Authors' Guidelines:
Article requirements for World
Oil authors
First, and foremost, we would not want to repeat articles
that have appeared in our direct competitors such as Oil & Gas
Journal, E&P, Offshore, JPT and other
SPE journals, American
Oil & Gas Reporter, The Leading
Edge, Geophysics, First
Break, The Explorer and The
Bulletin. Papers from conferences
are fine, but we would not normally publish them before the
conference, unless that is OK with the conference. Even then,
we would want the author to seek permission to publish, if
based on a copyrighted paper. However, unpublished conference
papers, and even some SPE/IADC and other papers that were either
published obscurely, such as in the Russian
Journal of Rheological Research or The
New Zealand Exploration Society, or only exist
as PowerPoint presentations or poster presentations, are fine.
A complete rewrite of the paper, including altering the figures,
is a way around the copyright, as copyright in this sense goes
to form, not substance: The nature of the story and its data
belong to the author (and perhaps his company), not the publication.
THERE ARE THREE TYPES OF ARTICLES:
1. Short, Wrap-up type articles may be bylined (although they
sometimes are not), and bylined solely by a vendor/service
supplier, although we always prefer to have an oil company
as a co-author. We do a compilation of these a few times a
year in a special section such as in Rig
Floor Equipment or
Technology from Europe. The technology should include an example
of use in the field, no matter how brief. If the technology
is so new that it is not fully commercialized, we will allow
the field-use example to be a beta test. If it is still on
the laboratory bench, it is usually too tentative; unless we
can qualify it from our own experience or as transfer technology
from another industry, we would probably not use the article
(except, perhaps, as a small, New Products’ item). The
field operator or client should be mentioned as well as the
specifics, e.g., “In BP’s Crazy Horse field, Block
2001, Gulf of Mexico, the X1 discovery well was drilled to
a 21,456-ft TD using the Xsteam Widget motor.” For some
examples of these short articles, see April 2005, McKenna;
December 2001 (staff authored); and April 2006, Nussbaum.
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2546&MONTH_YEAR=Apr-2005
http://worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=1616&MONTH_YEAR=Dec-2001
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2855&MONTH_YEAR=Apr-2006
2. Technical feature articles are our mainstay. They must
be bylined, preferably by an oil-company client, or at least
with an oil-company co-author. The rare exception is where
an oil company client has been quoted extensively or otherwise
has provided his view as to efficacy and costs/savings, but
just doesn’t want to have his name in the byline. Generally,
these articles describe new technology or procedures in a case-study
format. In these types of articles, certain specifics should
be mentioned, e.g., “In BP’s Crazy Horse field,
Mississippi Canyon Block 766, Gulf of Mexico, the X-1 discovery
well was drilled to a 21,456-ft TD.” (Although these
may be very brief in a very short article.) For some examples,
see July 2006, Burns, et al.; March 2005, Strickler, et al.;
and March 2005, Bickler.
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2942&MONTH_YEAR=Jul-2006
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2517&MONTH_YEAR=Mar-2005
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2518&MONTH_YEAR=Mar-2005
3. Expert/academic articles. Consultants, academics, and occasionally
vendor/service companies may be sole authors. They would write
a non-commercial article (that does NOT
discuss, mention or try to sell a particular “widget” or
service) from
a viewpoint of expertise. In these cases, the author appears
to have no obvious interest in marketing his work. These most
often deal with industry-status overviews, culminating with
what’s on the “cutting edge” (past, present
and future), or they discuss new/best methods and procedures,
again, without mentioning any particular “widget.” They
are often mathematical in nature. For some examples of these
articles, see September 2001, Cambois; July 2006, Ronen, et
al.; and October 2005, Tryie.
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=1537&MONTH_YEAR=Sep-2001
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2937&MONTH_YEAR=Jul-2006
http://www.worldoil.com/magazine/MAGAZINE_DETAIL.asp?ART_ID=2698&MONTH_YEAR=Oct-2005
COMMERCIAL CONSIDERATIONS
We do not want articles to appear to be
advertisements or brochures. Neither should you. It is not
in either of our best interests. We do not allow TM or SM marks.
