Manuscript guidelines

What do you need to know to prepare your manuscript efficiently, to produce the highest quality content possible, and to give your book the best chances for being discovered by readers?

Below you will find the most pertinent information on templates and guidelines, on book structure, and how to optimize your manuscript for search engines.

Templates and macros

To produce the best structured manuscript efficiently and in adherence with requirements, you can rely on manuscript preparation tools or follow Springer Nature’s guidelines.

English

German

Book structure

To guarantee a smooth publication process and a seamless transformation of your manuscript into the final layout and various electronic platforms, the manuscript needs to be structured as follows:

Front matter

Title page*

Table of contents*

*The title page and table of contents must appear in the manuscript’s front matter, while all other sections listed above are optional.

You should note that the above order is not flexible. We have defined this order as our house style and optimized our publication process to follow it strictly

Title page

Please include all author/editor names, their affiliations and ORCID, the book title, and the subtitle. Ensure that the sequence of the author names is correct and the title of your book is final when you submit your manuscript.

Once the manuscript has been delivered to Production, changes to title, subtitle, or authorship are no longer possible.

Foreword

If you intend to include a foreword, please submit it with the manuscript.

Preface

The preface should be about the book and it should stimulate interest in the book. Why it is important, why it was written, who it is for.

Table of contents

List of abbreviations

Text body/chapters

Chapters contain the actual content of the book, i.e., text, figures, tables, and references.

Chapters can be grouped together in parts; subparts are not possible. Only one chapter (e.g. an introduction) may precede the first part and would be the first chapter.

Chapter title and authors

Abstract

Chapter abstracts are strongly encouraged because they have been proven to significantly increase a book’s visibility.

These will appear online at SpringerLink and other sites and will be available with unrestricted access to facilitate online searching (e.g., Google) and allow unregistered users to read the abstract as a teaser for the complete chapter.

If no abstract is submitted, we will use the first paragraph of the chapter instead.

Keywords

Headings and heading numbering

Heading levels should be clearly identified and each level should be uniquely and consistently formatted and/or numbered.

Terminology, units and abbreviations

Formal style and text formatting

Springer Nature follows certain layouts and standards with regard to the presentation of the content, and the copy editors make sure that the manuscript conforms to these styles.

Emphasis and special type

Boxes

Equations and program code

Tables

Figures and illustrations

Numbering

Figure captions

Figure and illustration files

References

Reference citations

Cite references in the text with author name/s and year of publication in parentheses (“Harvard system”)

If it is customary in your field, you can also cite with reference numbers in square brackets either sequential by citation or according to the sequence in an alphabetized list:
[3, 7, 12].

Reference list

The rules for alphabetization are:

  1. First, all works by the author alone, ordered chronologically by year of publication
  2. Next, all works by the author with a coauthor, ordered alphabetically by coauthor
  3. Finally, all works by the author with several coauthors, ordered chronologically by year of publication
  4. For authors using EndNote software to create the reference list, Springer Nature provides output styles that support the formatting of in-text citations and reference lists.
  5. For authors using BiBTeX, the style files are included in Springer Nature's LaTeX package.

Reference styles

Springer Nature follows certain standards with regard to the presentation of the reference list. They are based on reference styles that were established for various disciplines in the past and have been adjusted to facilitate automated processing and citation linking. This allows us, for example, to easily cross link the cited references with the original publication. References will be revised in production in accordance with these house styles.

Choose the appropriate style for your subject from the list below. Please note that the adapted and standardized forms are based on, but differ slightly from, certain recommended styles (e.g., APA, Chicago)

Springer Nature style

Discipline examples

Key style points: reference styles

Basic style
Based on Harvard style and
recommendations of the Council of
Biology Editors (CBE)

Medicine, Biomedicine, Life Sciences,
Chemistry, Geosciences, Computer
Science, Engineering, Law and Economics

Vancouver style
Based on NLM guidelines Citing Medicine

MathPhys style

Mathematics, Physics, Statistics

Physics syle
Based on the reference list style of the
American Physical Society (APS)

Social sciences/psychology
style

Adapted from the reference list style
that was established by the American
Psychological Association (APA)

Social Sciences, Psychology

Humanities style
Based on the reference list style as
suggested by the Chicago Manual of
Style (15th ed.)

Humanities, Linguistics, Philosophy

Back matter

After the last chapter, the back matter of the book can contain an appendix, a glossary or an index.

Do not include a reference list containing the cited literature in the back matter, as references are then not linked to citations in the chapters. Instead, please include reference lists at the end of each chapter. A list of further reading may be included in the back matter.

Appendix

An appendix cannot include a reference list.

Index (if applicable)

If an index is desired, please submit the entries with the manuscript.

Optimizing for Google

Contribute to your book's success, long before it's published.

Search engine optimization (SEO) is about relevance. You can help Google and other search engines present your book to the right audience and give these readers what they are looking for.

By following our tips on how to optimize your manuscript for SEO – when thinking about your book’s title, the back cover description, and unique selling points – you can make sure that potential readers are able to find your finished book.