1 Aggregating with GeoscienceWorld (GSW) Whats in it for us?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CAIRN Chercher : Repérer : Progresser 20/03/ { } CAIRN A mutualist approach for distributing online contents in the humanities APM 2009 Conference.
Advertisements

EC Strategy Implementation Coping with Transformation Dick Scudder.
Lecture 2 - Revenue Models
Cancer Research UK Library The e-journals experience April 28 th 2010.
3. Introduction to Strategic Information Systems Planning (SISP)
Chapter 3 Launching a Business on the Internet. Awad –Electronic Commerce 1/e © 2002 Prentice Hall 2 OBJECTIVES Introduction of E-Business Life Cycle.
De Gruyter offers competitive pricing and customer-friendly business models for all its content: eProducts for Everyone De Gruyter e-dition Print + eBook.
1 L U N D U N I V E R S I T Y Integrating Open Access Journals in Library Services & Assisting Authors in choosing publishing channels 4th EBIB Conference.
10-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication Caroline Mutwiri.
1 of 16 Information Access The External Information Providers © FAO 2005 IMARK Investing in Information for Development Information Access The External.
28 April 2004Second Nordic Conference on Scholarly Communication 1 Citation Analysis for the Free, Online Literature Tim Brody Intelligence, Agents, Multimedia.
PUBLICATIONS BOARD REPORT Joe Konstan SGB Publications Advisor.
Journals Performance Review Publications Committee Meeting 6 January 2010.
1 Banking Services for Everyone? Barriers to Bank Access and Use Around the World Thorsten Beck Asli Demirgüç-Kunt Maria Soledad Martinez Peria The World.
Archiving Electronic Journals. Aims and objectives To get an overview of the challenges of archiving electronic journals To consider who can take responsibility.
Library 1 Electronic Resources in the EUI Library Veerle Deckmyn, Library Director Aimee Glassel, Electronic Resources Librarian September 2, 2009.
Library Electronic Resources in the EUI Library Veerle Deckmyn, Library Director Aimee Glassel, Electronic Resources Librarian 07 September
Electronic Resources in the EUI Library
Public B2B Exchanges and Support Services
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Title Subtitle.
1 FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR COUNTER AND USE STATISTICS David Goodman Palmer School of Library & Information Science Long Island University.
[ 1 ] © 2011 iParadigms, LLC Benefits for Teaching. Impact on Learning. Introduction to Turnitin.
Configuration management
Chapter 5 Strategies in Action
1 The information industry and the information market Summary.
12 June 2014 Library & IT Services 1 Renovating the Library: Creating Learning Spaces and Moving to E-Only Hans Geleijnse Library Strategy Consultant Tilburg.
1 IC GS J. Broome, Mar Introduction to the Informatics and Data Aspects John Broome (Canada)
Creating and Capturing Customer Value
A Key to Economic Analysis
New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
Sunday October 28, www.eprints.org Tim Brody - Stevan Harnad -
Introduction to Databases
Welcome! A powerpoint guide to IOP’s Electronic Journals Contents journals.iop.org 2 journals.iop.org Journals list 3Journals list Journal homepages 4Journal.
Who are the Experts?Simon KampaSlide 1 Who are the Experts? Simon Kampa IAM Group University of Southampton
Global E-Commerce Back to Table of Contents.
ARL 1 Library Publishing Services: New Opportunities for Research Libraries Karla Hahn ARL Office of Scholarly Communication ARL May Membership Meeting.
Safety and health at work is everyone’s concern. It’s good for you. It’s good for business. Online interactive Risk Assessment Advisory Committee for Safety.
25 seconds left…...
Older People’s Provision and Self Directed Support Geoff Mark Joint Planning & Commissioning Manager 1.
The library as organizer of digital information
Jean Bradford Serials and Inter-library Document Supply, University of Bristol UKSG Serials Resource Management Seminar 12 th October 2005.
ABC-CLIO’s Perspective on E-Books ICOLC September 21, 2000.
We will resume in: 25 Minutes.
Chapter 12 Strategic Planning.
1 Chapter 20 New Horizons. 2 Understand the many changing dimensions that shape international business. Learn about and evaluate the international business.
How the University Library can help you with your term paper
© 2012 JOANNE PERCY 1 The challenge of delivering on user expectation in a one-click world Joanne Percy Eastern Washington University Krista Higham Millersville.
Throwing Open the Doors: Strategies and Implications for Open Access Heather Joseph Executive Director, SPARC October 23, 2009 Educause Live 1.
The Evolution of Licensing and What It Means to Our Business Strategies Society for Scholarly Publishing May 28, 2003 Alma J. Wills, Partner Kaufman-Wills.
The rise of the e-book: issues for publishers and the impact on translation rights Lynette Owen, Copyright and Rights Consultant Moscow, September 6 th.
OPEN ACCESS Your Publisher of Choice DE GRUYTER OPEN Society-Pays Publishing Program.
When a Society journal changes publisher… Ian Russell Chief Executive Designate Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers
Experiences on services enabling integration of electronic resources: A to Z (EBSCO) and ScholarSFX (SFX Express with Google Scholar) Natalia Litvinova.
ELPUB 2006 Bansko, 14 June 2006 E-publishing Infrastructure for Firenze University Press Patrizia Cotoneschi University of Florence E-publishing Infrastructure.
M&A STRATEGY One of most fundamental motives for M&A is growth. Companies seeking to expand are faced with a choice between internal or organic growth.
E-journals: opportunities and challenges Bharati Banerjee.
Journal Sales Channels With the advent of the internet and online journals, the international library market has increased in complexity and opportunity.
Rich Foley - Executive Vice President Academic & Public Markets Helen Wilbur - Vice President Consortia Sales & Marketing Digital ArchivesResearch CollectionseBooks.
Open Access: An Introduction Edward Shreeves Director, Collections and Content Development University of Iowa Libraries
October Challenges for Scientific Editors in the Electronic Era Hooman Momen Editor Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
E-Resources Subscription for the University System: An initiative from UGC&INFLIBNET By Dr. T. A.V. Murthy
Charleston Pre-Conference Nov. 3, 2004 David Goodman Palmer School of Library and Information Science Long Island University How to survive.
Shruthi(s) II M.Sc(CS) msccomputerscience.com. Introduction Digital Libraries have become the source of information sharing across the globe for education,
The Transition to Electronic-Only Format: Costs and Considerations UKSG April 5, 2006 Roger C. Schonfeld Ithaka.
Using Open Access Publishing for the Effective Dissemination of African Research PKP PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE PROJECT Ensuring a Journal’s Economic Sustainability,
Publishing from the Library: New Roles for Libraries in Scholarly Communications David Ruddy Cornell University Library September, 2004.
Benefits and Problems Facing Them
Presentation transcript:

