Publishing Checklist for Long Articles: Links, Headings, and Proof

Connected Systems: Writing That Builds on Itself

“Let everything you do be done with love.” (1 Corinthians 16:14, CEV)

Featured Console Deal
Compact 1440p Gaming Console

Xbox Series S 512GB SSD All-Digital Gaming Console + 1 Wireless Controller, White

Microsoft • Xbox Series S • Console Bundle
Xbox Series S 512GB SSD All-Digital Gaming Console + 1 Wireless Controller, White
Good fit for digital-first players who want small size and fast loading

An easy console pick for digital-first players who want a compact system with quick loading and smooth performance.

$438.99
Price checked: 2026-03-23 18:31. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
  • 512GB custom NVMe SSD
  • Up to 1440p gaming
  • Up to 120 FPS support
  • Includes Xbox Wireless Controller
  • VRR and low-latency gaming features
See Console Deal on Amazon
Check Amazon for the latest price, stock, shipping options, and included bundle details.

Why it stands out

  • Compact footprint
  • Fast SSD loading
  • Easy console recommendation for smaller setups

Things to know

  • Digital-only
  • Storage can fill quickly
See Amazon for current availability and bundle details
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Publishing is where good writing quietly dies. Not because the piece is bad, but because the final mile is messy. Links break. Headings are inconsistent. The introduction promises one thing while the body delivers another. A few typos survive. The reader feels friction and leaves.

A publishing checklist is not bureaucracy. It is love expressed as care for the reader’s experience. It turns “almost finished” into “ready to trust.”

What This Checklist Is For

This checklist is designed for long articles, especially pieces that include examples, internal links, and multi-section structure. It assumes you already have a draft. Its job is to make the draft clean, coherent, and easy to read on a real screen.

The Reader-First Publishing Pass

Start with the reader’s path, not your author intentions.

Opening Clarity

  • The first paragraph states what the reader will gain.
  • The opening matches the article’s actual content.
  • Any key term introduced in the opening is defined soon after.

Structure and Flow

  • Headings form a readable map.
  • Each section answers a specific question.
  • Transitions exist between major sections so the piece does not feel stitched together.

Ending Clarity

  • The conclusion summarizes the main takeaway.
  • The conclusion gives a simple next step.
  • The ending does not introduce a new big idea that belongs earlier.

The Headings Checklist

Headings are where long articles succeed or fail.

  • Headings are specific, not generic.
  • Headings are parallel in style (similar grammatical form).
  • Headings reflect the promise of the introduction.
  • No section is a wall of text without a break.

A helpful test is to read only the headings. If the outline does not make sense alone, the structure needs work.

The Links Checklist

Links are part of trust. Broken links feel careless. Overlinking feels desperate.

  • Internal links are relevant to the sentence they appear in.
  • Internal links are described clearly so the reader knows why to click.
  • Links are not stacked without explanation.
  • Every link works and points to the correct page.

If you use internal links as a learning path, treat them like a trail, not like a pile of signs.

The Proof Pass That Actually Catches Errors

Proofreading fails when it is done too fast and too close to writing. You need a different mental mode.

Use this pass order:

  • Read the article out loud, slowly.
  • Read it on a phone-sized window.
  • Read it as if you disagree with it.

Each mode catches different problems:

  • Out loud catches rhythm and missing words.
  • Phone view catches layout and sentence length issues.
  • Disagreeing catches weak claims and unclear reasoning.

Final-Mile Problems and Fixes

Final-mile issueWhat it feels like to the readerThe fix
Intro promises more than the body deliversDisappointment, distrustRewrite intro to match what you actually deliver
Headings are vagueConfusion, skimmingReplace headings with question-answer phrasing
Paragraphs are too longFatigue, bouncingBreak paragraphs and add concrete examples
Links feel randomDistracted, annoyedKeep only links that deepen the current point
Conclusion fades outUnsatisfiedSummarize and give a clear next step

You do not need more polish than this. You need this kind of polish.

The “Evidence and Claims” Micro-Check

Even in non-academic writing, long articles often contain a few claims that should be tighter.

  • If a claim is factual, is it clearly framed and supportable?
  • If a claim is interpretive, is the reasoning visible?
  • If a claim is a recommendation, is the tradeoff acknowledged?

This is where credibility is either strengthened or quietly lost.

A Minimal Accessibility Check

You do not need to be an accessibility expert to make writing kinder.

  • Sentences are not overly packed with clauses.
  • Acronyms are defined the first time they appear.
  • Key terms are consistent across the article.
  • Tables have clear column headings.
  • Lists are used when they clarify, not as decoration.

These choices widen the circle of people who can benefit from your writing.

A Publishing Prompt You Can Use With AI

AI is useful here because the checklist is concrete. You are not asking for creativity. You are asking for inspection.

Run a publishing-quality pass on the article below.
- Ensure the opening states a clear purpose and matches the content.
- Improve headings for clarity and parallel structure.
- Break overly long paragraphs.
- Remove filler and vague claims.
- Preserve bullet points and tables; do not add numbered lists.
Return the revised article.
Article:
[PASTE ARTICLE]

Then you do the final human scan. AI can catch patterns. You decide what is true and what is yours.

A Closing Reminder

Publishing is a covenant with the reader. You are saying: I cared enough to make this clear. I cared enough to make it accurate. I cared enough to make it easy to follow.

If you use a checklist, you stop relying on mood and memory. You build a repeatable way to publish work you can stand behind.

Keep Exploring Related Writing Systems

Books by Drew Higgins