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The Supply Street


Editorial Team

Content creation
Content theme:
 A contemporary theme prevalent in the Operations and Supply Chain
Management covering the domains of manufacturing and service
industries and its value addition functions like sourcing, materials
management, operations planning, distribution, logistics, retail,
demand forecasting, order fulfilment.
Automobile, healthcare and other sectors (real estate) etc
 Eg: The future of supply chain in a post-COVID world
o Ramping up the supply chain post COVID-19
o COVID-19 and supply chain recovery-Planning for the future
o Fundamental supply chain changes in a post COVID-19 World
o Rethinking supply chain resilience for a post-COVID-19 world

Content medium:
 Research Articles
 Reports
 Editorials
 Research paper

Editing
Prerequisite to editing is a conformed format for the publications we’ll be
receiving.

 Articles must be submitted as a Word document (.doc or .docx format)


 Document size cannot exceed 5 MB
 The maximum length of an article cannot exceed 12 pages; this includes
all figures, tables, illustrations, footnotes, citations, and references
 Exception to 12-page limit is the abstract
 Font must be 12-point Times New Roman throughout the paper
 Margins must be 1-inch on all sides
 Article text must be double space
 Single space the abstract and references
 All pages must be numbered in the centre footer.
 The abstract/extended abstract should be of minimum 300 words and
may have a maximum of 2500 words including keywords.

Design
An attractive newsletter, either print or email, is going to encourage readership
and support our magazine.
Explain or interpret: Editors often use these editorials to explain the way the
newspaper covered a sensitive or controversial subject. School newspapers
may explain new school rules or a particular student-body effort like a food
drive.
Criticize: These editorials constructively criticize actions, decisions or situations
while providing solutions to the problem identified. Immediate purpose is to
get readers to see the problem, not the solution.
Persuade: Editorials of persuasion aim to immediately see the solution, not the
problem. From the first paragraph, readers will be encouraged to take a
specific, positive action. Political endorsements are good examples of editorials
of persuasion.
Praise: These editorials commend people and organizations for something
done well. They are not as common as the other three.
Brevity
We’re inundated with information and another lengthy newsletter is not going
to help anyone. Instead of trying to cram everything into your document, try to
limit it to just one page. Shorter, more frequent deliveries are more desirable
than the occasional tome.
Storytelling
The best newsletters utilize classic story-telling techniques. Adapt a
conversational tone to draw your reader in. Reveal some inside secrets about
your industry.
Reader Focus
The audience is going to be interested in how the article can help them, not
hearing about all your successes and dramas

Approval and Publishing


A peer review amongst the members can be encouraged for
 Plagiarism check:
o Plagiarism of 20% is a standard acceptance according to
contemporary publication standards.
o Plagiarism above the mentioned threshold can be mitigated by
mentioning suitable references and sources.
 Grammatical and syntax errors
o A thorough review amongst the editorial members before
finalising to check for any word discrepancies.

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