I am preparing a full-length research article for IEEE Software Magazine that explores how large language models (LLMs) are reshaping everyday development practice. The piece will sit squarely in the Artificial Intelligence in Software Engineering theme and must satisfy IEEE Software’s editorial standards in tone, citation style, and length (roughly 4,500–6,000 words plus figures). I have the core ideas, data sources, and several practitioner interviews, but I need an experienced IEEE-published author to translate this material into a compelling, peer-review-ready manuscript. Familiarity with the magazine’s preferred structure—context-problem-approach-results-lessons—as well as IEEE reference formatting is essential. Deliverables • Annotated outline reflecting the required IEEE Software sections • First draft incorporating at least three concrete industry examples of LLM-driven workflow changes (code generation, test impact analysis, and knowledge retrieval) • Revised, publication-ready manuscript with citations, figures/tables, and an abstract limited to 150 words Acceptance criteria: the final document passes the magazine’s internal plagiarism check, adheres to the IEEE Software author guidelines (latest version), and is formatted in Microsoft Word using the IEEE template. If you have verifiable IEEE Software (or related IEEE periodical) bylines and can slot this project into your schedule immediately, let’s talk about timelines and next steps.