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Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

Adobe® InCopy® CC and InDesign® CC
Collaborative Editorial Workflow
Executive overview
Effective publishing demands tightly choreographed collaboration among editorial groups
and design groups working against ever-present, urgent deadlines. With a more efficient
workflow, editorial and design professionals can devote more time to the quality of the work
and less to the mechanics of the publishing process.

Table of contents
1 Executive overview
2 B
 ridging the gap between
editorial and design
4 Moving to an InCopy CC
workflow
6 Step-by-step InCopy CC
workflow examples
14 Appendix A: InCopy CCand
InDesign CC workflow features
19 Appendix B: InCopy CC and
Microsoft Word integration
features

Regardless of company size, a large number of publications are created by small, tightly knit
teams of editors and designers. Publications created by fairly small workgroups need an
efficient workflow but often make do with a combination of Microsoft Word, a page layout
application, and many rounds of paper proofs. Because these tools and techniques are not
designed for tight collaboration, combining them in editorial workflows often leads to delays,
inefficient workarounds, and compromised quality.
Adobe InCopy CC software is a professional writing and editing program that integrates tightly
with Adobe InDesign CC software to deliver a complete solution for collaborative editorial
workflow for any size publishing workgroup. InCopy CC lets writers and editors simultaneously
develop their individual stories directly in the InDesign CC layout, even while the designers
are working on the same layout in InDesign. Because InCopy CC and InDesign CC use the
same technology for composing text and displaying graphics, writers, editors, and designers
can visualize exactly how copy and layout interact—throughout the workflow, rather than just
at the end.
This guide explains how using InCopy CC and InDesign CC together reduces review-andrevision cycles between editors and designers, improves editorial control over copy, and gets
publications to market faster. It also provides a step-by-step overview of how to set up an
effective InCopy CC workflow that’s easily customized for your workgroup’s needs.

Bridging the gap between editorial and design
An ideal workflow enables everyone to focus on his or her own work without being slowed
down, rushed, or hindered by others. However, publishing teams often devise an approach to
working together that is less than ideal.
Conventional publishing workflows: Linear and iterative
Many of the challenges faced by smaller publishing workgroups stem from the lack of an
integrated workflow solution. They combine word processing and page layout applications
from different vendors instead. Although both types of applications are well suited for their
respective purposes—developing copy and designing pages—they are not conducive to
seamless collaboration. In particular, writers and editors cannot see copy in the context of a
layout until it is placed in the page layout application. Once it is, they can no longer work on it
directly. Neither editorial nor design has an easy way of assessing precisely how their work will
come together: how the copy will fit the layout or how images and other design elements will
complement the copy.
To solve this problem, various workarounds have become standard practice. These
workarounds often include numerous hard-copy proofs marked up by editors and submitted
to the designer, who then makes the required changes in the layout. This editing cycle can be
repeated multiple times, resulting in additional material costs, and more important, a
significant decrease in efficiency and job satisfaction.
Conventional linear workflow

?
Copy
to edit

Copy
to proof

Final
copy

First layout
proof

Second layout
proof

nth layout
proof

Final layout
for printer

Content is developed “blind” with respect to the publication’s layout file. Only after the layout proofing rounds begin
can editors fix copyfitting problems.

Editors lose direct control of the editorial process, and designers are forced to serve as their
eyes and hands. Frustration can be high, errors are common, and quality may suffer.
If editorial and design proceed concurrently, without the right collaboration tools in place,
editorial may produce copy that’s too long, too short, or poorly suited to its visual context.
Design may produce layouts and graphics that don’t complement the copy, or they lose
precious time reformatting content when stories are updated. Also, editors may hover over
designers, making over-the-shoulder copy corrections.
The InDesign CC and InCopy CC workflow: Concurrent and collaborative
Implementing an InDesign CC and InCopy CC workflow transforms the production process by
making it easy for editors and designers to work together.

Mac OS
Windows

Mac OS
Windows

A cross-platform solution
InCopy CC for Windows® flawlessly opens InDesign
CC files created on a Mac and vice versa.

Using InDesign CC, the designer makes layout content editable by InCopy users by putting
individual spreads or the complete document on a networked file server. Using InCopy on
their local computers, one or more editors can open this file from the server at the same time,
editing their stories within the layout, without having to wait for a printout.
As editors save their changes to stories in the layout, the system keeps everyone else who’s
working on the publication up to date with their revisions. Since InCopy users are working in
the live layout file, they can “write to fit” (or edit to fit) from the start, dramatically reducing the
number of proofing rounds required.

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A powerful tool for editors
InCopy CC delivers an impressive array of poweruser tools in a user-friendly package. Here is a
brief overview:
Parallel workflow—Accelerate production by
working simultaneously instead of in sequence.
Designers can work on an InDesign document
while writers edit the same document’s text
in InCopy, without fear of overwriting one
another’s work.
Page visualization—Write and edit to fit the
layout precisely. View accurate feedback on the
status of copyfitting, line endings, and hyphenation, or simply view a story as it appears on
the original page layout. Writers are notified of
changes to the InDesign layout so they can copyfit as needed to a changing design.
Productivity—Meet deadlines more efficiently
using editorial features such as a powerful Find/
Change command; extensive paragraph, character, and table styles; dynamic cross-references;
and support for rapid editing and formatting
using only the keyboard.

InCopy CC and InDesign CC parallel workflow (simple overview)
INDESIGN

INCOPY

Writer

Designer
Final layout
for printer

Shared layout
and content
on server

Editor

Proofreader
The designer places the InDesign layout on a central file server. Text and image frames in the layout
are assigned for review and editing to a contributing member of the editorial workflow. Multiple
InCopy users can open spreads and edit content from the same layout file concurrently while it’s on
the server, even if the designer has it open in InDesign.

However, to protect the integrity of the design, InCopy allows editors to edit only the contents
of text and image frames that the designers have designated as editable in the layout. Editors
cannot change page geometry (move or resize frames, add or delete frames or pages, apply
text wrap, and so on). While they can apply local text formatting and any text styles that are
associated with the layout to their stories, editors cannot add, delete, or modify any of the
styles. If the designer is working on the same layout concurrently and saves changes to it in
InDesign, any editor who has it open in InCopy is notified that the design is out of date.
Choosing File > Update Design in InCopy immediately refreshes the layout to reflect the latest
state of the publication, without losing any of the InCopy user’s edits.
When the editors have completed their work on the stories and the designer has updated all
the InCopy content in the layout, the file is ready for preflighting and handoff to a
commercial printer.

Off-the-shelf
InCopy CC and
InDesign CC

Third-party developer
solutions that add
structure and features
to the InCopy and
InDesign workflow

SI enterprise-level
production and
management systems
with InCopy and
InDesign at the core

Cost of entry

Low

Moderate

High

Workgroup size
(per publication)

2–15

5–30

15–100+

Technology
infrastructure

Folders and files on a
networked file server

File server or simple
database running on the
file server

High-end database
running on a dedicated
database server

Customizable UI

Yes

May be enabled

May be enabled

Extensible

Minimal

Minimal

High

Support services

Standard

Varies

High

More information

www.adobe.com/incopy

www.adobe.com/
products/plugins/incopy

www.adobe.com/
products/incopy/
integrated

Selecting the right implementation of InCopy
Large publishing workgroups tend to invest
in highly structured workflows supported by
features such as automatic routing, user roles,
and database reporting. Because smaller
workgroups don’t need this kind of structure,
InCopy CC paired with InDesign CC provides a
simple, flexible solution that enables team
members to work in parallel without interfering
with one another’s work. The basic InCopy CC
and InDesign CC workflow is ideal for project
teams of 2 to 15 people, such as small to midsize
book publishers, weekly newspapers, corporate
communications teams, and monthly magazine publishers. Consult the table at the left for
guidance on selecting the right way to integrate
InCopy based on the size and complexity of
your organization.

