Scholastica announces Scholarly Journal Promotion 101, a new series of digital handbooks on scholarly journal promotion best practices. Get the first handbook - Twitter 101 for Journal Editors!
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Whether you have a journal management system or you're considering adopting one, this blog post will help you start thinking about how you can use software to keep your editorial team on track and save time.
One key promotion outlet often overlooked by journals, which is arguably more effective than the rest, is building an email list. Here are tips to get started.
Does your journal have clear ethical requirements for authors? Here are best practices your team can use to revisit and build upon existing policies.
While offering reviewers any form of guidance is better than none, being thorough and creating a reviewer checklist is by far the best way to help reviewers know the expectations of your journal.
Scholars as well as universities, research foundations, and government organizations, are encouraging journals to take steps to make their content more accessible and engaging. As a result, the notion of brand-name journals is changing.
The role of the journal editor is changing fast. What was once a job centered on managing peer review has evolved to include new steps to ensure journal articles reach their intended audience.
Despite some editors questioning the Web 2.0 transition, there are scholarly journals that have been successfully publishing solely online for years that have reaped many benefits as a result.
Rather than writing out every email by hand, wouldn't it be easier to automate recurring communication? You can, with the right peer review software.