'editorial effort' is correct and usable in written English. You can use it to refer to the work that has gone into writing, editing, or revising a particular piece of work. For example, "My project required a lot of editorial effort, but I'm proud of the results.".
Advertisers like to be part of the discounts, too, though those are technically an editorial effort.
We should also not rule out a big editorial effort by newsrooms straining to grab readers' attention and loose change.
No additional editorial effort was invested in any aspect of the app so, in effect, the performance was entirely social.
The playful labor of this translation of drama into narrative was undertaken, Jean Strouse tells us in her introduction to the newest reprint of "The Outcry," in the wake of "an acute depressive breakdown" brought on by the tepid reception of the New York edition, to which James had devoted heroic editorial effort, introducing and at times drastically revising his life's work.
In his books and editorial efforts, Febvre embraced a "global" history that rejected all forms of pedantry and determinism.
None of the editorial efforts I operate, such as blogs, require extensive hardware tuning and five sigmas of server uptime.
Academic and popular publishers, as well as some authors, have dreamed for years of such feedback to direct sales and editorial efforts more efficiently.
Awesome tool! I started using it one year ago and I never had to look for another app
Ha Thuy Vy
MA of Applied Linguistic, Maquarie University, Australia