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Moving to an InCopy CC workflow
Making the transition to an InCopy workflow is surprisingly easy and flexible. InDesign CC
contains all the tools necessary for design and production staff to participate in the workflow,
so all that’s needed is to install InCopy CC on the editorial workstations. InCopy can be flexibly
integrated with any stage of the editorial process. An editor may begin composing a story
directly in InCopy (in a standalone InCopy file or an empty placeholder text frame in the layout
file) or may choose to import finished content created in Word and use InCopy only for latestage copyfitting in the layout.
Publishers with a local network file server can choose to implement a layout-based workflow,
an assignment-based workflow, or a combination of the two. To accommodate off-network
InCopy users, or if no local server is available, remote workflows can be set up with emailbased assignments. These options, described in the following paragraphs, allow publishers to
customize their workflow based on the speed of the local network, the size of the layout files,
the number of editors involved in the same project, and whether users are on- or off-site.
Layout-based workflow. The most straightforward way to implement an InCopy workflow is to
place the InDesign layout (INDD) file on a local network file server and have all publication
staff work with it directly off the server. Designers open the file over the network in InDesign.
Editors and writers open the same InDesign layout over the network with the File > Open
command in InCopy, allowing them to see and edit their stories “live” in the actual layout. One
InDesign user and one or more InCopy users may open and work on the same layout file
concurrently.
Initially, an InDesign layout file is read-only when opened in InCopy. To make content editable
for InCopy users, the designer needs to export the layout’s text and image frames to InCopy
content (ICML) files, saving them on the server in a project subfolder. The layout’s content
(text and images) is now linked to the exported files. Editors can open the layout in InCopy
and edit the content in the linked frames. A built-in check-in/checkout system prevents more
than one user from editing the same content in the layout at the same time.

B
C

Layout-based workflow

A

open over the network

INDESIGN
INDD

INCOPY

INDD

InDesign layout and
linked content files on
network server

B
C

A

Writer

A B
C
ICML

linked files

ICML

Understanding linked content (ICML) files
Most content in an InDesign layout (INDD) file
is contained in a text or image frame. Designers create these frames, position them on the
page, and fill them with text or graphics using
InDesign tools. Some frames may be empty
“placeholders,” awaiting content.
In the InCopy CC workflow, designers can export
the formatted contents of any text or image
frame, or even an empty one, to an exter-nal
InCopy (ICML) file. This creates a dynamic link
between the ICML file and the content in the
source frame in the INDD file.
Only the contents of linked frames (those that
are linked to external ICML files) are editable
by InCopy users. Other frames’ content that the
designer did not export, such as page folios and
background images, are visible in the InCopy
layout view, but are not editable.

B
C

B
C

A

Designer
(opens layout from
server)

A
INDD

A B
C

Final layout
for output

ICML

B
C

A

Editor

B
C

A

Proofreader

Assignment-based workflow. Assignment (ICMA) files are subsets of full InDesign layout
(INDD) files, often containing only one or two spreads from a much larger InDesign document,
and so are faster to open over the network. Even if network speed is not an issue, assignments
allow the designer to provide editors with a single document containing only the content for
which they are responsible.
INDESIGN

Full InDesign layout

INCOPY

Mary’s six pages

Joe’s two pages

Ada’s four pages

Multiple InCopy assignment (ICMA) files can be created and managed from a single InDesign layout file.
Here the designer has exported three assignments, one for each of the editors working on the publication.

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About file types
The InCopy CC workflow entails working with
three main types of files (in bold) and three
others that are used in special situations. Each
type has its own filename extension to distinguish it in the operating system, the InCopy CC
Story bar, and InCopy CC and InDesign CC status
messages.
INDD

ICML

ICMA

The InDesign layout, containing
a mix of native, embedded, and
linked page elements in frames.
The native format for InCopy
documents. When the content of a
text or graphics frame in InDesign
is exported from the InDesign
layout to InCopy format, the
resulting ICML file is known as a
“linked content file” because it’s
linked to the layout.
An InCopy assignment file,
containing layout previews from
a subset of the InDesign (INDD)
file and full editorial access to the
linked content (ICML) in the text
and image frames the designer
associated with it.

ICMT

An InCopy template for a
standalone ICML file.

ICAP

An InCopy package file used in
remote workflows, containing an
assignment (ICMA) file and all its
associated ICML files.

IDAP

An InDesign package file used in
remote workflows, containing
an ICMA file and its associated
ICML files.

Assignments are easy to create. Using the InDesign Assignments panel, the designer sets up
assignment files by exporting to a new assignment the text and image frames for a specific
editor. InDesign automatically creates assignment and content subfolders in the layout’s
project folder on the network file server. It saves new ICMA files in the assignments subfolder,
and from the frames selected by the designer, it exports linked ICML files to the content
subfolder. Editors open their own assignment files in InCopy to edit their content. The same
check-in/checkout system prevents the designer from modifying a frame’s content while an
editor is working on it, and vice versa.
Assignment-based workflow
INDESIGN

open over the network

linked files

INCOPY

InCopy assignments and linked
content files on network server

A

A

A

B

Editor

Designer

C

(layout may be local, as
shown, or on server)

ICMA

B
Writer

A B
C
Final layout
for printer

C

ICML

Proofreader

Remote workflow. If an editor is off-site and cannot access the file server, or if a publishing
team doesn’t have access to a central file server, InCopy can be used remotely. This solution
requires the use of assignments for any editor who is working remotely, even if the workgroup
is using a layout-based workflow locally.
After creating an assignment for an editor, the designer chooses the Package For InCopy
command in InDesign, which creates a single, compressed ICAP file that can be emailed to the
editor or uploaded to an FTP server. The package file contains everything an InCopy user
needs to view the layout and edit content within it, including the assignment file and all the
linked content files associated with it. When the designer packages an assignment, the system
also checks out all its content from the local server on the remote editor’s behalf, preventing
local users (including the designer) from editing the content while it’s being worked on by the
off-site editor.
Remote workflow (email-based assignments)
INDESIGN

B
C
Designer

INCOPY
ICAP

A
INDD

4. Designer opens
package; InDesign
automatically
updates layout’s
content with
editor’s changes.

1. D
 esigner creates an assignment
and then emails an InCopy
assignment package (ICMA and
ICML files) to editor.
IDAP

3. E ditor creates an InDesign
assignment package with
updated content and emails it to
designer.

B
C

A

Remote editor ICMA
2. E ditor opens
package, edits
content in InCopy
assignment, and
saves changes.

