class Author Guidelines
Journal of Digital Marketing and Halal Industry is published twice a year. Articles published in this journal are the results of empirical research in digital marketing and halal industry, including consumer behavior, marketing research, integrated marketing, internet marketing, e-commerce, persuasive strategies, relationship marketing, marketing and business ethics, distribution strategies, product development strategies, strategic marketing, customer relationship management, international marketing, halal management system, ethics and behavior, halal business & marketing, halal tourism, halal foods, pharmaceuticals & personal care products, halal supply chain management, and covering the whole Halal Industry, good research quantitatively and qualitatively.
Editors invite experts, practitioners, and enthusiasts in digital marketing and halal industry to write a research article in this journal. Articles should be original, research-based, unpublished and not under review for possible publication in other journals. All submitted papers are subject to review of the editors, editorial board, and blind reviewers. Submissions that violate our guidelines on formatting or length will be rejected without review.
Online Submission Guidelines
Manuscripts must be sent online to the online portal of Journal of Digital Marketing and Halal Industry on page http://journal.walisongo.ac.id/index.php/JDMHI/index
Steps for submitting Manuscripts:
- In the Start section, check all checklists, then click save & continue.
- In the Upload Submission section, please upload the article manuscript file in MS Word in this section. After that, click save & continue.
- In the Enter Metadata section, enter the data of all authors and affiliates. If the author is more than one person, please click "add author", then fill in the author's data like the first author, and so on. Next, fill in the title, abstract, keywords, research methods, and bibliography in each of the available columns.
- In the Upload Supplementary Files section, it is permissible to upload supporting files or cover letters or other documents.
- In the Confirmation section, please click "Finish Submission" if all data is correct.
General Instructions
- Articles are formatted according to the writing pattern of the scientific journal. Writing articles follow the rules set out in Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA), Sixth Edition. Please use Mendeley reference management software, turn on “the American Psychological Association (APA), Sixth Edition.” For an explanation of the APA Citation Guide, see http://www.apastyle.org/manual/index.aspx or http://www.bibme.org/citation-guide/apa/
- The article is an original work (no plagiarism) and has never been published in a journal printed/online.
- During the review and editing process, or after the article is published, it may not be registered in another journal.
- Sent articles to editors via submission Open Journal Systems (OJS) on http://journal.walisongo.ac.id/index.php/JDMHI/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions
- Articles typed in Goudy Old Style Font (11 pt) with 1 spacing in Microsoft Word format with a page size A4 (210 x 297 mm). The length of the article ranged 5000-8000 words or about 17-20 pages, including pictures, graphs, and tables (if any) or see https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GMwSF9VP-ABxvVpGwEVTqb0IU4SVDUMc/view?usp=sharing
- The article is written in Indonesian or English using grammatical rules. In general, the English article is in the past tense.
Particular Instructions
- The article is the result of empirical research in digital marketing and halal industry.
- Because of the "Blind Review" system, the author hoped not to include the name, the name, and address of the institution and email address in the cover of the article. The author's name, the name of the institution, as well as the email address listed at the time of registration on the OJS author. To facilitate communication should include an active mobile number.
- The content and systematics of articles written using the format presented in a narrative essay in the form of a paragraph, without numbering in front subtitles, and should include these components:
- Title, provided that: a) the title is the formulation of a brief discussion of content, compact, and clear. May use the title of creative and attract readers (maximum 16 words). b) the title is written in English and Indonesian. c) the title is typed in bold, use capital letters for each beginning of a word, except for conjunctions and prepositions.
- Abstract written in English and Indonesian. Abstract is the essence of the subject of the whole article. Abstract written in one paragraph within one space, with a maximum length of 250 words. Abstract presented briefly and clearly, it must contain four (4) elements, namely: Reasons for the selection of topics or the importance of the research topic, the aims of the reseach, research methods, and finding of the results.
- Keywords contains basic words in the study, can be drawn from the research variables, characteristics of the subjects, and the theory of the referenced (minimum three words or combinations of words, written in alphabetical order).
- Introduction contains background of the problems, objectives and benefits of the research, the literature review, and concludes with the hypothesis (number of pages approximately 20%).
- Method contains the identification of the variables, the research subjects, research instruments and methods of research including used data analysis techniques (the number of pages approximately 20%).
- The result shows exposure data analysis, consisted of descriptive statistics, test results of the assumptions and results of hypothesis testing are presented sequentially or integrated (number of pages approximately 20%).
- Discussion contains an explanation of the results of research associated with the results of previous studies, critically analyzed and linked to relevant recent literature (page number approximately 30-40%).
- Conclusions and suggestions answers from the research objectives written concise, clear, and compact based on the results of research and discussion (approximately 1 page).
