jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • Advertise a Job
  • Recruiters
  • Your Account

  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

career-advice.jobs.ac.uk

Secondary Sidebar

jobs.ac.uk Career Advice

  • CV and Cover Letter Advice
    • CV Tips
    • Free CV Templates
    • Cover Letters with Examples
    • Personal Profiles
    • CV Resources
  • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
    • Jobseeking Tips
    • Academic Interviews
    • Professional Interviews
    • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
  • Career Development
    • Academic Careers
    • Research Careers
    • Career Progression Stories
    • Professional Careers
    • Working in Industry
    • Career Development Resources
    • Global Careers
    • Working From Home
  • Women in Higher Education
  • FE Career Advice
    • FE CV & Interview Tips
    • Working in FE
    • Managing your Career in FE
    • FE Jobs Profiles
  • Resources
    • Academic Case Studies
    • Professional Case Studies
    • Job Profiles
      • Biological Science Jobs
      • Health and Medical Jobs
      • Engineering and Technology Jobs
      • Computer Science Jobs
      • Physical and Environmental Science Jobs
      • Professional Service Jobs
        • Business Development Manager Jobs Profile
        • Chef Jobs Profile
        • Civil Service Jobs Profile
        • Email Marketing Jobs Profile
        • SEO Jobs Profile
    • Vlogs
  • Webinars
  • Country Profiles
    • Africa
      • Egypt
      • Ghana
      • Kenya
      • Nigeria
      • South Africa
    • Americas
      • Canada
      • United States of America
    • Asia
      • Bahrain
      • Brunei
      • China
      • Hong Kong
      • India
      • Japan
      • Kazakhstan
      • Malaysia
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Dubai
      • Singapore
      • South Korea
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Work in Vietnam – Country Profile
      • Work in Uzbekistan – Country Profile
    • Europe
      • Belgium
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Netherlands
      • Norway
      • Russia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • Oceania
      • Australia
      • New Zealand
  • PhD and Studentship Advice
    • PhD
    • Studentship Resources
    • Vlogs
  • Need help advertising a job?
  • About jobs.ac.uk
  • Ask A Professional
  • Academic Spotlight Interviews
  • Menu
    • CV and Cover Letter Advice
      • CV Tips
      • Free CV Templates
      • Cover Letters with Examples
      • Personal Profiles
      • CV Resources
    • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
      • Jobseeking Tips
      • Academic Interviews
      • Professional Interviews
      • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
    • Career Development
      • Academic Careers
      • Career Progression Stories
      • Research Careers
      • Professional Careers
      • Working in Industry
      • Career Development Resources
      • Global Careers
      • Working From Home
    • Women in Higher Education
    • FE Career Advice
      • FE CV & Interview Tips
      • Working in FE
      • Managing your Career in FE
      • FE Jobs Profiles
    • Resources
      • Academic Case Studies
      • Professional Case Studies
      • Interview questions tool
      • Vlogs
      • Job Profiles
        • Biological Science Jobs
        • Health and Medical Jobs
        • Engineering and Technology Jobs
        • Computer Science Jobs
        • Physical and Environmental Science Jobs
        • Professional Service Jobs
        • Civil Service jobs
    • Webinars
    • Country Profiles
      • Africa
        • Work in Egypt – Country Profile
        • Work in Ghana – Country Profile
        • Work in Kenya – Country Profile
        • Work in Nigeria – Country Profile
        • Work in South Africa – Country Profile
      • Americas
        • Work in Canada – Country Profile
        • Work in the United States of America – Country Profile
      • Asia
        • Work in Bahrain – Country Profile
        • Work in Brunei – Country Profile
        • Work in China – Country Profile
        • Work in Hong Kong – Country Profile
        • Work in India – Country Profile
        • Work in Japan – Country Profile
        • Work in Kazakhstan – Country Profile
        • Work in Malaysia – Country Profile
        • Work in Qatar – Country Profile
        • Work in Saudi Arabia – Country Profile
        • Work in Singapore – Country Profile
        • Work in South Korea – Country Profile
        • Work in Turkey – Country Profile
        • Work in United Arab Emirates – Country Profile
      • Dubai
      • Europe
        • Belgium Country Profile
        • Work in Denmark – Country Profile
        • Work in Finland – Country Profile
        • France Country Profile
        • Work in Germany – Country Profile
        • Work in Ireland – Country Profile
        • Work in Italy – Country Profile
        • Work in the Netherlands – Country Profile
        • Work in Norway – Country Profile
        • Work in Russia – Country Profile
        • Work in Spain – Country Profile
        • Work in Sweden – Country Profile
        • Work in Switzerland – Country Profile
        • Work in the United Kingdom – Country Profile
      • Oceania
        • Work in Australia – Country profile
        • Work in New Zealand – Country Profile
    • Studentship Advice
      • PhD
      • Studentship Resources
      • Vlogs
    • Need help advertising a job?
    • About jobs.ac.uk

Getting Published

getting published2

There has been a proliferation of options for would-be writers to be published in recent years due to the development of digital technology and social media platforms. Many publications are now both online as well as in hard copy, with others only accessible online. Whilst this offers more choice for those wanting to publish their work, it can be confusing and harder to decide where to target.

 This article discusses some key points about getting published, covering a range of possibilities, not just academic ones. Those considering publication will find advice here about options, tactics and strategies.

The key is how to take those practical steps that will move you from publishing ambitions to plans and tangible results.

