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Once a manuscript passes peer review and is accepted for publication, it enters the final stages of the editorial workflow—Copyediting and Production. These stages transform a raw accepted manuscript into a polished, professionally formatted article ready for readers. This guide explains both stages in detail, covering the roles involved, the tasks required, and how to navigate OJS to move articles from acceptance to publication.
After acceptance, manuscripts pass through two stages before publication:
Copyediting: The manuscript undergoes language editing, style corrections, and formatting checks. This stage ensures the content is clear, consistent, and adheres to journal standards.
Production: Copyedited files are converted into final publication formats (galleys), proofread, and scheduled for publication in a journal issue.
While these stages have distinct purposes, smaller journals may combine them or have the same person handle both. OJS accommodates various workflow configurations.
Responsible for improving manuscript quality by:
Responsible for creating publication-ready files by:
Performs final quality checks by:
Participates in final stages by:
Note: In many journals, the Editor, Section Editor, or Journal Manager handles copyediting and production tasks directly. OJS is flexible enough to accommodate various staffing arrangements.
Struggling with Production Backlogs?
Production can become a bottleneck for many journals. We help optimize your OJS workflow, configure efficient processes, and can assist with ongoing production support for galley creation and publication.
When an editor accepts a manuscript and clicks "Send to Copyediting," the submission enters the Copyediting stage.
The Copyediting stage displays:
Draft Files: The accepted manuscript files that need copyediting. These are the files the copyeditor will download and work on.
Copyedited Files: Where copyeditors upload their edited versions.
Copyediting Discussions: Communication panel for all participants in this stage.
Participants: Shows who's assigned to this stage (editors, copyeditors, authors).
Use the notification email or Copyediting Discussions to communicate:
Work outside OJS using your preferred editing tools (Microsoft Word, etc.). Focus on:
Track Changes: Use your word processor's Track Changes feature so authors can see modifications. This is especially important for substantive edits.
Journals typically involve authors in reviewing copyedits:
When copyediting is complete and approved:
The submission now moves to the Production stage.
The Production stage is where copyedited manuscripts become published articles. This involves creating galleys (final publication files) and scheduling the article for publication.
The Production stage displays:
Production Ready Files: Copyedited files ready for conversion to galleys.
Galleys: Final publication files (PDF, HTML, etc.).
Production Discussions: Communication panel for production participants.
Participants: Layout editors, proofreaders, and others involved in production.
Important: OJS does not automatically convert Word documents to PDF or HTML. You need external tools:
For PDF Galleys:
For HTML Galleys:
For XML Galleys (JATS):
Repeat for each galley format (PDF, HTML, etc.).
If the article includes supplementary files:
Use Production Discussions to inform the editor that galleys are ready for review.
Before publication, galleys should be proofread to catch any remaining errors.
To involve the author:
Authors should check:
If corrections are needed:
Need Help with Journal Production?
From galley creation to DOI registration, production involves many technical steps. We provide comprehensive journal production support, including PDF/HTML galley creation, OJS configuration, and indexing setup.
Once galleys are finalized and approved, the article is ready for publication.
Before scheduling, verify the article metadata is complete and accurate:
If your journal uses DOIs (Digital Object Identifiers):
Status after scheduling: The article is now "Scheduled" and will appear in the Table of Contents for that issue. It will be published when the issue is published.
Publishing an Entire Issue:
Publishing to a Published Issue (Rolling Publication):
If you schedule an article to an already-published issue, it publishes immediately. This is useful for continuous/rolling publication models.
After publication:
Articles are published within issues. Here's how to manage them:
Within an issue, you can:
You can also create issue-level galleys (e.g., a full-issue PDF):
What if you need to make changes after publication?
For small fixes (typos, formatting):
For significant changes requiring a new version:
Versioning is useful for:
Copyediting:
☐ Use a consistent style guide
☐ Track all changes for author review
☐ Verify reference formatting
☐ Check figures and tables
Galley Creation:
☐ Use consistent templates
☐ Create multiple formats (PDF at minimum)
☐ Test display on different devices
☐ Verify all content transferred correctly
Before Publication:
☐ Complete metadata verification
☐ Author approval of final galleys
☐ DOI assignment confirmed
☐ Issue properly configured
After Publication:
☐ DOI registered with Crossref
☐ Article accessible on website
☐ Authors notified
☐ Issue announced to readers
Problem: Uploaded galley doesn't appear or can't be downloaded.
Solution: Check file permissions, ensure the file isn't corrupted, try re-uploading, verify the component type is correct.
Problem: DOI not registering or showing errors.
Solution: Verify Crossref plugin configuration, check metadata completeness, ensure credentials are correct, contact Crossref support if needed.
Problem: Scheduled article doesn't show in the issue.
Solution: Verify the article is scheduled (not just in production), check the issue is the correct one, ensure galleys are uploaded.
Problem: Articles backing up in production.
Solution: Establish regular production schedules, consider outsourcing galley creation, use templates to speed up formatting, assign dedicated production staff.
Altechmind Technologies provides end-to-end support for journal production—from OJS configuration to galley creation and indexing setup. Let us handle the technical aspects so you can focus on quality content.
This guide is based on OJS 3.5 and applies to OJS 3.x installations. Production workflows may vary depending on your journal's specific configuration. For official documentation, visit the PKP Documentation Hub.