- Bibliography contains reference sources written alphabetically and chronologically, Referral sources are published literature in the last 10 years (especially of the journal). Referral preferred are the primary sources in the form of books, reports (including dissertation), or research articles in scientific journals and magazines. It is suggested to use Mendeley as a reference manager at styling the citations and the bibliography.
The Example of Compiling a Bibliography
All notes must appear in the text as citations. A citation usually requires only the last name of the author(s), year of publication, and (sometimes) page numbers. For example: (Siddiqi 2000; Mustafa Omar Mohammed 2008; al-Shāṭibī 2000; Geertz 1966:114). Explanatory footnotes may be included but should not be used for simple citations. All works cited must appear in the reference list at the end of the article.
References should be written in alphabetical order, without any number. The journal uses the American Psychological Association (APA), such as below:
References should appear as
Journal article:
Ruchba, S. M., & Suhada, F. (2015). Halal Industry in Indonesia; Challenges and Opportunities. Journal of Digital Marketing and Halal Industry, 7 (3), 60-68.
Gabbett, T., Jenkins, D., & Abernethy, B. (2010). Physical collisions and injury during professional rugby league skills training. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 13(6), 578-583. doi:10.1016/j.jsams.2010.03.007
A publication in press:
Kuncoro, H. (in press). Digital marketing during the pandemic period; A study of islamic perspective? Economic Journal of Emerging Markets.
Conference Paper/Proceeding
Williams, J., & Seary, K. (2010). Bridging the divide: Scaffolding the learning experiences of the mature age student. In J. Terrell (Ed.), Making the links: Learning, teaching and high quality student outcomes. Proceedings of the 9th Conference of the New Zealand Association of Bridging Educators (pp. 104-116). Wellington, New Zealand.
MacColl, F., Ker, I., Huband, A., Veith, G., & Taylor, J. (2009, November 12-13). Minimising pedestrian-cyclist conflict on paths. Paper presented at the Seventh New Zealand Cycling Conference, New Plymouth, New Zealand. Retrieved from http://cyclingconf.org.nz/system/files/NZCyclingConf09_2A_MacColl_ PedCycleConflicts.pdf
Book with one author:
Author, A. A. (2017). Title of work. Location/City, State: Publisher.
Book with two authors:
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (2017). Title of work. Location/City, State: Publisher.
Book with more than two authors:
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (2017). Title of work. Location/City, State: Publisher.
Edited book:
Gregoriou, G. N. (Ed.). (2009). Emerging Markets: Performance, Analysis and Innovation. Florida, USA: CRC Press.
Chapter in an edited book:
Courant, P. N., Gramlich, E. M., & Rubinfeld, D. L. (1979). The stimulative effects of intergovernmental grants: or why money sticks where it hits. In P. Mieszkowski, & W. H. Oakland (Ed.), Fiscal Federalism and Grants-in-Aid (pp. 5-21). Washington, DC: The Urban Institute.
Website:
Prasetyo, P. E., Sudarma, K., & Sulaha, A.S. (2014). Economic policy impact on competitiveness and efficiency of textile industry in central java. Economic Journal of Emerging Markets, 6 (2), 85-95. Retrieved August 23, 2016, from http://journal.uii.ac.id/index.php/JEP/issue/view/417
Unpublished doctoral dissertation or master’s thesis:
Mosquera, C. M. R. (2009). Essays on Economic Growth, Financial Integration and Exchange Rates. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Published proceedings:
Altinbas, H., & Biskin, O.T. (2015). Selecting macroeconomic influencers on stock markets by using feature selection algorithms. In E. Hromada (Ed.), IISES 3rd and 4th Economics and Finance Conference: Vol. 30. Procedia Economics and Finance (pp. 22-29). London: International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences.
A presented paper:
Lagos, Ricardo. (2009, October). Asset Prices, Liquidity, and Monetary Policy in an Exchange Economy. Paper presented at the Annual Economic Policy Conference of the FRB of St. Louis: "Debt, Financial Markets and Monetary Policy", Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, US.
Newspaper
Matthews, L. (2011, November 23). Foodbanks urge public to give generously. Manawatu Standard, p. 4.
Little blue penguins homeward bound. (2011, November 23). Manawatu Standard, p. 5.
Rogers, C. (2011, November 26). Smartphone could replace wallets. The Dominion Post. Retrieved from http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/gadgets/6038621/Smartphone-could-replace-wallets
Act (statute/legistation)
Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992. (2013, December 16). Retrieved from http://www.legislation.govt.nz
Internet
Ministry of Health. (2014). Ebola: Information for the public. Retrieved from http://www.health.govt.nz/your-health/conditions-and-treatments/diseases-and-illnesses/ebola-information-public