When the remote editor opens the packaged assignment on his or her own computer, the file
automatically unpacks itself, opening the assignment file in InCopy and allowing the editor to
edit its content. When finished, the editor can use the same procedure for packaging the
assignment and modified stories into a single file and sending it off, either to another editor as
an InCopy package (ICAP) file or back to the designer as an InDesign package (IDAP) file. When
the designer receives and opens an IDAP file, it automatically unpacks itself, checks the
content back in, and allows the designer to update the layout with the editor’s changes.

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Step-by-step InCopy CC workflow examples
Chicago Wilderness magazine: Current issue
Chicago Wilderness is a 124-page, full-color, quarterly magazine offering its outdoor enthusiast
subscribers in-depth articles about Chicago-area wilderness destinations, news about nature
conservancy efforts, and colorful wildlife photography.
In this step-by-step scenario, a designer named Peter, a writer named Kate, and a copyeditor/
proofreader named Gina are working on the fall 2010 issue. Since the InDesign layout is a
single, 124-page file on the server, too large for the editors to comfortably open and work on
over their network, Chicago Wilderness uses an assignment-based workflow. Kate will write
copy for the feature on restoration efforts at nearby Wolf Lake. Peter, the designer, needs to
create an InCopy assignment for her that includes all the elements in the article.
Set up an assignment in InDesign
In InDesign, on the four pages in the layout allotted for the Wolf Lake story, Peter roughs out a
design with images and placeholder text frames and then selects frames from the first spread
and drags them on top of the New assignment icon at the bottom of the Assignments panel.
He names the assignment “Wolf Lake” and clicks OK (see sidebar at left). InDesign
automatically saves this file in the project’s assignments folder, CW_Fall10 Assignments, which
it created and named based on the name of the InDesign layout. The exported ICML files, one
for each content frame Peter included in the assignment, are automatically saved to a content
folder within the CW_Fall10 Assignments folder.

About assignment options
An assignment includes an assignment name, the
name of the InCopy user who will work on the
assignment, and a color for identifying assigned
frames in InCopy and InDesign. Additional
controls determine how much context a writer or
editor sees when working on an assignment:

• Placeholder Frames creates an assignment
that includes all spreads containing assigned
frames. However, only assigned frames display
their text or graphics content and can be
checked out; all other frames appear empty.
For writers and editors who prefer to focus
exclusively on their content, this option eliminates nonessential information.

• Assigned Spreads creates an assignment
that includes all spreads containing assigned
frames. All frames—not just assigned frames—
display their text or graphics content. However,
only assigned frames can be checked out. This
is the default option.

The first spread of Kate’s feature article on Wolf Lake. The frame at the top right, and the series of threaded frames
(comprising a single story) at the bottom, have been exported to icml format and associated with Kate’s
assignment. You can see the names of the two linked icml files in the Assignments panel in InDesign.

On the second spread reserved for Kate’s feature, Peter adds the remaining frames to Kate’s
assignment by dragging and dropping them onto the Wolf Lake entry in the Assignments
panel. He chooses Update Selected Assignment from the Assignments panel menu and alerts
Kate, the writer, that the assignment is ready for her to work on.
Write and edit content in InCopy
In InCopy, Kate opens the Wolf Lake.icma file from the CW_Fall10 Assignments folder on the
server. The assignment file is much smaller than the InDesign layout because it includes only
the two spreads containing her story frames, not the entire 124-page layout. Kate selects the
at the
name of the assignment in the Assignments panel and clicks the Check Out icon
bottom of the panel to prevent others from editing the same stories while she’s working on
them. She begins writing the main feature story.
A

B

C

• All Spreads creates an assignment that
includes all pages and spreads regardless
of whether they contain assigned frames.
However, only assigned frames can be checked
out. This option lets writers and editors
see their work in the context of the entire
InDesign layout.

A. The Assignments panel in InCopy lists the editable content in the active file. B. Before she can begin writing, Kate
checks out the stories by selecting the name of the assignment and then clicking the Check Out icon at the bottom of
the panel. C. The pencil icons confirm the checkout.

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Simple access control and synchronization
Straightforward check-in and checkout of linked
content frames prevents a co-worker from
editing a story you’re currently working on and
keeps everyone informed as to who is working
on which content at any given time. Easy-tospot visual indicators (such as the Out Of Date
symbol) in InCopy and InDesign alert you when
a colleague working concurrently on the same
document has modified content or page geometry or checked out a content item. Modified items
can be brought up to date with a simple click.

As she works, Kate switches among one of the three page views in InCopy CC: Layout, Story,
and Galley. When she just wants to get the words down on “paper,” she uses Story view. When
she wants to see line breaks and line numbers, she chooses Galley view.

Story and Galley view, easily accessible by tabs at the top of the window, show the editable text content (including
overset text) of the current InDesign layout or assignment in one scrolling window, without distracting text
formatting and surrounding page elements. Galley view (left) includes line numbers and stays true to the layout’s
line breaks. Story view (right) flows text to the edge of the window, as in Word, so less scrolling is required. Gray
story bars separate individual stories.

When she wants to see her words in context with the design, Kate works in Layout view. Text
formatting, image wraps, footnotes, page jumps, folios, background colors, and other page
elements appear exactly as they do in InDesign. Kate can zoom in (up to 4,000%) for close-up
work of text set in small type sizes or zoom out for an overall look at multiple spreads at once.

Workflow status icons
Icon

Name

Location

Available

Assignments panel, text
frames, and graphic
frames

In Use by (name)

Assignments panel, text
frames, and graphics
frames

Editing

Assignments panel, text
frames, and graphics
frames

Available and
Out of Date

Text frames and graphic
frames

In Use by (name)
and Out of Date

Text frames and graphic
frames

Assignment or
Layout
Out of Date

Assignments panel

Text Content
Out of Date

Assignments panel

Text Content
Up to Date

Assignments panel

Graphics Content
Out of Date

Assignments panel

Graphics Content
Up to Date

Assignments panel

The InCopy CC Layout view in normal mode (left) shows nonprinting frame edges, ruler guides, bleeds, the
pasteboard, and content status icons. Page elements that are not editable are screened back as a visual cue.
Switch to Preview mode (right) to hide the pasteboard and see an accurate print preview of all content in the
layout. Content can be edited in either mode.

Regardless of which view Kate’s working in, the Copyfit Info panel keeps her up to date with
her progress. If her text exceeds the amount of space allotted to the story in the layout, she
can access the overset copy in Galley or Story view and edit to fit.

The Copyfit Info panel provides continuously updated statistics on the current story’s word, line, and character
count and its column depth. A visual and numeric indicator also tracks underset or overset status.

Format text in InCopy
Since InCopy has the same text engine and styling options as InDesign, Kate can be confident
that the formatting she applies to text in InCopy will carry through to the InDesign layout. All
the paragraph and character styles that the designer created and saved in the InDesign layout
are available to InCopy users working on the same layout, helping to ensure that the

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Copy and paste formatting with the
Eyedropper Tool
Instead of using menus and panels, some editors
may prefer a more visual approach to formatting
text. The Eyedropper tool lets users “pick up” text
formatting from sample text in Layout
view and then apply it to text elsewhere
in the document by simply clicking
or dragging over it with the “loaded”
Eyedropper tool.

formatting applied by individual editors in InCopy remains consistent with the designer’s
intent throughout the publication.

