Scholarly articles can be published in many different journals, and no single venue is best for every project. The “right” journal depends on your topic, methods, audience, career stage, and any funder or institutional requirements. This guide offers practical questions and tools to help you identify journals that are a good fit for your manuscript and avoid venues that may harm the visibility or credibility of your work.
Publishing practices differ across disciplines, so it is important to consult your department or school evaluation document, talk with colleagues, and review guidance from relevant professional associations. Their expectations around journal prestige, impact measures, open access, speed to publication, and co-authorship will shape which venues are most appropriate for you.
Use the questions and tools on this page to create a short list of potential journals, then explore the later pages to evaluate quality, costs, and rights in more detail.
Thinking through the questions that follow will help you identify what you need from a journal and narrow your search to venues that best support your scholarly goals.
What is the main contribution of your article?
Who is the primary audience?
What type of article is it?
Are there constraints you must meet?
How important are the following for you in this project?
Before investing time in a submission, review the questions below to see how well the journal’s scope, audience, and article types align with what you’ve written.
Scope & aims
Audience & discipline
Article types & length
Practical details