What's the production schedule for a publication?
A few days ago I was asked if I could tell someone what a typical production schedule for a magazine would look like.
I doubt if there is actually such a thing as a "typical schedule". Most that I've come across start with a simple list working backwards from the print date to the date on which final ads and editorial have to be with page production.
Then both advertising and editorial section will calculate back from that to have separate schedules.
However this is something which should be considered carefully not only in the planning for a new publication but also by every publication occasionally. And schedules all have to bear in mind that only a few final items can be prepared on that deadline.
In advertising it is normal to set a deadline a day or two ahead of the date required by the production dept, and the following wording occurs in many sets of conditions (this is for a weekly published locally on a Friday): Preferred deadline for the receipt of all advertising materials is Friday, seven days before publication. Materials and space reservations will be accepted, however, until 5 pm Monday, week of publication. When space has been reserved and paid for by Monday, camera-ready materials can be accepted until 4 pm Tuesday, week of publication. Electronically submitted ads for which space has been reserved must be received by 1 pm Tuesday. Cancellations and changes cannot be accepted after 5 pm Monday, week of publication. For advertisers wishing to approve a proof, the deadline is noon Wednesday, nine days before publication. Major holidays that are celebrated on weekdays generally cause the deadlines to fall one business day earlier.
You will find many such schedules in the online conditions of publications.
There are also likely to be earlier deadlines on small display ads and perhaps later ones on classifieds which are just run in automatically by system software.
In editorial, magazines will tend to work in production runs even though all the runs may be on the press at the same time. So there will be perhaps on a 64-page magazine deadlines each day for perhaps 16 pages. The deadline given for editorial submissions would normally be a week or more ahead of the earliest of those dates for regular contributors who can be relied on to meet deadlines, a week or two further ahead for contributors who are not yet trusted, and then another couple of weeks further ahead for anything which is being considered at an editorial conference or on which the editor has yet to make a decision.
All these dates will normally be indicated by marks or stickers on a wall planner -- I have come across some publications experimenting with computer scheduling but it is too easy to ignore something that is not constantly in the face of the actual users.
A production run which is a physically separate run on the press, even if only a day earlier, will usually be regarded as a separate production process to be completed before the final section, and so will most likely have a deadline at least a week before the rest. It can almost be regarded internally as a separate publication.
It basically comes down to ensuring there is a steady flow of work for each person in the process, so not only does the person setting the schedule have to consider what amount of work is possible in the time, but also what those people will be doing at other times. That is why it is common for feature pages of daily newspapers to be scheduled for all work to be completed two to three days ahead of the news pages -- and that the only pages actually prepared on deadline for a daily newspaper are likely to be the front page and the main sports page.
Despite the common impression that publications are a frantic hive of activity on deadline, any publication which is like that other than when a disaster occurs just ahead of that deadline, has a production schedule which needs work. I've worked on magazines where final deadline day can be very quiet, a time for long lunches because those in charge of checking final proofs just need to know where everyone is in case there is a query. A newspaper may be very quiet after midnight with just a late copyeditor watching the wire service.


1 Comments:
Very practical advice. Thank you.
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