Authors' Guidelines:
Selecting high interest subjects
Another important responsibility of an editorial staff is the selection
of articles with the greatest reader appeal. This largely determines
their reader acceptance, which in turn decides whether the editors
have succeeded or failed. WORLD OIL devotes a great deal of attention
to this phase.
Before acceptance for publication, every WORLD OIL article must
pass rigid scrutiny to determine its reader appeal. The amount of
reader interest determines the value of all articles. If twice as
many readers are likely to be interested in one article, it is twice
as valuable as another article with half as much reader appeal,
unless there are other important considerations involved.
Helpful Articles Are Best
Long experience in the publishing business has demonstrated that
articles which tell how to perform an operation or job better or
more efficiently, or how to solve some operating problem have the
highest reader interest.
Therefore, WORLD OIL's editorial aim is the publication of articles
that will help people in the industry find, drill for or produce
oil and gas. This may be in the form of faster drilling, reduced
costs, recovery of more oil, etc. Such articles promise that the
reader will benefit from reading the article. This is the reason
business publications or company reports are read in the first place.
Because readers are seeking to learn something that will help them,
articles that discuss new developments and new techniques have much
higher reader interest than do articles that review well-known facts
and practices. Many readers are prone to flip the page as soon as
they discover an article or report is reviewing things they already
know.
Determining Reader Interest
Extensive reader interest studies have made it possible for WORLD
OIL to establish a rather precise yardstick for evaluating the reading
interest on almost any subject related to the exploration-drilling-producing
branch of the industry.
Basic Readership Test
WORLD OIL editors judge each article on the basis of how many of
the following four basic questions can be answered in the affirmative:
- Will this article help to improve the operations of an oil or
gas company, individual operator or contractor?
- Will this article help a company, individual operator or contractor
to arrive at a decision or formulate a policy?
- Will this article be believed? Do the claims that it
makes for improvement, cost savings, etc., come from the
company that markets it, or from a company that has used
it, or both?
- Will this article carry enough general interest to cause a large
number of subscribers (at least half) to want to read it purely
from an interest standpoint?
Each article must answer at least one of these questions in the
affirmative to warrant consideration for publication.
A decision by the editors to approve a proposed article merely
means that an article on the subject is deemed to have sufficient
reader interest to warrant its preparation. Approval is only a green
light for the preparation of the article.
Finished manuscripts must still measure up to expectations before
the article is finally accepted for publication. This is true even
if one of our editors has asked you to prepare an article.
To accept an article without reading it in the final form would
be like signing a contract without studying its entire contents.
Not only must the subject matter be of sufficiently high interest
and value, but the article also must be prepared in a fashion that
will attract and hold reader attention. Otherwise, it may be rejected
for publication, or major revisions may be necessary before it can
be accepted.
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