Transformational Management Review (TMR), a prestigious academic research journal ofIILM, Lodi Road, published ONLINE, has following distinctive characteristics:
Why publish in TMR?
Positioned at the intersection of theory and practice, TMR accepts Policy Perspectives of Practitioners, Research Articles on Contemporary Issues, Review Articles, Executive Perspectives, Teaching Cases with Notes, Thesis Briefs, and Book Reviews
Recipes for desk rejection
Policy Perspectives of Practitioners
Purpose: This section seeks articles written primarily by experienced practitioners who can offer deep, reflective insights that influence or reshape management policy. Contributions should go beyond surface-level reporting of practices, instead translating field-based experience into evidence-backed recommendations for institutional or systemic change.
Do:
Don’t:
Research Articles on Contemporary Issues
Purpose: This section welcomes rigorous empirical or theoretical research addressing emerging management challenges such as strategic innovation, digital transformation, leadership in turbulence, sustainability, and behavioral implications of technology.
Do:
Don’t:
Review Articles
Purpose: Review articles should integrate and synthesize existing literature to provide a comprehensive understanding of a management topic, identify gaps, and propose well-justified future research directions.
Do:
Don’t:
Executive Perspectives
Purpose: This section features reflective, experience-based articles that distill lessons from significant leadership or strategic experiences, offering value to executives and senior managers.
Do:
Don’t:
Teaching Cases with Notes
Purpose: Teaching cases should present realistic managerial dilemmas accompanied by detailed instructor notes that guide educators in using the case effectively.
Do:
Don’t:
Thesis Briefs
Purpose: Thesis briefs distill the essence of recent doctoral work into an accessible, concise summary that highlights key contributions to theory and practice.
Do:
Don’t:
Book Reviews
Purpose: Book reviews should critically engage with recently published and academic management-related works, preferably those released no earlier than 2010, in order to ensure contemporary relevance. Reviews must assess both the scholarly and practical value of the work, providing an informed perspective for the journal’s audience.
Do:
Don’t:
General Do’s and Don’ts
The Transformational Management Review encourages all authors to produce clear, accessible, and inclusive writing that avoids excessive jargon while maintaining high editorial clarity. Submissions must demonstrate transparency by including ethical statements, conflict-of-interest disclosures, funding acknowledgements, contributorship details, and information on data or material availability.