MColeman
Programmer
- Sep 23, 2002
- 242
I was sent a MS Word document that contained Terms and Conditions. I was supposed to have a program tack it on to
the end of quotation documents.
After reviewing it carefully, I found the following.
- it's was used three times to show the possessive of 'it'
- prorate was spelled pro-rate
- seven times a comma was omitted
- two run on sentences
- the word customer is randomly capitalized
This led me to believe what I was sent could not be the
final version of the document; so I forwarded it to the
Legal Department for review. After five minutes, they emailed me approval without correcting any of the mistakes.
Should the word 'customer' be caplitalized wherever it appears in this terms and conditions document?
The only times I've seen use of this is when there is a paragraph at the top naming the entities of a contract.
(ex: John Doe, the undersigned, hereafter referred to as
the Customer...)
Can someone help me out of this jam? This document is going to be sent out to our customers, and I'm sure it will be on my head if it is not perfect.
the end of quotation documents.
After reviewing it carefully, I found the following.
- it's was used three times to show the possessive of 'it'
- prorate was spelled pro-rate
- seven times a comma was omitted
- two run on sentences
- the word customer is randomly capitalized
This led me to believe what I was sent could not be the
final version of the document; so I forwarded it to the
Legal Department for review. After five minutes, they emailed me approval without correcting any of the mistakes.
Should the word 'customer' be caplitalized wherever it appears in this terms and conditions document?
The only times I've seen use of this is when there is a paragraph at the top naming the entities of a contract.
(ex: John Doe, the undersigned, hereafter referred to as
the Customer...)
Can someone help me out of this jam? This document is going to be sent out to our customers, and I'm sure it will be on my head if it is not perfect.