FIELD GUIDE 01 / CROSS-FORMAT

A calm final check before client work leaves the team.

A useful preflight does not reread every sentence from scratch. It catches the mechanical things that are easy to miss when the deadline is close, then leaves judgment with the reviewer who knows the work.

12 checksWord + Excel + PowerPointAbout 8 minutes

The final file often passes through several good people. That is exactly why small leftovers survive. One person owns the numbers, another edits the wording, and someone else exports the delivery copy. A preflight gives the last handoff a clear owner and a repeatable order.

01 / Candidate

Lock the copy you are actually sending.

Reviewing the working file is not enough if someone exports, renames, or edits it afterward. Put the final candidate in one delivery folder. Review that folder, then avoid making silent changes.

01
Use a clean delivery folder

Include only files the recipient needs. Keep drafts, source exports, notes, and archives somewhere else.

02
Name the real final copy

Remove version labels such as FINAL-v7-new. Use a stable name that makes sense to someone outside the team.

02 / Review residue

Clear the conversation that helped make the file.

Comments, speaker notes, tracked changes, hidden text, and internal instructions are useful during collaboration. The delivery copy needs a separate decision about each one.

03
Resolve comments and tracked changes

Turning off tracking or choosing No Markup changes the view. It does not resolve changes that remain in the file.

04
Review notes and hidden content

Check PowerPoint speaker notes, hidden Word text, hidden sheets, comments, and internal-only instructions.

Useful detail: Microsoft says Word's No Markup view hides markup temporarily. The changes remain until they are accepted or rejected. Track Changes guidance ↗
03 / Workbook logic

Make sure the spreadsheet still works outside your environment.

A workbook can look correct while depending on another file, a hidden sheet, or a stale calculated value. The safest question is simple: what will the recipient see when they open this on a different machine?

05
Find error values and recalculate

Resolve #REF!, #VALUE!, #DIV/0!, and similar errors. Recalculate the final copy before reading the output again.

06
Decide what every external link should do

Do not break links automatically. Confirm whether the recipient needs the source, a fixed value, or an embedded copy.

Useful detail: Excel's Document Inspector can find workbook links, but Microsoft says it cannot remove them for you. That is a reviewer decision. External links guidance ↗ For the complete workbook sequence, use the Excel preflight checklist →
04 / Identity

Confirm who the file is for.

Search the full delivery folder for previous client names, internal codenames, template markers, placeholder dates, and draft labels. Check headers, footers, charts, notes, file properties, and hidden parts too.

SYNTHETIC FINDINGDL201
HIGH
Unresolved client placeholderproposal.docx / document.xml

Replace the template marker with approved final content, then rescan the delivery copy.

07
Search old names and placeholders

Include variations, abbreviations, bracketed fields, filler copy, unfinished task labels, and internal status notes.

08
Confirm dates, scope, currency, and version

Match the brief or approved source. Do not infer the intended value from nearby text.

05 / Evidence

Give important numbers somewhere to stand.

For each material claim, check the period, unit, definition, comparison base, and source. The number may be correct and still be hard for a reviewer or recipient to verify.

09
Trace claims to approved sources

Keep citations close enough that the relationship is clear. Confirm the source supports the wording you used.

10
Cross-check repeated figures

Compare the deck, proposal, workbook, appendix, and email summary. Repeated numbers should agree.

06 / Hidden data

Inspect what the page does not show.

Run the current Microsoft Document Inspector on a copy. Review document properties, personal information, comments, hidden data, custom XML, external content, and embedded objects. Then check your own policy for credentials, private URLs, and client-specific restricted terms.

11
Inspect metadata and embedded content

Review every Inspector result before choosing Remove All. Some information is intentional, and some removal cannot be undone.

12
Scan for credentials and private references

If a real secret appears, revoke it first. Removing the visible text does not make an exposed credential safe again.

07 / Decision

End with a named decision.

A checklist is useful when it changes what happens next. Record the final file, the reviewer, the scope, and one of three outcomes.

PASS

No issue was found under the checks and scope you ran. The accountable reviewer still owns the delivery.

REVIEW

Something needs context. Confirm the intent, evidence, or recipient environment before sending.

BLOCK

A release issue needs to be fixed or explicitly accepted by the owner before the file leaves the team.