1st Step- Self Reflection

  • Are you ready to write for publication?
  • Do you have previous publications? What and where?
  • Why do you want to publish anyway? Professional, personal reasons or a mix of these
  • What type of outputs do you have in mind?

You may be:

  • Focusing on getting academic work published, such as turning a thesis into a book and/or academic papers. This is important for anyone intent on an academic career
  • Considering non-academic writing to disseminate your research to wider and more diverse audiences
  • Aiming for both academic and non-academic publications
  • Planning to pursue writing as a career or as a secondary activity

Or you may just want to know a bit more about getting published. 

First, let’s consider turning a thesis into a book and/or articles

This entails moving from an academic product to a publishable one and the associated challenges.

Things to Do:

  • Identify and research the main publishers in your field both for books and journals
  • Identify and look at relevant books, conference paper collections, special journal editions and online journals
  • Make a list of target publishers/journals and read their submissions policies
  • Consider what might catch their attention and what your work’s USP is
  • Map out what is/are the potential target audience(s)
  • Build up a portfolio whilst you are doing your thesis: articles, conference papers, blogs and so on to raise your profile
  • Draw up your own publishing/ action plan/timetable
  1. NB. Include expected time(s) you aim to be ready as well as your target publisher’s deadlines.

Be realistic with your timescale!

Don’t forget to talk (offline and online) to people who have published. You can learn a lot from them. 

This will include:

  • Developing your academic and professional networks
  • Expanding your links and contacting those who can offer advice and support
  • Joining relevant groups that offer advice and discussion forums

Don’t forget:

  • Consider the boredom factor- you may be tired of your thesis by the time you complete
  • You may need a break but don’t leave it too long – your work may ‘go cold’ and you could struggle to get motivated
  • You have to reach a wider audience than your supervisor and examiners
  • Your material may be interesting at a certain point- seize the moment
  • Bring out its uniqueness -is there anything going on in society/world that you could ‘hitch’ a submission onto?
  • Length and style will depend on who you publish with

What not to do:

  • Write a book or article and send it unsolicited hoping for a positive response. It will probably not be looked at
  • Send a summary of your thesis to publishers to get them interested. They will want a book proposal instead
  • Send out any work without it being looked at/edited by someone else such as tutor or colleague
  • Be too optimistic about how much you can do in a given period

Importance of Social Media

Most of us use many forms every day for many purposes. You can consider how to use social media as a platform for your publication ambitions, such as:

  • Raise your profile as a researcher/ writer/expert
  • Aim to become an identified source of knowledge in your field through the ‘usual suspects’- Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn etc

Self-Publishing Route

Self-publishing is increasingly acceptable, no longer considered purely as ‘vanity publishing.’ It can work well for both fiction and non-fiction

This route does require an investment of time and money and a lot of ‘DIY’ work: editing, layout, sales, distribution, marketing and PR

Popular Press and Media

Do you have information that might make a ‘good’ media story or be part of an existing one?

Various media outlets from TV, radio and press might be interested in your work when ‘big’ events take place nationally or internationally. You could approach them about a written piece

Newspapers and magazines are possible publishers of your work as well as academic journals.

Local newspapers and radio are interested in material about the area and are often keen to promote local people.

You would clearly have to write in a different style but you can practice this.

The key is to read the publications you are aiming to submit to so that you grasp their styles.

Remember: Universities have Communications and Publicity offices keen to get academic work ‘out there’ as stories. You could contact them for some leads.

Final tip: Cast your net wide and take a look at the vast range of publishing outlets and platforms that now exist both for academic and non-academic works.

What did you think of our article? - please rate

4 / 5. 1


Share this article

Dr. Ruth Cherrington

Ruth Cherrington has a long record as a higher education professional. She has been a lecturer, trainer and employability adviser both in the UK and abroad. Ruth has always been committed to maximizing the professional development of those she works with. Another strand to her career is as a writer, with a wide range of publications to her name. Ruth enjoys travelling to meet former students and colleagues across the world. LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ruthcherringtonnumber7/

Reader Interactions

You may also like:

  • Supporting Individual Researchers in a Publish-or-Perish Culture

    Supporting Individual Researchers in a Publish-or-Perish Culture

  • Online education training and e learning webinar on internet

    Basic skills in Moodle management

  • Diverse Team Working Together in Modern Co Working Space planning a conference

    How to organise a conference

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

nine + 9 =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Searching for a job in the United Kingdom

Latest Jobs

  • Faculty Position in AI/ML for Biosciences

    Department of Biosciences and Bioinformatics, Xi'an Jiaotong - Liverpool University

    Location: Suzhou

    Salary: Competitive salary in the market


  • Apprentice - Chemical & Environmental Engineering

    Engineering, University of Nottingham

    Location: Nottingham

    Salary: £23,563 - £23,946 per annum, depending on skills and experience.


  • Research Assistant / Research Associate (Fixed Term)

    Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge

    Location: Cambridge

    Salary: £32,546 - £45,413 per annum


  • Professor of Computer Science and Head of Department

    School of Mathematical Physical & Computational Sciences - Computer Science, University of Reading

    Location: Reading

    Salary: Competitive Salary plus excellent benefits


  • Head of Student Marketing & Recruitment

    College of Social Sciences, University of Glasgow

    Location: Glasgow

    Salary: £49,559 - £57,422 Grade 8, per annum


  • CISM Research Assistant

    Faculty of Science and Engineering, Swansea University

    Location: Swansea

    Salary: £34,132 - £38,249 per annum


Footer

jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility Statement

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025

  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Careers Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025