Delivering your manuscript

One of the most essential factors in the success of a quality publication is timeliness.

We cannot overstate the importance of meeting the delivery date agreed with your publisher. Late delivery will limit the editorial time available to develop the quality and production of your work, and may force us to abandon promotional campaigns planned in advance. Our partners in the retail book trade do not look kindly on books that fail to appear at the agreed time, and late books invariably suffer in the selling process.

We have a primary duty towards the books delivered on time by the majority of our authors, and to the wider credibility of our list. In a situation where the ongoing slippage of one title begins to undermine the success of others, we will not hesitate in removing that title from our publishing programme.

We will do all we can to help you meet your agreed completion date, so please let your publisher know as soon as possible if you are having trouble doing so. We would always prefer to hear of potential problems with delivery at the earliest possible stage, so that we can reschedule our editorial and promotional activities accordingly.

We would also strongly recommend that you send in draft material to your publisher for comment before final completion of the manuscript. Set yourself some way-marking targets at regular intervals throughout the writing process - delivering some advance draft chapters in batches - in order to keep you on track. What gets measured gets done.

We hope that these suggestions are useful. Please feel free to contact us at any time to discuss the development of your book. We will be happy to help.

Manuscript delivery checklist
  • Please refer to this checklist when finalising your manuscript to send to us.
  • The manuscript should be supplied on disk as standard word-processed documents – i.e. as .doc or .rtf files (MS Word is preferred).
  • Two hard copies of the manuscript and images should be supplied with the disk.
  • Ensure the disk and hard copy match exactly.
  • On the disk, create a new file for every major subdivision of the text, e.g. preface, introduction, individual chapters, appendices, glossary, bibliography and so on. Identify the files with meaningful names – INTRO, CH01, CH02 for example.
  • The hard copy should be double-spaced and on one side only of A4 paper, and should not be designed.
  • Number the sheets consecutively throughout the manuscript, not chapter by chapter.
  • Tables and their captions should be included at the appropriate location within the manuscript.
  • Please do not embed any images (including line art or screenshots) in the text files. Create a separate file for the images in each chapter and include a clear placement for each (e.g. ‘Insert Figure 1.1 here’), plus caption, at the appropriate location in the manuscript. Supply a hard copy of the images with the manuscript.
  • When you deliver your manuscript, please also supply:
    • Details of the system on which the manuscript has been prepared and word-processing software (package and version).
    • A list of the chapters and corresponding filenames on the disk.
    • The total word count and total number of illustrations and tables included.
    • Contact details where we can reach you regarding editorial queries or promotional opportunities over the coming months.
    • How you would like your name and title to appear on the title page.
    • An author biography describing yourself, your qualifications, your work (academic and professional) and your experience. We are keen to use photographs of authors in the books where studio-quality photos are available.
    • A brief executive summary emphasising the key elements of the book and main selling points. This will help our marketing executives put together winning promotional copy which is appropriate to the book's contents and target market.
    • Endorsements (or contact details for suggested endorsers and reviewers) which can be used on either the jacket or opening pages of the book. These endorsements can significantly boost the sales of a book.
    • A list of case studies employed (companies and countries etc.). Where possible, a contact name and number for each organisation featuring as a case study.
    • If your book has potential for use on business or finance courses, please give us details of appropriate courses (and relevant business schools where possible).
    • Hard copy (and electronic) list of all third party material you have included (list all text, tables, figures/images) plus comprehensive source details (see Copyright section for advice on copyright and permissions).