1 Aggregating with GeoscienceWorld (GSW) Whats in it for us?

2 [1] Awareness. Awareness – visibility of participating societies The easier you can find a publication, the more it will used. Wider use = increased stature.

3 [2] Maximize publishing advantage for authors. Highly cited authors publish in journals that are widely cited. Authors favor publications with easy (online) submission process. GSW will encourage authors to publish regionally focused papers with smaller societies. Why? Because the aggregate gains them national and international circulation.

4 [3] Keep societies competitive. Libraries subscribe to most-used journals. On the basis of usage or impact factor, most societies competitors are journals published by multi-million if not billion dollar commercial publishers. A society cannot afford to ignore the benefits of co-operation. Small societies that do not aggregate could become extinct.

5 [4] Increase readership/circulation. Societies are likely to reach new markets as GSW users discover new journals through searches, reference linking and easy access.

6 [5] Maintain readership/circulation. It will be easier for a library to make a case for a single online collection of journals than individual subscriptions. A society-based aggregate is insurance against being picked off one by one. Aggregate cuts costs to libraries

7 [6] Maintains readership/circulation. Societies will risk losing the print subscriptions whether they participate or not. Libraries may not pick up individual online journals if they drop print versions. GSW offers way to maintain presence in libraries if print subscriptions are dropped.

8 [7] Preservation and use of past literature. Readily accessible publications will be used. Aggregate avoids the probability of not bothering to check old refs because they have been moved off-site. For example: SEG. Entire journal put online. Downloads of the earliest articles were observed. Especially true when GSW can put pre-2000 articles online (the Legacy Collection).

