Why Creatives (Still) Skip Spell-Check: A Small Team Problem with a Simple Fix

Designer working late with text overlay – “Spell-check last, again?”

The Same Old Song and Dance

I had a conversation recently with someone at a small agency. We were talking about the kind of stuff that gets quietly ignored until it becomes a pattern. Specifically: Why do designers (and other creatives) send out work without running spell-check?

As someone who’s been an art director, designer, copywriter, and founder across multiple businesses, I’ve done it more times than I care to admit. My wife (who produces theater work) has called me out for it more than once — especially when I’m swapping letters on the marquee with a ladder and forgetting to check the spelling.

At first, I laughed it off. “It’s just what happens.” Fast deadlines. Limited bandwidth. Division of roles. But after this recent conversation, I started thinking: Why does it happen so often, and what could solve it?

Turns out, there’s some real behavioral psychology behind it.

The Mindset Behind the Miss

  1. Role Compartmentalization
    When we’re in design mode, we tend to shut off the editorial brain. It’s a different mode entirely. Spell-checking gets pushed into “someone else’s job.”
  2. Mental Bias (Einstellung Effect)
    We default to familiar solutions. So if the original role didn’t require editing, we won’t adopt it even when we’re solo or hybrid.
  3. Planning Fallacy
    We underestimate how long something will take — like checking spelling. So we assume we’ll “do it later,” but later rarely comes.
  4. Cultural Assumptions
    In some teams, especially small ones, the unspoken belief is that editing is someone else’s responsibility.

A Simple Fix: Make It a Shared Step

Instead of pushing the responsibility onto one person (like a copy editor), build it into your team’s shared workflow.

Example: create a shared email like copycheck@yourdomain.com.

  • Before anyone sends a deliverable, they send the content to that address.
  • Whoever’s got the bandwidth does a quick grammar/spell-check pass.
  • The work returns with clean text before it ever goes out.

This turns what used to be a “side task” into a team norm — no shame, no finger-pointing.

Even Creatives Need Guardrails

I know this because I’ve been the one to skip spell-check more times than I can count. But when you reframe it as just another part of the process — like file naming or version control — it stops being about individual habits and becomes a shared standard.

Small teams don’t have time to chase avoidable mistakes. But with a little structure, even the most creative brains can hit ‘send’ with confidence.