I honestly got really frustrated and thought about leaving Constant-Content.com altogether; but I noticed that we have a very active and supportive community here, so I thought why not give it a try and see what others think about my experience, I won't lose anything.
So I submitted an article for a public request entitled "CoQ10". The first time, I got this editorial message:
They were quite right because I had written the summary directly on the Constant-Content.com form and had forgotten to revise it. So, I did that. I also consulted two English language teachers with regards to the missing commas and they pointed them out. I revised the article and the summary a couple more times and submitted them.Editorial Team wrote:==== Editorial Information for Your Article: ====
Short summaries must be free of errors upon submission. Yours has unclear writing, grammatical problems, and missing commas. // Other problems with the article include This article is missing commas necessary for clarity or includes commas that are misplaced.
Please observe rules for comma usage and apply these rules consistently.
Comma Use: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/607/01/
Commas and Subordinate Clauses: http://www.chompchomp.com/terms/subordinateclause.htm
PowerPoint Presentation for Comma Use: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/692/1
==== End Editorial Information for Your Article ====
Less than 24 hours later, I got this:
Editorial Team wrote:==== Editorial Information for Your Article: ====
We do not consider content with grammar errors, punctuation errors, or other errors.
==== End Editorial Information for Your Article ====
Although generalized, the first reply was a lot more helpful. At least it said it's something to do with the commas and pointed out where the problems were, roughly (in summary? in article itself?). My optimism after the second submission changed to complete frustration after the second reply. For me, it's basically telling me "give up, we don't want you". It's actually as if the reply was meant to paralyze you, though I think that probably isn't the purpose. It would have taken the editor 3 more seconds to just specify a paragraph, or a specific type of error just like the first reply did.
I'd like to know what you guys think, and how you fix the problems with your articles when you receive such extremely broad editorial comments. I'd also appreciate it if an editor could tell me more about the rejection reasons if they have some time.
Thanks a lot and sorry for the pretty long post.