Skip to main content
Health E-Learning and Media Team

Academic Writing for Publication

Menu
56% Complete

7. Maximise your publication success

Here are a few pointers on organising your writing to produce the manuscript that meets the journal's guidelines:

  1. Make a checklist of relevant points on how to organise a manuscript, for example: word count, submission deadline.
  2. Compare your checklist with the one provided (right).
  3. In the future, once you have identified a specific journal that is relevant for your research and accredited by your institution (if applicable), refine this checklist against the specific journal requirements. Most journals - local, national, international - have a homepage with specific guidelines for manuscript/paper submission. If not, make enquiries about their guidelines.

Developing your academic writing and publishing your manuscripts is important in building your academic career, however, we also use academic writing for other purposes too.

Top tips: "Organise the text based on journal standards/guidelines, each journal has its own rules."

Top tips: "Getting small things like referencing and abbreviations as well as bigger things like structure right from the beginning, can save you a lot of time."

Suggested generic checklist (please always check specific journal guidelines)
  • manuscript categories (e.g. original article; review article; commentary)
  • word count
  • structure (abstract, keywords, introduction, etc.)
  • referencing style
  • style and formatting details
  • conflict of interest
  • submission deadline
  • author information
  • tables, figure legends, appendices
  • supporting information

Make a checklist of relevant points.


 
Document Top