 So before you send in that final paper, carefully read it again, read the entire manuscript and mail it in. Now, hopefully your paper is accepted. Once it's accepted, then it will be copy edited. The publisher will set it up to look like the pages of the journal or how it will appear for an online presentation. But the journal will send you back the paper now for a final, final review. You may get what are called queries, author queries, where the editor, the copy editor, is asking you a question like, Dear author, I revised the first paragraph. I hope I haven't changed the meaning. Please double-check that paragraph carefully. So it's up to you to very carefully read the paper, answer all the queries. But I again encourage you to read the entire paper from start to finish to be sure there haven't been any mistakes introduced. I've seen mistakes introduced where paragraphs unfortunately got dropped somehow in the editing process. So suddenly the paper doesn't flow well because paragraphs, I had a paper about six paragraphs just magically disappeared. So read carefully the entire paper. When you get the paper at this stage, often the publisher gives you a very short turnaround to return those page proofs. And you may be saying to yourself, Gee, this whole process took months or a year. And now you want my page proofs returned back by FedEx in 48 hours? Yes, we do. So please review carefully and meet the deadline because what the publisher is saying to you is we want your paper. We want to publish it. We're ready for perhaps for it to go to the printing press. Please get it back to us right away so we can keep on our publishing schedule. When you're finished, celebrate your success, particularly if you're a new author. It's just an amazing, wonderful experience to see your paper in print, to see your name there, to know that you've made a contribution to the literature. Your idea is out now for the whole discipline to see. Celebrate your success, but get started on your next paper. Experienced authors always have one paper in the draft stage, one paper under review. Perhaps one paper is accepted and is in the press phase. So experienced authors are constantly writing, contributing to the literature. And I hope you'll do that as well. Best of luck.