Author Guidline

Author Guidelines

INJITECH  (International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Technopreneurship), is a great channel for publication of papers on Entrepreneurship And Business Development. Manuscripts reporting on experiments or research in this area will be accepted for review as papers.

 

GUIDING PRINCIPLES

The acceptable manuscript will meet the following general criteria: manuscripts report a valuable contribution to science, the exact methodology used, and are described in sufficient detail so that the other scientists were able to repeat the experiment. The conclusion is supported by the data, the manuscripts concise, well written, and comprehensible.

 

MANUSCRIPT FORMAT

Manuscripts should be uploaded to the INJITECH system journal and arranged in a standard format, Title, Author, Affiliation and Contact E-mail, Abstract, Keywords, Introduction, Methodology, Results and Discussion, Conclusion, Acknowledgment (optional), and References. Typed at one side of white paper of A4 size, in two columns, theme fonts Book Antiqua, Line Spacing: multiple at 1.08, Before 0pt and After 8pt, 1.5 space line, 10 points Arial font and should be given line numbers. Margins top : 1.27 cm; Left, Bottom and Right : 2.54 cm. 

 

MANUSCRIPT TITLE

The title of the paper should be concise and informative. Avoid abbreviations and formulas where possible. The contents of the study should be written clearly and concisely.

AUTHORS

The manuscript has a main author and co-author with the full name of the author and co-authors (no abbreviations), including the address (es) and email address.

ABSTRACT

The abstract comes after the title page in the manuscript. Abstracts should be integrated and independent consisting of an introduction and objectives, methods, results, conclusions, and impacts. However, the abstract should be written as a single paragraph without the header. For this reason, References should be avoided. Also, non-standard or uncommon abbreviations should be avoided, but if necessary, it should be defined at the first mention in the abstract. The abstract must consist of 150 to 250 words without references and accompanied by keywords.

KEYWORDS

Keywords should avoid general and plural terms and multiple concepts. Do not use words or terms in the title as a keyword. These keywords will be used for indexing. Keywords can not be more than 5 words or phrases in alphabetical order.

INTRODUCTION

The Introduction section consists of a minimum of 3 paragraphs. The first paragraph explains the meaning or preface of the research title in general. The second paragraph describes and compares previous studies related to the object under study, explaining the gaps from previous research that made you choose to do this research. The third paragraph restates or prearranges the objectives of the work and research methods previously described in the abstract section.

The introduction section consists of at least 3 paragraphs. The first paragraph describes the meaning of the title or preface of the research title in general. The second paragraph describes and compares the previous research related to the object under investigation, explained the gap from previous studies that made you choose to do this research. The third paragraph restates the objectives and research methods previously described in the abstract section.

METHODOLOGY

The first section should state the time and place of the study. Describe all materials, the number of samples/respondents, and methods used for analysis. Avoid detailed literature surveys or summary results.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Results and discussion should be written in the same section. It should be presented continuously, starting from the main results, supporting results, and discussions. Prior to present tables and figures, please explain in advance and specify the tables or figures. This section should also include comparisons with previous research that can support the results of the study.

CONCLUSION

Conclusions must be clearly explained based on the results obtained which answer the research objectives. This section describes the shortcomings of your research without pointing out the downside of your research. Conclusions should be written in a narrative and one paragraph. Do not use citations in the reference section.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

This section is optional If the authors include this section in the manuscript, please provide the source of funds and data from the research as well as those who assist in the study.

REFERENCES

An author-year notation system is required and finalized. All references cited must be written in the American Psychological Association (APA) style and arranged from A to Z. Articles have 10 or more recent references and 80% are journals. Most references are primary references (last ten years). Unpublished data and personal communications should not be cited as literature citations. "In Press" articles that have been accepted for publication may be cited for reference. Include in a journal excerpt where the "in print" article will appear and the issue date, if available. If you want to display data sources from the website, then use official websites such as the government and other agencies.

An author-year notation system is required and completed. All references cited should be written in the style of the American Psychological Association (APA) and arranged from A to Z. Articles have 10 or more recent references and 80% are international journals. Most references are the primary reference (last ten years). The unpublished data and personal communications should not be cited as literature citations. The article "In Press" that has been accepted for publication can be cited as a reference. Include in the journal in which the article citations "in print" will appear and the date of issuance, if available. If the author provides data sources from the website, please use official websites such as the government and other agencies.

 Example

Reference to a Journal Publication:
Diah, N. M., Nossal, N., Zin, N. A. M., Higuchi, T., & Iida, H. (2014). A Game Informatical Comparison of Chess and Association Football (Soccer). Advances in Computer Science: an International Journal, 3(4), 89-94.


Reference to a Book:
Bolda, M. L., Tourte, L., Klonskyk, K. M., & de Moura, R. L. (2005). Sample cost to produce fresh market rasberries. Berkeley, US: University of California Cooperative extension.

 

Reference to a Chapter in an Edited Book:
Tuong, T. P., & Bouman, B. A. M. (2003). Rice production in water-scarce environments. In W. Kijne, R. Barker, & D. Molden (Eds.), Water productivity in agriculture: Limits and opportunities for improvement (pp. 53–67). Manila, PH: CAB International.

 

Reference in Proceeding:

Huynh, D., Zuo, L., & Iida, H. (2016, December). Analyzing gamification of “Duolingo” with focus on its course structure. In International Conference on Games and Learning Alliance (pp. 268-277). Springer, Cham.

CITATION

The citation format uses the author's name and the year of the journal or article to be cited. If the article to be cited has more than three authors' names, first write the author's name, followed by et al, and the year the article was published. Example: (Zwain & Bahauddin, 2017), (Zwain et al., 2017).