Instead, we insert the word “proprietary” before
the name or description. In rare cases, in response to a lawyer’s
request, we have used the classic, “Windows and XP are
registered trademarks of Microsoft Corp.” in an Acknowledgment
at the end of an article. We generally only allow one appearance
of a company name or brand name. Thereafter, we refer to it
generically if at all possible. For example, “Microsoft’s
VISTA operating system” becomes, “the company’s
new O/S,” or “the new software.”
Similarly, we do not allow logos in pictures, unless they
are unreadable. We remove such logos electronically. If you
do not wish to have your logos removed, please provide us with
pictures/drawings without them.
A personal email address may (optionally) be included in
the author’s biography (<75 words), which should include
work experience and education. Author photos are encouraged,
but not mandatory; however, in the case of more than three
authors, only the lead author may have the option to have his
photo appear. Please ensure that the author includes an email
address, fax and telephone number so that we can send a copy
to the lead author for final proofing. Also include address(es)
for the author(s), since we send extra magazine copies to the
author(s) after publication.
ARTICLE PARAMETERS
Length. For short, Wrap-up articles
of specific technologies (e.g., widgets and services), which
we do about six times a year in a special catalog-like section,
lengths are between 200 and 1,000 words. Only one figure/photo
is usually needed.
For Technical feature articles and expert
articles, we usually try for not more than four magazine pages
in length—roughly,
between 1,800 and 3,800 words. Of course, the number of figures/photos
affects article length, and these vary. Use this as a guideline:
estimate four to eight figures per page, depending on size,
with six being a good average; estimate 900 words per page;
and estimate 1/4 of a page for four author bios. Thus, a 2,700-word,
two-author paper with six figures will probably take up four
pages. We print technical feature articles in white-paper (outline)
style.
File format. We use Word for the PC for text editing, any
font. No embedded figures please. The preferred file format
is .doc. Next is .rtf. Don’t waste effort on custom templates,
where everything (head, body, captions, etc.) has a different
font, size, etc.; it is of no value to us, since we will eventually
remove those formats.
Deadlines. Our lead time/deadline is at
least seven weeks before the publishing date, on or before
the 7th of the month, two months before the publishing date
(i.e., February 7th for the April 1st issue).—a little
earlier if you want to ensure publication.
Artwork requirements. We use Adobe Products for the Mac: Photoshop
and Illustrator. They are the print industry standards.
Photo format/resolution. The
preferred photo formats for article figures are .jpg, .tif
and .eps, and every effort should be made to provide them in
these formats. If jpegs are used, they can only be for a photo,
and even then, must be of high resolution (300 dpi is standard).
Author photos are preferred, but optional, and, if there are
more than three authors, should be limited to the lead author
only. These are preferred in color and can be in any format
(jpg, Kodak PhotoCD, PCX, etc.), and may have less resolution
(~150 dpi). However, screen captures are generally risky; often
they are unusable.
It should be mentioned that it is of no
use to convert a crummy photo or drawing to high resolution,
i.e., take a .jpg or a screen-capture and convert it to a 300-dpi
tiff. (You can’t
make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.) A good way to
tell if a photo or drawing will look bad when published is
to zoom to 200% at 4 x 6 inches: if it still looks fairly sharp,
it’s probably OK.
Drawing format/resolution. If at all possible, drawings should
be in vector format. If the drawings are in Corel Draw, Freehand,
CAD, etc., they need to be re-saved or exported in Adobe Illustrator
format, that is, .ai or .eps. We have had about a 60% success
rate of converting PowerPoint or embedded Word images into
something that is usable. If it is a graph in Excel or PowerPoint,
we can usually use the data points in Adobe Illustrator for
graph plotting, so send the spreadsheet with its data points
if it’s not 300 dpi.
Following the above guidelines benefits both authors and
publishers, as it results in a better quality article. Your
cooperation is greatly appreciated. I look forward to working
with you.
Best regards,
Perry Fischer
Editor
World Oil
713/520-4464
Bldg. 2, Ste. 1020 Greenway Plaza, Houston TX 77046
World Oil is an oilfield trade magazine with over 35,000 audited
readers worldwide, in business since 1911.
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