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Building Editorial Capacity with Limited Resources

By  Sachin T. Jose Jul 15, 2026 38 0

Editorial offices are the backbone of scholarly publishing, ensuring that manuscripts undergo rigorous peer review, ethical oversight, and timely processing before publication. Their effectiveness directly influences the quality, credibility, and reputation of a journal.

Editorial offices often operate with limited staff, tight budgets, and increasing manuscript submissions. Building editorial capacity with limited resources requires a modular approach. By repurposing core editorial content into multiple formats, leveraging automation, and engaging distributed networks of editors and reviewers, journals can improve efficiency while maintaining publication quality. Standardized workflows and collaborative editorial practices enable teams to maximize productivity without significantly increasing operational costs.

Repurpose Existing Editorial Content
Instead of creating every resource from scratch, repurpose high-value editorial materials into multiple formats. For example, transform comprehensive author guidelines into reviewer checklists, editorial decision templates, frequently asked questions (FAQs), newsletters, or training materials for new editors. Likewise, related editorial policies can be compiled into downloadable handbooks or orientation resources for editorial board members. Repurposing existing content ensures consistency while reducing duplication of effort.

Standardize Workflows and Automation
Establish clear Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for the complete editorial workflow, from manuscript submission to publication. Use shared style guides, editorial checklists, standardized decision-letter templates, and publication schedules to minimize repetitive tasks. Editorial management systems and automation tools can assist with manuscript tracking, reviewer invitations, reminder emails, formatting, plagiarism screening, and preliminary language checks, allowing editors to focus on scientific quality and editorial decision-making.

Build a Distributed Editorial Network
Develop a reliable network of associate editors, peer reviewers, subject-matter experts (SMEs), freelance editors, and guest editors to distribute editorial responsibilities effectively. Provide clear editorial briefs outlining the journal's scope, publication standards, ethical requirements, and target audience. A distributed editorial network not only reduces workload but also strengthens subject expertise and promotes timely peer review.

Optimize the Editorial Cycle
Streamline manuscript handling by implementing efficient editorial management platforms such as Open Journal Systems (OJS), Editorial Manager, or ScholarOne Manuscripts, SCIONE, alongside collaborative project-management tools where appropriate. Transparent manuscript tracking, standardized review timelines, automated reminders, and clear communication with authors and reviewers can significantly reduce editorial delays and manuscript backlogs while improving the overall publication experience.

Leverage Professional Communities and Open Resources
Rather than developing all editorial training materials independently, utilize open-access resources and guidance provided by professional editorial organizations. Networks such as the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), the Asian Council of Science Editors (ACSE), Council of Science Editors (CSE), and the European Association of Science Editors (EASE) offer valuable recommendations on editorial ethics, peer review, publication integrity, and best editorial practices. Participation in these professional communities also provides opportunities to identify qualified reviewers, recruit editorial board members, and exchange practical solutions to common editorial challenges.

Strengthening Editorial Capacity
Editorial excellence is not determined solely by the size of an editorial office but by the efficiency of its workflows, effective collaboration, and strategic use of available resources. Through content reuse, standardized processes, automation, distributed editorial networks, and engagement with professional communities, journals can strengthen editorial capacity, improve turnaround times, and maintain high standards of scholarly publishing despite resource constraints.

Keywords

Editorial capacity Scholarly publishing Editorial workflows Peer review Manuscript management Editorial automation Open Journal Systems (OJS) Publication ethics Editorial efficiency Scientific journals

Sachin T. Jose
Sachin T. Jose

Holds an undergraduate degree in Zoology from Madras Christian College, University of Madras, a postgraduate degree in Pharmacology under the Faculty of Medicine from the University of Madras, Chennai, and a Ph.D. in Pharmacology from SRM Medical College Hospital and Research Centre, affiliated with SRM Institute of Science and Technology. Also completed a Postgraduate Diploma in Data Science with specialization in Machine Learning through UpGrad in collaboration with the International Institute of Information Technology (IIIT), Bangalore. Possesses teaching experience at medical colleges across India and project experience with the Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI) through a Government of India–UNDP–GEF funded capacity-building program for local officials in Sindhudurg District, Maharashtra. Research interests include pharmacology, biomedical sciences, data science, machine learning, and interdisciplinary health research.

View All Posts by Sachin T. Jose

Disclaimer

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of their affiliated institutions, the Asian Council of Science Editors (ACSE), or the Editor’s Café editorial team.

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