How do I attract and publish high quality content?

Modified on Mon, 8 Jul at 5:11 PM

Below are some ideas on encouraging submissions to your journal which you may like to discuss with your Sage editor. Please reach out to your Publishing Editor for further discussion. 

  • Make use of your Editorial Board: Editorial board members should be encouraged to contribute articles to the journal, either by submitting their own work (subject to rigorous peer-review) or soliciting articles from their colleagues. See our guide on Making the Most of Your Editorial Board. Marketing tools, such as journal business cards and flyers, may be provided if needed. 

  • Appoint a Reviews Editor: Review papers often attract more citations than regular articles. If appropriate, consider appointing a dedicated Reviews Editor to solicit review articles for the journal.

  • Special Issues: Special issues on hot topics can attract new authors and readers and are an opportunity to invite prominent scholars in the field to guest edit. Please see Editor guidance on publishing special issues.

  • Conferences: Events and conferences can generate ideas for articles and provide networking opportunities to expand your base of reviewers and contributors. Consider running a writing workshop or arranging a “meet the editor” session. Please note that we cannot accept material that has already been published; any article submitted to the journal should be substantially different from the version published in the conference proceedings. For more information on our publication policy, please visit our Sage Editorial Publishing Policies page.

  • Providing excellent author services: If an author has a positive experience, they are more likely to submit again, even if their paper is rejected. Timely responses to inquiries, quick review decisions, and constructive feedback from reviewers can contribute to a positive experience. You might like to let authors know if their article is among the journal’s most downloaded or cited and encourage them to submit other articles. Individual article downloads and Altmetric scores are listed online. Your Sage Editor can provide additional article download and citation data. 

  • Is your Aims and Scope up to date? Review your Aims and Scope statement regularly to ensure it accurately reflects research currently published in the journal. Make sure your instructions to authors or submission guidelines are clear and unambiguous. Publish your peer review policy on your journal website to reassure potential authors of the journal’s rigor and quality.

  • Encourage authors to use ORCID: ORCID provides a unique and persistent digital identifier that distinguishes researchers from every other researcher, even those who share the same name, and, through integration in key research workflows such as manuscript and grant submission, supports automated linkages between researchers and their professional activities, ensuring that their work is recognized. Sage is a supporting member of ORCID and encourage all authors and co-authors to link their ORCIDs to their accounts in our online peer review platforms. We collect ORCID iDs during the manuscript submission process and an author’s ORCID iD then becomes part of their accepted publication’s metadata, making their work attributable to them and only them. The author’s ORCID iD is published with their article so that fellow researchers reading their work can link to their ORCID profile and from there link to their other publications. Visit our Sage ORCID homepage to learn more.

We also encourage you to explore the Journal Editor Gateway for valuable information and resources on your role as a Sage journal Editor.

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