Peer Review Process
Step 1 : Author should be registered and submit the complete manuscript in .doc or .docx format.
Step 2 : Manuscript submitted by registered author will be checked by Managing editor (may be rejected if not full filling the standard research criteria).
Step 3 : Submitted Manuscript will be assigned a manuscript number.
Step 4 : Peer review process will be started and manuscript will be send to two reviewers (manuscript may be rejected if reviewer comments are indicating the poor research quality).
Step 5 : Author/s will receive the manuscript with reviewers comment/s.
Step 6 : Author/s has to submit the revised manuscript to managing editor and manuscript checked by managing editor and one of the reviewers (may be rejected if not satisfying the reviewers queries).
Step 7 : Revised Manuscript will be accepted for publication.
Step 8 : Author/s should submit the manuscript handling/processing fee
Step 9 : Galley proof will be formed for the author/s approval and it will be send back to author/s.
Step 10 : Manuscript typesetting and final editing process will be started based on the author/s feedback.
Step 11 : Manuscript will be published after the final approval from the author/s.
Understand the journal peer review process and read our tips for revising your submission.
When you have submitted your paper or case study, up to three experts in the field will review it to provide validation, quality control and added value to you in the form of constructive feedback.
Double blind peer review
The most common form of peer review for our journals and case studies is “double blind”, which keeps the process as objective as possible. Reviewers are not aware of the author’s identity, and you will not know the identity of the reviewers.
Role of the journal editor
The editor decides whether your paper fits the aims and scope of the journal, then select the reviewers and guide the paper through several revision stages.
Role of the reviewer
Your reviewers will read your paper or case study and teaching note and provide the journal editor with detailed and useful comments.
The journal review process
Download and keep your step-by-step guide (PDF).
What do reviewers look for?
This will vary from title to title, for example a journal with a strong research focus will put more emphasis on research methodology, while journals publishing case studies will focus on the quality of the case and accompanying teaching note.
The questions editors ask reviewers
- Does the article or case study say something original? Does it add to the body of knowledge?
- If it is a case study, is this its first use?
- If it’s research, is the design, methodology, theoretical approach and critical review sound?
- Are the results well-presented and have they been correctly interpreted? Is the analysis sufficiently rigorous?
- Is the submission set in the context of the wider literature?
- Are there sufficient relevant citations?
- Are these well referenced and are other people's views credited?
- Is the submission accurate?
- Is any information missing or wrong?
- Does the title of the submission accurately reflect the contents?
- How useful would the submission be to a professional or student?
- Is it an example of “good practice”?
- If research-focused, could the study be replicated in other situations?
Tips for revising your submission
A reviewer may recommend that the editor immediately accepts or rejects a submission, or they may request revisions. We have developed some helpful tips to guide you through the revision process.
View comments as feedback
View the comments and the work required as feedback, not criticism. The peer review process is very likely double blind, so you don't know who your reviewers are, and they don't know who you are.
Take time to reflect
Put the comments to one side for a few days, then come back to them. You will be in a better frame of mind to appreciate exactly what is being said.
Agree a timescale
Agree a timescale with the editor to carry out the revisions, including gathering more data or reading new literature, if required We suggest 30 days for minor revisions and 90 days to resubmit for major revisions.
Get clarity on reviewer comments
Clarify any ambiguity or contradiction in the reviewers' comments.
Plan your amendments
Decide the order in which you tackle the amendments. You might want to work through your submission chronologically, by reviewer, or perhaps attempt the more minor revisions first.
Proofread your revised work
Once you have revised your submission, proofread and spell check it again. Carefully!
Summarise your amendments
Write a covering letter to the editor, stating what you have done for each reviewer, and if you haven't done what the reviewers requested, provide detailed reasons why not.
Thank your reviewers
Thank your reviewers for their positive comments and respond graciously to constructive feedback.
Once you have resubmitted your paper, it will be reassigned to the same reviewers to check whether their comments have been addressed. If sufficient improvements have been made, your paper will be accepted. If not, you may be asked to perform multiple revisions or have your paper withdrawn.
You will receive an email from the journal editor with the final decision. Once accepted, your paper will be processed by our in-house team.