Complicated text formatting is easily applied in InCopy
by selecting the desired styles, which were created by
the designer, from the panels (left). Editors can also
use the Quick Apply feature (above) to locate and
apply the styles from the keyboard.

Kate would like a long subhead to extend across both columns in the story. Since she cannot
create new text frames, she chooses to manually apply the Span Columns paragraph format (a
new feature in InCopy CC) to the subhead.

Using Track Changes
Turn on Enable Tracking in InCopy or InDesign to
record edits made by every user to a story. You
can view the tracked-changes markup in Galley
or Story view (InCopy) or the Story Editor (InDesign). Use the Changes menu or toolbar to hide,
show, navigate, and accept or reject changes. You
can also track changes across multiple stories,
customize the way tracked changes are displayed
onscreen, and (from InCopy) print out the
tracked-changes markup.

Story or Galley view shows tracked-changes markup
(top), and the Change Info panel reveals details of each
specific change (bottom).

Editors don’t need additional text frames to change the number of columns a paragraph spans in a multicolumn
text frame. As with all the text formatting attributes, the Span Columns setting can be included in a paragraph
style and applied to text by applying the style. If editors need to apply some formatting that isn’t available in a
style, they can apply it as a manual override.

Update design in InCopy
While Kate is working on the Wolf Lake feature story, Peter (the designer) continues to work
on the magazine layout in InDesign, creating and designing other pages. He has just learned
that there will be one more image in Kate’s feature, so he has to modify other elements to
make room. While he cannot edit the contents of the frames Kate has checked out, he still has
full control over the page geometry and can add, remove, and resize elements. He places an
image on top of the main body of her story and turns on Text Wrap so it pushes Kate’s text to
either side of the image instead of overlapping it. Peter chooses Update Out-of-Date
Assignments to alert Kate to the change.

In InDesign, the crossed-out pencil icons on text frames (and their equivalents in the Assignments panel) tell Peter
that someone has checked out the content to work on it. If he hovers his cursor over any workflow icon, a tool tip
appears with the name of the user who checked it out and other details. Peter cannot edit the contents of a frame
another user has checked out, but he is always able to change its page geometry in InDesign.

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InCopy CC for web, EPUB, and XML workflows In
addition to print publications, InCopy CC can
streamline content creation for websites and
other distribution methods involving XML. Both
InDesign CC and InCopy CC allow users to create
XML tags and apply them to text selec-tions. Tags
are maintained in the text flow during all check-in
and checkout procedures as a file is being
collaboratively produced. The current XML
structure of a file can be previewed and edited in
either program’s Structure pane.
InCopy CC can open XML files and convert them
to standalone InCopy (ICML) files, as well as
export a story to XML format.

In InCopy, Kate notices the alert
in her Assignments panel that the assignment itself is out
of date. She chooses Update Design from the panel menu to see Peter’s latest changes to the
page geometry. Fortunately, the copy she has written for the main story still fits, even with the
new image forcing the text to wrap around it. She continues working until she is finished with
the main body, saves her changes, and turns her attention to the pull quote on the last page.
Update copy in InDesign
appear on the Wolf Lake text frames and next
In InDesign, Peter sees an Out Of Date icon
to the entry for the story in his Assignments panel, alerting him that Kate saved her edits, and
now the content he sees in her feature is out of date. Peter selects the story’s entry in his
at the bottom of the panel
Assignments panel and then clicks the Update Content button
to review Kate’s finished copy. He is glad to see she was able to accommodate the
last-minute change.
When Kate has completed all the copy for the feature story, she closes the assignment file.
InCopy alerts her that she still has some content checked out and offers to check it in for her.
Kate clicks OK to have InCopy save any unsaved changes and check all the content back into
the workflow in one step.
Peter now has all of Kate’s updated content, and he completes the layout for the Wolf Lake
feature story. Next, it’s Gina’s turn to copyedit and proofread. Using the assignment Options
dialog box in InDesign, Peter reassigns the Wolf Lake assignment to Gina and notifies her that
it’s ready.
Copyedit and proofread in InCopy
In InCopy, Gina opens the Wolf Lake assignment and checks out all its content by clicking the
Assignments panel’s Check Out icon . She reviews the stories for poor hyphenation, bad
line breaks, and widows and orphans, confident that what she sees in InCopy precisely
matches the InDesign layout.
Working with tracked changes

Click a tag in the Tags panel (top) to apply it to selected
text. In Layout view (middle), tagged text is surrounded
by nonprinting brackets. Tags are easier to see in Story
or Galley view (bottom) and may be hidden
for readability.

Before she makes any edits to the file, Gina chooses Enable Tracking In All Stories from the
Changes menu in InCopy. This will allow Kate to review Gina’s (and any other user’s) changes
to the copy before accepting or rejecting them. When Kate checks out the story, she can
review Gina’s edits and accept or reject them singly or all at once, leaving other user’s tracked
changes intact.
Finish up in InDesign
By this time, all the writers have checked in all the stories from the assignments they had open,
Gina has copyedited them all, and Kate has accepted or rejected everyone’s changes. In
InDesign, Peter updates all content, makes a few last-minute refinements, and then proceeds
with his normal preflighting routine in preparation for creating a press-ready PDF file from the
InDesign layout.
The results: With the InCopy/InDesign workflow enabling them to work concurrently in tight
collaboration, the Chicago Wilderness team has shaved considerable time off their magazine
production schedule.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

9

Printing and exporting to PDF
Some InCopy users find it difficult to edit
onscreen, preferring to review paper proofs and
mark them up as in a traditional workflow. This is
easy to do in InCopy CC. In this workflow, it’s
usually the InCopy users themselves who then
apply their handwritten edits to the actual text
onscreen.
Editors are offered a lot of choices in the Print
dialog box. They can print the full layout as single
pages or as spreads, with images or without.
They can also print out either galleys (with accurate line breaks) or text content as seen in Story
view and choose the typeface, font size, and line
spacing they prefer, even if it’s not what they use
onscreen. Story and Galley printouts can optionally include inline notes and tracked changes.

Chicago Wilderness magazine: Upcoming issue
This example demonstrates how editors can benefit from the InCopy workflow at any point in
the process, even before an InDesign layout is ready for them. In this scenario, Robert, the
managing editor for Chicago Wilderness, wants to begin working on a two-page review of
Goose Lake Prairie, a popular regional destination. Goose Lake Prairie is one of the four places
slated to be reviewed in an upcoming issue’s periodic reviews section, “Into the Wild.” By
specifying a few basic settings in a standalone InCopy file, Robert can get a head start on his
review and be confident that it will fit the InDesign layout that Peter will create in a few weeks.
Set copyfitting parameters in InCopy
Robert creates a new InCopy document. In the New Document dialog box, from the Document
Preset menu he chooses the Into the Wild preset that Peter helped him prepare earlier. The
preset specifies the page size and the main content area’s width and target word count. If he
preferred, he could enter a target line count, page count, or column depth using any available
measuring unit.

The New Document dialog box in InCopy lets you define a target story length. Writers may prefer to set a
target column depth in any unit of measurement, including agates for newspapers.

