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Optimising with Translation Memory

The advantages of working with a Translation Memory (TM) cannot be overstated

Although a Translation Memory (TM) is useful for almost any type of non-literary translation, they tend to work best with texts which are to some degree repetitive, such as manuals, catalogues or legal documents. TMs enable a translator to be consistent in translating the same phrase the same way each time it occurs; this is extremely important in the case of technical documents, for example.

It also applies in the case of a Language Service Provider (LSP) which works regularly with the same clients. A TM tailored to that client will ensure that any translator who works on a document for them will use the same terminology (ie. product names and descriptions, industry terms, taglines, etc), even if there are two or more equally valid possible alternatives.

TMs are highly customisable, and the more they ‘learn’ about a particular client’s preferences, the more effective they are – in other words, the bigger they get, the better!

Crucially, if a TM system is used consistently on appropriate texts, it can save translators not inconsiderable time and effort. Imagine having to translate by hand the segment “the red house” in a 10,000 word document about new house-painting legislation – a TM reduces hugely the time this would otherwise take. This saving is, of course, passed on to customers.

One of the great beauties of a TM is that it extracts the text from the document, regardless of how that document is formatted, and reinserts the translation automatically. This means that translators can now forget about what was some years ago the great bane of a translator’s life, namely fiddling around with text boxes or poorly-formatted word processing files.

Integrating with DTP

Integrating Desktop Publishing and translation can be a hugely important aspect of the role of the modern translator, but, for a project in which this is not an issue, the TM neatly sidesteps what was a hassle-filled and time-consuming part of the translation process.

Quicksilver Translate’s integrated approach is an end-to-end process which consolidates all elements of a translation project into one continuous workflow. Combining DTP software and processes, with leading-edge translation software (CAT tools) — saving you time, money and hassle.

Updating Documents using a TM

There is another huge benefit of using a TM. A brochure, say, or a technical document, will not change significantly each time it is updated; a new product will be added, one taken away, some guidelines adapted to meet the latest legislation, but the document will not change fundamentally.

In the past, this fact was irrelevant, as one would have had to translate the entire thing from scratch, by hand, each time a new version was produced (even if the new version could be compared with the original). Not so with TM, where a customer will only end up paying for the translation of the changes made rather than the whole document.

They will pass the new version or update to their LSP who feeds it into the TM; of course, the TM will recognise the majority of segments as identical candidates, and the translator will only have to work on the small percentage of segments which have been changed, added or removed from the version that was translated in the first place.

This means very significant savings. If a company produces three or four versions of the same document each year, they could potentially save more than 50% on what they would have spent by choosing an LSP which didn’t use Translation Memory, and would have done the whole thing from scratch each time.

Find out more: Building a Retroactive Translation Memory

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