Recently, a journal I have some editorial involvement with has decided that for its 'rapid publication' outlet, it will no longer accept submissions where LaTeX has been used to format the document. They now demand everything be submitted as a (sigh) Word document.
After much whining, bitching and moaning from me (and some others), they've relented -- partially. They'll take LaTeX submissions *if* we can build a strong stylesheet - one wherein the generated PDF looks "pretty damned close to exactly like the published form" (their words).
The actual (published) format they want isn't particular complex. Fore example, see
http://www.esajournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1890/ES12-00286.1
Now, I'm 'good enugh' with laTeX to be able to use this package, and that, a few tweaks here and there, to cobble together something pretty damned close. But, that approach isn't particularly portable. What they want (and I would agree) is a .cls file (and a .bst for the bib) which a user could apply to their document, and presto chango, out comes the paper.
I've never tried writing a .cls file. Those that I've accumulated over the years (e.g., Springer etc), I can follow pretty well, but I'm not quite sure where to start.
Suggestions? Of course, if any of your smart folks who can do this in your sleep wanna take 15 minutes and put it together, ( (and oh, say, 500 or so folks who use LaTeX for this journal) would be forever indebted - virtual beers on us for life. Real ones if we ever crossed carporeal paths.