Because styles affect copyfit, Robert uses commands in InCopy to import selected paragraph,
character, and table styles from the InDesign layout of the most recent “Into the Wild” section,
helping to ensure his InCopy text formatting will be consistent.
You don’t need to use Adobe Acrobat® software
to create a PDF file from InCopy; a custom PDF
engine is part of the program. To make a PDF
file of a layout or an assignment, choose File >
Export, and then choose Adobe PDF from the
Format menu. PDF export options are nearly
identical to Print options (for example, PDF files
can be made from the Layout, Story, or Galley
view), with a few additional features. One of
these is the ability to convert inline notes to
annotations (“comments”) when exporting
the Layout view to PDF—something not even
InDesign CC can do.

Because InCopy and InDesign
share a text composition
engine, writers are assured
that the formatting and styles
they apply to text in InCopy
will be honored in the
InDesign layout file.

Now Robert is ready to write. He prefers to start in Story view, putting words down quickly as
they come to him. Since the InCopy file is not linked to any InDesign layout yet, he
understands that the Layout view won’t show him his story in the context of other elements
on the final designed page, but it is still useful for checking formatting and line breaks.

While the Info column in Galley or Story view (left) lists the names of the styles applied to paragraphs, only
Layout view (right) shows text in its formatted state.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

10

Advanced word processing tools
Editors working in InCopy enjoy the same powerful toolset for working with long or complex
documents as InDesign users do, including:

• Cross-references—Insert, track, and modify
cross-references that automatically update as
content changes or is moved in the document.

• Footnotes—Add auto-numbered footnotes
or import a Word file with footnotes intact,
and then edit them on the page in Layout view
or inline, next to their references, in Story and
Galley view.

• Conditional text—Easily create multiple
versions or editions of the same InCopy story
by tagging text with version-specific conditions
from a convenient panel.

As Robert writes, he keeps his eye on the Copyfit Info toolbar, which provides a word count
and other indications of how well his copy will fit its eventual hole in the layout.

Since Robert specified a target word count of 1,250 in the New Document dialog box, the Copyfit Info toolbar
informs him that he’s 330 words short at this point (note the current word count of 920 on the left).

Working with notes
From time to time, Robert wants to keep alternative text close at hand until he decides which
version he prefers. He selects the alternative text and presses the F8 key to convert it into an
inline note. Occasionally he inserts a new note from the Notes menu and enters comments or
questions for Peter or Gina. He can use the Notes panel to show or hide notes and quickly skip
from one note to the next.

• GREP Find/Change—Search and replace
text and formatting not just by matching literal
text strings, but by finding “wildcard” pattern
matches. Save frequently used queries that you
can reuse in other InCopy files.

• Language dictionaries—Ensure foreign
language text is properly spell-checked and
hyphenated by choosing the appropriate
language dictionary (over 30 choices) from a
menu or as part of a text style.

Inline editorial notes let designers and editors communicate with one another in the context of the copy.
In Layout view, notes appear as nonprinting icons (top right) that can be revealed in the Notes panel
(bottom right).

Working with hyperlinks
As he’s writing, Robert uses the Hyperlinks panel in InCopy to embed hyperlinks into the
website and email addresses he spells out. This way, readers of the PDF version of the
magazine will be able to click the hyperlinks and gain immediate access to those resources.

Hyperlinks created in InCopy (left) are included in PDF files (top)
exported from InDesign if the designer turns on the setting.

Working with Buzzword®
In the “Into the Wild” section, every review of an area destination includes a small table listing
the area’s contact information, activities, web address, and other information. To streamline
the workflow and ensure Chicago Wilderness can access the most up-to-date information from
these local attractions, Robert uses Buzzword, the web-based collaborative word processor
that’s part of Acrobat.com. He has already created a table in the Buzzword document he
shared with the Goose Lake staff for them to update as necessary. Now he imports that table

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

11

directly into the layout and then uses the InCopy table features and table styles to format the
plain table.

Easy access to shared Buzzword files (left) allows InCopy users to collaborate online and then bring the data into
the local workflow. Powerful table features help users convert raw data into elegantly formatted tables (center).
Settings for stroke color, alternating background fills, and text styles can be specified in a table style (right) and
applied with a single click.

Finally, when he has completed his review of the Goose Lake Prairie nature reserve, he saves
the InCopy document into a folder, called “Incoming Copy,” that Peter (the designer) created
on the server. It holds new stories that are ready to be placed into the InDesign layout.
Placing a standalone InCopy file in an InDesign layout
Peter begins working on the layout of the upcoming issue. He adds pages for the “Into the
Wild” section and places Robert’s ICML file into text frames on the Goose Lake Prairie review
spread, which automatically links the frame to the ICML file. Peter continues to flow the story,
threading the text from one frame to the next. Robert had already formatted the text with the
styles he’d imported and matched the column width, so it fits perfectly. Peter cuts the table
from the story flow and pastes it into a new text frame so he can position it elsewhere on the
spread. He then adds images and illustrations to the article.

InCopy or “InPhoto”?
Even with the restriction of not being able to
reposition or resize image frames, InCopy users
have a number of options when editing the
contents of those frames, assuming the designer
exported them to InCopy format (otherwise, all
images are read-only in InCopy).
After checking out an image frame in the layout,
InCopy users can scale the image contents to
adjust the crop. They can rotate, shear, and flip
the image inside the frame, and if it’s a layered
PSD, PDF, or AI file, they can change which image
layers are visible. Editors can modify the image
itself if they have the right software installed or
even import a different image, replacing the one
in the frame, using the File > Place command.
Some publishers have found it helpful to install
InCopy CC on their photo editors’ workstations.
Designers create InCopy assignments composed
of placeholder image frames, allowing photo
editors to work with images in the layout, just as
editors work with text.

Robert’s text, flowed into the InDesign layout, fits perfectly. While it’s not required that writers apply formatting
to InCopy text—they can leave that task to the designer—doing so helps them accurately gauge copyfit and
streamlines the production workflow.

Peter knows Robert will need to review the complete article, so he creates an InCopy
assignment that includes the main story as well as the title, table, images, and captions. After
InDesign saves the assignment and the new linked content files to the project folder on the
server, Peter notifies Robert that the layout is ready for him to review.
Robert opens the new assignment, checks out the content, and makes minor line-break
adjustments to smooth the rag of the text that wraps around the images.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

12

FOR MORE INFORMATION

• InCopy CC free trial and documentation
—Download a free trial of InCopy CC for
Mac or Windows from the Adobe website.
Free trials are fully enabled for 30 days and
come with full documenta-tion built into
the program’s Help files.

Working with images in InCopy
At Chicago Wilderness, writers and editors have some control over the images that accompany
their stories. Knowing this, Peter made sure to export the inline images he had placed to
InCopy format and include them in the assignment so that Robert could make minor
adjustments to them. InCopy users cannot modify image frames, just image contents.

• InDesign CC: Collaborative Workflows

with InCopy CC—Purchase on DVD or
view online this comprehensive video tutorial series (over eight hours) authored by
independent InCopy trainer and consultant
Anne-Marie Concepción, at www.lynda.com.

• InCopyFlow—View a free monthly e-zine
of InCopy workflow tips, techniques, news,
and reviews for editors and designers who
collaborate in the workflow. Sign up at
www.incopysecrets.com/incopyflow.

