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A day in the life of a Reviews Editor (at Development)

Posted by , on 14 May 2026

It’s been just over 8 months since I finished my PhD and posted my introduction as Development’s newest Reviews Editor on the Node. In this time, a constant question I’ve been asked by the ECRs around me from both my past life in academia and my current life at conferences has been “What do you do now? What does your day look like?”.

Of course, it’s not just me. Saanjbati – my partner in crime on the Reviews Editors team – has also been fielding these questions since she started this job as well. So, given the appetite from ECRs in hearing about our jobs, we’re lifting the lid on the elusive title of ‘Reviews Editor’ to show you what really goes on behind the scenes to deliver Development’s review articles and other front section content. To kick things off, Saanjbati has an article on “What does a Reviews Editor do?” and I am providing a run-down here of one sunny (!) day in April 2026, randomly chosen by my prettiest d20 dice for your perusal.

It’s probably worth noting here that, as with most jobs, each day in the journal’s office is very different to the next. So do let me know if you would like to see another day in my life. But for now, hope you enjoy reading about this one!

Microsoft 365 Co-Pilot’s graphical interpretation of my day.

Whilst I am writing about my experiences as a Reviews Editor at Development, all views here are my own and do not represent the journal.

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Cambridge, England – 2026
One of April’s many Mondays.

10:00 – Get to work, catch up with the office, grab a coffee. Our core office hours are 10am till 2pm so, as a night owl, I take full advantage of this and start at 10.

10:05 – Check emails that have come in through the weekend, as well as the various reports and notification we automatically receive from our online submissions system. An author who I am really excited about has agreed to write a review for us – whoop! I respond immediately and get stuck into clearing my inbox, which seems to be perennially full no matter how much I try to empty it.

10:30 – Soreen* break! Have a quick chat with the lovely preLights Community Manager, Reinier, about possible exciting preprints to highlight between bites of sticky sugary goodness. I promise to also upload the preprints list I collated at BSDB a few weeks ago. But for now, back to emails.

11:30 – Just received a message from Saanjbati about moving an article around between scheduled issues, so we have a quick chat about this. Then back to working through my inbox.

12:30 – Done with emails! Whew. A few commissioning emails have been sent out, feedback on synopsis given, reviewers chased, submission deadlines updated. Deep dives into synthetic biology and photoreceptors surfaced from. Just a little bit more admin to go…

12:45 – … and we’re done! Time for lunch outside in some suprisingly good weather.

13:15 – After a little bit of sun (and a touch of wind), it’s back to the desk for me. This afternoon, I have a slightly overdue meeting report to send round. It’s been delayed because I lost all the notes I’d been taking on it when my computer decided to restart itself whilst I was at the conference dinner and disco. Obviously a massive shame, but it also pushes me to ruminate harder over my notes in an attempt to rescue them, which might lead me to find other ideas…? Or at least that’s what I tell myself.

13:30 – I’ve realised I need to book my hotel for a trip later this year, which I’ve already forgotten to do four times. I get this out of the way first before I forget a fifth. Makes me excited for EuroEvoDevo in Glasgow!

14:30 – Somehow got sidetracked into looking up biorxiv references made during BSDB, which prompted another deep dive into recent preprints published under ‘Developmental Biology’. Spend a few minutes in awe of how quickly research is moving in certain directions and the seemingly masses of interest in biophysical/quantitative biology. Send some ramblings to Reinier and feel mildly envious of his job.

14:40 – Back to work on my core responsibilities! I’m only halfway through thinking about the meeting report and doing follow-ups on it. But it’s already time to look through the list of articles that were accepted in the past week and think about which should be highlighted.

14:58 – Done, just in time for the research highlight (RH) meeting! This is our weekly meeting where we discuss all the back section (i.e. primary research) articles and decide which to highlight. There are so many interesting papers this week, it’ll be quite hard to choose and I’m excited for the discussion.

15:35 – RHs have been picked, and I’m back at my desk to do a final read-through of the paper I’ve been assigned, just to make sure it’s as interesting as it seemed from my initial read-through.

15:40 – An email from our production team has just come through about a review article I’ve handled. Spend 10 minutes on this. Then another message comes through regarding some travel admin. Another 10 minutes gone.

16:00 – Back to reading this week’s RH paper. I personally really like it and am even more excited to write the highlight, although some of it is feeling quite anatomically complicated and will be difficult to describe in just 200 words without an illustration… Ohh well, that’s a problem for the future.

16:15 – OK, the various miscellaneous items that came in are done. Time to really lock-in on the meeting report, which needs to be sent today. It’s a nice creative exercise to reflect on all the science discussed at the meeting, but quite stressful to go through the whole programme and all my notes and synthesise something coherent for the rest of the team when under a time pressure.

16:50 – My brain is fried, my fingers feel like they’re about to fall off and my spirits are in dire need of chocolate. But the meeting report has finally been sent off! Time to wrap up a few things. As always, some important emails trickle through right as I’m about to leave. I resolve to address them on my way home.

17:00 – I leave early on Mondays so rush out for my bus. Bye!

*(other brands of malt loaves exist etc. etc.)

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