Skip to Main Content

MGMT 36800 Organizational Leadership - Clevenger

What is the Difference Between Popular, Scholarly, and Trade Articles?

  • Popular: These are articles written for everyone. They’re found in magazines like Time or People, often with glossy pages, pictures, and simple language.
  • Scholarly: These are written by experts for other experts. They include research, use technical language, and have lots of citations. They’re often plain-looking with few pictures.
  • Trade: These focus on a specific job or industry, like business or healthcare. They share news, tips, and trends but don’t include deep research or peer review.
TIP: In library databases like Business Source Complete, you can filter results by type, such as Academic Journals/Peer Reviewed or Trade.

Source: University of Texas Libraries, Creative Commons CC BY-NC 2.0 license.

Source Types Widget
Feature Popular Magazines Scholarly Journals (Peer Reviewed/Academic Journals) Trade Publications
Content News, entertainment, trends Research studies, detailed reviews, book reviews Business/industry updates
Purpose To entertain or inform To share research and scholarship with academics To inform professionals
Author Journalists, staff writers Professors, researchers, scholars Industry experts, staff writers
Audience General public Researchers, academics, students Professionals in an industry
Review Process Checked by editors Reviewed by scholars/peers (peer-reviewed) Checked by editors
Citations Rare or informal Always includes citations (bibliographies, footnotes) Few or none
Frequency Weekly/monthly Quarterly or semi-annually Weekly/monthly
Ads Many ads for general products Minimal ads, usually for academic books or journals Ads for industry-related products
Examples Time, Vogue Journal of Business Ethics, New England Journal of Medicine Library Journal, Accounting Today

What is Peer Review?

From NC State University Libraries

Using Filters to Narrow Results

Skip ahead to 1:55 to learn how to find Peer Reviewed articles. 

If you can’t find peer-reviewed articles or books about your topic, it might be because it’s too recent, like an event from last month. Some topics, like pop culture or sports, might not have been studied by academics yet. If you're stuck, ask a librarian—we’re here to help!

Timeline of Information Production

Footer Example