After checking out the content, Robert uses the Position tool in InCopy to select the inline graphic and move it
around in its frame. He uses the Transform commands for more control or to quickly flip the image’s horizontal
orientation, as shown here.

When Robert is satisfied with the Goose Lake Prairie spread, he checks the files back in so that
Peter can assign them to Gina for copyediting and proofreading.
The results: By using InCopy CC, writers and editors can work ahead of the publication
schedule. Robert’s preparatory work in styling and copyfitting his standalone Goose Lake
Prairie review enabled the team to skip a number of proofing rounds that would normally be
required in a traditional, linear workflow.

Summary
For thousands of small to midsize editorial workgroups, the basic InCopy CC / InDesign CC
workflow enables tight collaboration, accurate page visualization, and significantly enhanced
productivity. It provides many of the efficiencies of high-end editorial systems at a fraction of
the cost and without imposing the strict procedures they demand.
Whether you work on the editorial, design, or business side of publishing, and whether you
publish books, magazines, newspapers, catalogs, brochures, or nearly anything else, if you’re
looking for a flexible, streamlined workflow solution for your publishing team, we encourage
you to learn more about integrating InCopy with your workflow. Visit www.adobe.com/
products/incopy for detailed product information or to download a 30-day trial version of
InCopy CC and InDesign CC.

Contact us for your InDesign and InCopy training:

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

13

Appendix A: InCopy CC and InDesign CC workflow features
Parallel collaborative workflow
Feature

Description

Email-based assignments

Easily assign stories and graphics as a single assignment
package to send to any external contributor via email.
The package contains all information needed to update
the layout with the added or edited content.

Automated file management Create and edit assignments without worrying about

the location of the files in the assignment. Creating an
assignment auto-creates a folder that holds the assignment’s stories and graphics. Moving an article to a
different assignment automatically moves the article’s
file to the appropriate folder.

Assignments panel

The Assignments panel is the hub of the InDesign and
InCopy workflow. View and manage the status of assignments, arrange story order, select multiple items, and
unlink stories in one central location. Update assignments to make sure the assignments represent the latest
changes not only to text but to the layout as well.

Save story order

Change the sequence of stories in an assignment to
match an organization’s working style.

Track Changes
(ENHANCED)

Track changes to text for improved editorial control and
collaboration. View all edits made to a story by an InDesign or InCopy user, and accept or reject any edit as you
review the text, individually or by user. Print the trackedchanges markup.

Inline editorial notes

Improve collaboration with inline notes that maintain
their position within the text and are visible in both
InCopy and InDesign.

Flexible graphics placement

Easily place, scale, crop, and rotate images and artwork, including inline graphics, in frames assigned to
editorial staff.

Adobe Mini Bridge
(NEW)

Navigate your system and preview page thumbnails of
InDesign layout files. Drag and drop files from Adobe
Bridge into Layout view easily and efficiently.

Integration with
Adobe Bridge CC

Browse, organize, label, and preview InCopy documents.
Search for files using metadata and keywords.

Output to print or
Adobe PDF

Print from InCopy CC to edit hard copy or export one
or more stories at a time to Adobe PDF, setting options
such as font subsetting or including accurate line endings, inline notes, tracked-changes markup, and styles.

Page visualization
Layout, Story, and Galley
views

Edit copy in the view that best fits the current task. Layout view shows you exactly how stories appear in the
InDesign layout and allows you to edit or write in context. Story view displays text in a pure word processing
view. Galley view includes line numbers and provides
accurate story and line breaks.

Instant layout refresh

Refresh the Layout view whenever your designer sends
you design changes for reference as you edit.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

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Standalone copyfit

Begin assigning or writing copyfitted text as soon
as available space is known, even before pages are
designed. Define a copyfit area by specifying a column
width, column depth, and available styles.

Copyfit status indicator

Color-coded feedback via the Copyfit Info toolbar
provides up-to-the-minute feedback on copy length.

Multiple measurement units

Multiple measurement units include agates for
newspaper publishing.

Vertical depth ruler

Budget space for stories more accurately with the vertical depth ruler, located in the margin of the Story and
Galley views, which reports a story’s depth using the
active unit of measure.

Power zoom

Use the Hand tool in “patient user mode” to zoom out
by simply holding down your mouse button. Continue to
hold, and you can move the zoom-area indicator across
pages. Release, and the view returns to your original
zoom level in the new location. Increase or decrease the
zoom percentage using the Up and Down Arrow keys.

Editorial productivity
Task-based workspaces

Work quickly with established task-based workspaces
that unclutter your screen and present only the keyboard
shortcuts, menu commands, and panel arrangements
that are best for the job at hand. You can also easily
customize your own menus and workspaces that can be
shared and saved.

Customizable menus

Hide and colorize menu items to streamline workflows
and simplify menus for more direct access to the commands you use most. Save these settings as part of a
custom workspace.

Text import/export from
Buzzword (NEW)

Import and optionally link to the files on Buzzword, the
web-based collaborative word processor that is part of
Acrobat.com. Export to a new Buzzword file to share
InCopy stories with online collaboraters.

Text import from Word and
Excel

Adapt the formatting of diverse Word and Excel documents as you import. Map Word styles to InCopy styles,
and import or paste Excel spreadsheets as tables.

Text variables

Simplify and automate the use of repeating elements
such as running headers, footers, product names, and
date stamps. Modifying a text variable updates all
instances of the variable throughout a document.

Conditional text

Take advantage of conditional text to easily deliver
multiple versions of a document from a single InCopy
CC file. Build student/teacher textbook editions, multilanguage publications, or documents customized for
print, web, and mobile viewing by creating conditions,
applying them to text, and quickly hiding content without relying on layers.

Cross-references

Simplify the writing and production of long documents
with the ability to create cross-references that update as
content changes or moves within a document.

Object-level Layers panel
(ENHANCED)

Make complex layouts easier to edit in Layout view with
the redesigned Layers panel. Temporarily hide and show
individual stories and objects with a simple click, even if
they’re on the same layer.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

15

Customizable Links panel

Use the Links panel to find, sort, manage, and organize all placed files in your InCopy CC documents and
assignments. Click on thumbnail images of files to view
detailed information such as date created, date modified, and who edited last. Choose which attributes and
metadata you would like listed in the panel.

GREP styles

Automatically apply character styles to text that matches
a pattern by using a GREP expression specified in the
paragraph style.

Nested styles

Use nested styles to dynamically apply complex character formatting to ranges of text within a paragraph,
including individual lines of text. Formatting remains
unchanged when text is edited.

Support for spread rotation

Easily edit content that appears in a nonhorizontal
alignment thanks to support for rotation of spreads in
90-degree increments. Spread rotation established in
InDesign CC is maintained in InCopy CC.

Support for mixed page
sizes (NEW)

View and edit content in layouts with mixed page sizes.
Mixed-page-size documents are set up by the InDesign
CC user and are fully accessible by InCopy CC users.

Single-page spreads

Create documents that include single-page spreads for
greater time savings and more workflow flexibility when
composing and editing content.

Edit Original

Choose which application to use to edit a placed item
instead of relying on the operating system to default to
the appropriate program.

