Writing10 min readNovember 28, 2025
Paper Writing Timeline: A 12-Week Plan
Writing a research paper is a marathon, not a sprint. This 12-week plan breaks the process into manageable phases, from initial idea to polished submission.
Whether you are a first-time author or a seasoned researcher, having a structured timeline dramatically reduces last-minute stress and improves paper quality. This guide assumes you already have preliminary results or a clear research direction. Adjust the timeline based on your specific situation and deadline.
1
Week 1-2Research
Ideation & Literature Review
- Define your research question clearly
- Conduct a thorough literature review (50+ papers)
- Identify the gap your work addresses
- Draft a one-paragraph problem statement
- Discuss feasibility with your advisor
2
Week 3-4Research
Methodology & Experimentation
- Design your experimental setup
- Implement baseline methods for comparison
- Set up evaluation metrics and datasets
- Begin running initial experiments
- Document all experimental decisions
3
Week 5-6Writing
Core Experiments & Analysis
- Run main experiments with multiple seeds
- Perform ablation studies
- Analyze results statistically
- Create initial figures and tables
- Identify any additional experiments needed
4
Week 7-8Writing
Writing the First Draft
- Write the introduction (problem + contributions)
- Draft the related work section
- Describe methodology in detail
- Present experimental results with analysis
- Write a preliminary conclusion
5
Week 9-10Polish
Revision & Feedback
- Share draft with advisor and collaborators
- Incorporate feedback systematically
- Strengthen the narrative and motivation
- Polish figures for clarity and aesthetics
- Verify all citations and references
6
Week 11-12Polish
Final Polish & Submission
- Proofread for grammar and clarity
- Check formatting against submission guidelines
- Write a compelling abstract (last!)
- Prepare supplementary materials
- Submit 24 hours before the deadline
Pro Tips
- 1.Write your abstract last. It should summarize what you actually wrote, not what you planned to write.
- 2.Start with the methodology section. It is the most concrete part and helps you build momentum.
- 3.Submit at least 24 hours before the deadline. Server crashes and last-minute issues are more common than you think.
- 4.Use version control (Git) for your paper. You will thank yourself when you need to revert changes or track what was modified.