Scoring Top Managerial Articles: How to Get Published in Harvard Business Review (HBR)?


Speaker


Abstract

Scoring Top Managerial Articles: Meet  David Champion, one of the Senior Editors of HBR

To improve the visibility & impact on Management Practice (MP), ERIM stimulates the publication of articles in top-managerial EJL journals like HBR, CMR, Interfaces, MIT SMR, AOM Perspectives and LRP. The idea is to stimulate the ERIM members to publish in these journals on a more regular base.

We are happy to anounce the seminar event by David Champion (senior Editor of Harvard Business Review). During his presentation, Champion will explain the selection process of HBR and the criteria used to make editorial decisions. He then describes the development and editing process, and concludes with a discussion on what makes as great HBR article.

The guidelines for authors are available on the HBR website.

If you would like to attend this seminar please send an email to Tineke van der Vhee, tvhee@rsm.nl before October 4, 2008.
 
Contact information:
Tineke van der Vhee
Email

Resources for this ERIM Institute events:

Wikipedia on HBR:

Harvard Business Review is a general management magazine published since 1922 by Harvard Business School Publishing, owned by the Harvard Business School. A monthly research-based magazine written for business practitioners, it claims a high ranking business readership and enjoys the reverence of academics, executives, and management consultants. It has been the frequent publishing home for well known scholars and management thinkers, among them Clayton M. Christensen, Peter F. Drucker, Michael E. Porter, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Gary Hamel, C.K. Prahalad, Robert S. Kaplan, Robert H. Schaffer and others. Management and business concepts and terms such as "Balanced scorecard," "Core competence," "Strategic intent," "Reengineering," "Globalization," "Marketing myopia," and "Glass ceiling" were first given prominence in HBR's pages. Its worldwide English-language circulation is 240,000, and there are 11 licensed editions of the magazine, including two Chinese-language editions, a German edition, a Hungarian[1] edition, a Brazilian (Portuguese-language) edition, and an English-language South Asia edition. The magazine is editorially independent of Harvard Business School. It is not peer reviewed. Thomas A. Stewart, who joined as editor of the magazine in 2002, left HBR in June 2008.

Information about the editorial structure of HBR:

The Publisher is Hank Boye

Deputy Editor and Assistant Managing Director: Karen Dillon

Senior Editors:

David Champion (Paris), Diane Coutu, Bronwyn Fryer, Paul Hemp, Lew McCreary, Gardiner Morse, M. Ellen Peebles, Steven Prokesch, Anand P. Raman,

 HBR Video's on Youtube:

http://www.youtube.com/HarvardBusiness