Ruler origin on the spine

Correctly place the ruler’s zero position of X at the spine
of your document so that the X values are positive for
right-sided pages and negative for left-sided pages when
Facing Pages is enabled.

Support for anchored
objects

Anchored objects travel intelligently with a story as text
flow changes. Edit content such as sidebars and callouts
that maintain position relative to a line or block of text.

Text macros

Accelerate the entry of boilerplate text and other
frequently used words and phrases. Type a short combination of letters, and the shortcut automatically expands
to the entire word or phrase.

Powerful Find/Change

Quickly change text, text formatting, and object attributes in documents of any length. Customize the scope
of a search to include master pages, footnotes, and
locked or hidden layers. Save find/change queries for
sharing and instant reuse. Speed up complex searches by
running one search using GREP, instead of running multiple conventional searches.

Dynamic spelling

Flag misspellings, repeated words, and capitalization
errors with inline markup as you type. Link specific text
or styles to one of over 30 language dictionaries for foreign language spell-checking and hyphenation rules.

Built-in thesaurus

Use the Thesaurus panel to quickly look up synonyms,
antonyms, and related words. A selected word is automatically loaded when the Thesaurus panel is open to
help you find related words and phrases without delay.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

16

Advanced bullets and
numbering

Make quick work of lists and numbered sequences,
including figure numbers and advanced hierarchical
sequences. Include bullet and number formatting in
styles for easy global updates. Import bullets or numbering from Word documents. Use advanced hierarchical
numbering, and continue the sequence over paragraphs
that you don’t want to number.

All-language user
dictionaries

Add custom words, names, or phrases to a user dictionary; all languages will treat the terms as correctly spelled.

Robust footnotes

Create footnotes or import Word text with footnotes
preserved. In Story and Galley view, footnotes appear
inline, adjacent to the footnote reference, for easy
editing.

Robust table creation and
formatting

Quickly create tables from scratch, import styled Word
and Excel tables directly, or turn tab-delimited text files
into tables. Format tables efficiently and consistently
with table styles.

Table editing in Story and
Galley views

Edit table content directly within the text flow in both
Story and Galley views so you can seamlessly correct
overset text without impacting table design.

Change tracking in tables

Speed up document reviews with the ability to track
changes in tables. View changes to table content directly
within your InCopy CC document without relying on
hard-copy proofs.

Notes in tables

Add inline notes directly to table cells. Notes may contain alternate text, writer-editor communications, and
other annotations. Easily add, delete, hide, show, and
navigate among notes in tables using the Notes panel.

Easy hyperlink creation

Create compelling interactive documents with hyperlinks that navigate to external URLs, link to files with
more information, jump to a section of a page within the
same document, and more. Use the Hyperlinks panel
to quickly insert hyperlinks directly into text, and verify
your hyperlinks directly within InCopy CC.

Multiple undo/redo

Step through your edits backward or forward in time.
Undo/redo steps are unlimited within the current
session.

Position markers

Use position markers to quickly jump back and forth
between specific positions in your story without tedious
scrolling and searching.

Professional typography

Apply a wide range of precise typographic adjustments
such as leading, letter spacing, and paragraph spacing.
Use OpenType® fonts and Unicode character encoding,
and easily insert glyphs by using the Glyphs panel.

Powerful styles

Create and easily update paragraphs, characters, objects,
tables, and table cell styles for improved graphic and
typographical consistency. Use style groups to simplify
and organize long style lists.

Selective style import

Selectively choose which paragraph and character styles
to import from other documents, and easily specify how
InCopy CC handles style-name conflicts.

Text import from Word
and Excel

Adapt the formatting of diverse Word and Excel documents as you import. Map Word styles to InCopy styles,
and import or paste Excel spreadsheets as tables.

Copy and paste formatting
(NEW)

Format text easily and intuitively by picking up attributes
from source text and applying the same to target text
with the Eyedropper tool. Customize how the tool works
with simple checkboxes for each formatting attribute.
Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

17

Quick Apply

Gain instant access to menu commands, styles, scripts,
and text variables without leaving the keyboard for
faster text formatting and editing.

Glyphs panel

Create typographically sophisticated documents with
the help of the Glyphs panel. Use filters and the Recently
Used area to streamline browsing and inserting glyphs
from any font. Build and share glyph sets tailored to your
workgroup’s needs.

Expanded scripting support

Use scripts to automate tedious work. Scripts can be
created with JavaScript, AppleScript, or VBScript. Attach
scripts to menu commands that run when the command
is selected, or launch a script from the Scripts panel. Support for compiled JavaScript protects your investment in
building scripts.

Robust XML support

Open, create, and modify structured XML text and tables
within your publishing workflow.

ICML

ICML (InCopy Markup Language), an XML-based file format, allows developers to programmatically assemble
and disassemble InCopy documents using standard XML
tools and without having to open binary InCopy files.

Apple Multi-Touch gesture
support

Take advantage of support for Multi-Touch trackpad gestures on Apple MacBook Pro and MacBook Air laptops.
Pinch to zoom in on objects and pages, swipe to turn
pages, and rotate to change the orientation of objects
and spreads.

Adobe InCopy CC Workflow Guide

18

Appendix B: InCopy CC and MS Word integration features
Import word processing documents into InCopy— Import plain text, Rich Text Format (RTF), or
Microsoft Word files into checked-out frames in the layout. Use controls in the Import Options
dialog box to customize the conversion of text formatting, tables, and page breaks. Save
settings in a preset for future use.

To facilitate working with outside contributors, InCopy CC makes it easy to import and convert the
formatting in Word documents.

Share InCopy stories with Word users—Export any story in a layout or assignment to RTF,
which is compatible with Word, to share with outside authors who aren’t part of the workflow.
Place incoming RTF files into checked-out layout stories.
Open text files directly in InCopy—Open Microsoft Word (DOC and DOCX) files, ASCII (TXT)
files, and RTF files using the File > Open command in InCopy. When a file is opened, a
conversion dialog box appears with options dependent on the file type. After you choose
options and click OK, files are converted to standalone InCopy (ICML) files.
Import selected text from Word—Drag and drop or copy and paste text selections from a
Microsoft Word document directly into an InCopy story. Choose whether or not InCopy should
retain the original formatting (via the Preferences dialog box in InCopy).

Adobe Systems Incorporated • 345 Park Avenue,
San Jose, CA 95110-2704 USA • www.adobe.com

Adobe Systems Incorporated
345 Park Avenue
San Jose, CA 95110-2704
USA
www.adobe.com

Adobe, the Adobe logo, Acrobat, Buzzword, InCopy, and InDesign are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the
United States and/or other countries. Apple, Mac, and Mac OS are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. OpenType and
Windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other trademarks are
the property of their respective owners.
© 2012 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. Printed in the USA. 9/12



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History Instance ID             : xmp.iid:3932DDFFA82068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:3A32DDFFA82068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:FEE678A1AA2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:FFE678A1AA2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:A34A1DADAA2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:A44A1DADAA2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:82E1F0E3AB2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:B3A1DD1DAC2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:5B40B9B2AC2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:E796A432AD2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:3BA8AFFBAD2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:DFB34144AE2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:823295A0AE2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:26BB8F23AF2068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:BA90EE3EB22068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:45EE2695B22068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:8A8F9DBEB22068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:8B8F9DBEB22068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:8C8F9DBEB22068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:916CD05AB52068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:341A69ACB52068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:351A69ACB52068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:361A69ACB52068118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:8B3CC129082168118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:5DF608FE0A2168118C14F593926C99F8, xmp.iid:EED31F74072068118C14842DE6648D8B, xmp.iid:5870FA88092068118C14842DE6648D8B, xmp.iid:62560AE20A2068118C14842DE6648D8B, xmp.iid:9253D3960B2068118083F1C5C45D002B, xmp.iid:407E2DA2092068118C1486064C9346C7, xmp.iid:7EB873800D2068118C1486064C9346C7, xmp.iid:6B4023740720681180838BE48E7BE7C0, xmp.iid:6EF470A20720681180838BE48E7BE7C0, xmp.iid:44F735EA2820681188C68CADD4B604DC, xmp.iid:8793DE572A20681188C68CADD4B604DC, xmp.iid:69CB9C004420681188C68CADD4B604DC, xmp.iid:F77F1174072068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:CD981C74072068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:CE981C74072068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:4335A8A7132068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:A97A00851A2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:5C310B371C2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:16E19B6E1D2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:7905714C242068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:D3D2AEE2242068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:7C1A74B42E2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:99A95F64382068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:7EA277E4392068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:02F5D1F43A2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:40D64D823E2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:7F6B7AA9472068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:5566DADD4A2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:2ECEBED14D2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:D68489D84E2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:605E2A7A522068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:A913D4CA522068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:83CF8440542068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:6DCE3A5F542068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:84A4988A542068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:FF9A66FD5B2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:446DCDB45D2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:088D6F696C2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:46311AAD6D2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:65ECB7746F2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:6F6792A56F2068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:16A95B3C722068118C14C58B0AC6BC43, xmp.iid:50F71AAFCD2068118C149B3672608714, xmp.iid:04A72B7F1E2168118C149B3672608714, xmp.iid:81FF598F1E2168118C149B3672608714, xmp.iid:F7C5337407206811871FDA586AA29B8F, xmp.iid:488C7B8807206811871FDA586AA29B8F, xmp.iid:3AC3ECAF58206811871FDA586AA29B8F, xmp.iid:2BC8CFDB58206811871FDA586AA29B8F, xmp.iid:F77F1174072068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:58BB1F74072068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:A06F6A94082068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:BB137C16102068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:9EB0EADF112068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:680B7081152068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:370B72C8162068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:47D3A113182068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:4A599D7A182068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:A436E6B2182068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:E5072F11192068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:F1C19B1D1A2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:AAA4FBFD1A2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:6C9C96E81B2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:E14FC4623D2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:02EDF8FD402068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:4E9E8CBA422068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:798B1059442068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:803B196F462068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:0AFB4CAE472068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:EFAED5AD492068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:B9AF30264B2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:707A22CB4B2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:525D6B574C2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:C05E8B844C2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:C15E8B844C2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:C25E8B844C2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:03A52C3D4D2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:D1462F514D2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:D0DE289D4D2068118083BDEF3E2DF059, xmp.iid:1A35E34F4E2068118083BDEF3E2DF059
History When                    : 2010:07:10 10:52:42-05:00, 2010:07:10 10:52:42-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:04:23-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:04:42-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:04:42-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:06:11-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:13:24-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:15:01-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:19:11-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:22:45-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:28:23-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:30:24-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:32:59-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:36:39-05:00, 2010:07:10 11:58:53-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:01:18-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:02:28-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:04:37-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:15:26-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:21:09-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:23:26-05:00, 2010:07:10 12:23:26-05:00, 2010:07:11 14:43:30-05:00, 2010:07:11 14:48:27-05:00, 2010:07:11 15:08:42-05:00, 2010:07:11 15:36:53-05:00, 2010:07:11 15:51:47-05:00, 2010:07:11 16:01:26-05:00, 2010:07:14 17:21:03-05:00, 2010:07:14 17:40:02-05:00, 2010:07:14 18:07:43-05:00, 2010:07:15 15:40-05:00, 2010:07:15 15:41:18-05:00, 2010:08:15 15:04:16-05:00, 2010:08:15 15:04:16-05:00, 2010:08:15 18:07:57-05:00, 2010:08:24 08:48:30-05:00, 2010:08:24 08:48:30-05:00, 2010:08:24 10:13:05-05:00, 2010:08:24 10:15:50-05:00, 2010:08:24 11:04:59-05:00, 2010:08:24 11:17:07-05:00, 2010:08:24 11:25:50-05:00, 2010:08:24 12:14:59-05:00, 2010:08:24 12:19:11-05:00, 2010:08:24 13:29:28-05:00, 2010:08:24 14:38:49-05:00, 2010:08:24 14:49:33-05:00, 2010:08:24 14:57:10-05:00, 2010:08:24 15:22:36-05:00, 2010:08:24 16:28:07-05:00, 2010:08:24 16:51:04-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:12:12-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:19:33-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:45:33-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:47:48-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:58:15-05:00, 2010:08:24 17:59:06-05:00, 2010:08:24 18:00:19-05:00, 2010:08:24 18:53:38-05:00, 2010:08:24 19:05:56-05:00, 2010:08:24 20:51:11-05:00, 2010:08:24 21:00:15-05:00, 2010:08:24 21:12:59-05:00, 2010:08:24 21:14:21-05:00, 2010:08:24 21:32:53-05:00, 2010:08:31 15:46:34-05:00, 2010:08:31 15:46:34-05:00, 2010:08:31 15:47:01-05:00, 2010:09:26 12:58:47-05:00, 2010:09:26 12:59:21-05:00, 2010:09:26 23:42:30-05:00, 2010:09:26 23:43:44-05:00, 2010:09:28 07:23:45-05:00, 2010:09:28 07:23:46-05:00, 2010:09:28 07:31:49-05:00, 2010:09:28 08:25:34-05:00, 2010:09:28 08:38:21-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:04:21-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:13:29-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:22:45-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:25:38-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:27:12-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:29:51-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:37:21-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:43:37-05:00, 2010:09:28 09:50:11-05:00, 2010:09:28 13:49:49-05:00, 2010:09:28 14:15:38-05:00, 2010:09:28 14:28:04-05:00, 2010:09:28 14:39:40-05:00, 2010:09:28 14:54:36-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:03:31-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:17:49-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:28:21-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:32:58-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:36:53-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:38:09-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:38:17-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:42:22-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:43:18-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:43:52-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:45:59-05:00, 2010:09:28 15:50:59-05:00
History Software Agent          : Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0, Adobe InDesign 7.0
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Format                          : application/pdf
Title                           : Adobe InCopy CC Workflow
Creator                         : Adobe Systems, Inc.
Rights                          : Copyright 2010 Adobe Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Description                     : InCopy white paper updated for InCopy CC
Doc Change Count                : 21008
Web Statement                   : http://www.adobe.com
Producer                        : Adobe PDF Library 9.9
Trapped                         : False
Page Layout                     : OneColumn
Page Mode                       : UseOutlines
Page Count                      : 19
EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools

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