9 [8] Greater Accessibility to a Wider Audience. Most journal subscribers are academic libraries in advanced degree-granting institutions. A cooperative effort like GSW may have the content diversity and resources to develop a pricing scheme to market to industry, public libraries, developing countries, etc. creating subscriber diversity.

10 [9] Enable small societies to go electronic. Experience, procedures, and economies of scale will benefit and assist a small society to publish electronically. There may be direct financial support for digitizing archives.

11 [10] Decrease costs to libraries. Economies of scale and resource sharing from publishers (societies) dedicated to disseminating the geological sciences by making their publications available at lowest costs possible.

12 [11] Decrease cost of keeping up with technology. Members and subscribers will soon want more than current publishing systems. Electronic publishing will become increasingly complex. Unlikely that most societies could continue to manage or afford the file preparation, software, and hardware expenses. Joining an aggregation of journals holds the most promise. Sharing production costs, whether print or electronic, makes management and financial sense.

13 [12] Library Consortia. Processing an institutional paper subscription order is relatively inexpensive and quick. But there are a growing number of library consortia. Electronic subscriptions for these will involve contracts, which likely will differ between consortia. Society will need more legal help to process these subscription orders. For single journals this does not make economic sense. A small society with few titles is apt to lose out to publishers offering journal titles in bulk lots. A society participating in GSW would benefit from being part of a larger group.

14 [13] Marketing. It is difficult to market a scientific journal today, especially internationally, with the hope of increasing subscriptions. Aggregating a society's journal with other, related journals is the first mechanism that has the potential to increase circulation.

15 [14] Less Developed Countries. Most journals, whether print or electronic, are too expensive for many institutions in less developed countries. Societies find it hard to develop subscription arrangements that reflect ability to pay. A larger or cooperative group would have the resources to develop and market a business plan for the less well-off markets. Electronic format could eliminate printing and mailing costs

16 [15] GSW is Non-profit. A commercial aggregator relies on significantly higher library subscription prices. Not in the tradition of societies providing scientific papers of dedicated (unpaid) authors. Society-based aggregate can allow societies to continue making publications available at lower cost.

17 [16] GSW is a Co-operative. Even with a "customer relations department" a society, particularly a small one, has relatively little leverage for change over a commercial vendor. GSW participants will have more clout in determining their distribution.

18 [17] Covering Journal Costs. Some commercial arrangements require the society to support the journal from sources other than electronic subscription revenues, or rely on the continued sale of paper copies. In some cases the commercial aggregator is an additional publishing expense with no returned revenue. Clearly if the future of publications for a small society is electronic-only, the society would be hard pressed to continue to deliver hard copy.

19 [18] GSW is a Discipline Aggregate. Many commercial aggregates contained a large number of journals, but few are science- or Earth-science related. An Earth science publication adrift in a sea of unrelated journals may not in itself bad, but it would mean the grouping would be marketed generically rather than specifically.

20 [19] GSW is Non-exclusive. A society can make its electronic publications available through existing or new channels. While the financial aspects of multiple distributors are yet to be fully anticipated, at the minimum it means that various societies could continue to make their online publications available to members and institutional subscribers who do not subscribe to GSW.

21 [20] Inclusion of Non-journal Material. Long term, GSW would like to include books, field guides, maps, databases etc. All of a society's published material available digitally from the same source. The richness of the material available from GSW would increase the attractiveness of subscribing This in turn would make each societys publications more visible.

22 [21] Inclusion of Non- English Languages Publications. GSW plans to include non-English pubs. asap. Some have English abstracts, already. With translation software, articles will soon be translated as needed. English publications will be translatable through the same software. Richness of the material available from GSW would increase the attractiveness of GSW. This would make each societys publications circulated more widely than ever imagined.

23 [22] Secure a Broader Earth Science Voice. Unlike the physics community, the Earth sciences tend to be less cohesive and consequently less visible, scientifically and politically. Visible co-operation may change that to benefit all Earth science societies.

24 [23] Better Integration of Earth Science Literature. Literature searching will be easier, faster, and ought to be more complete.

25 [24] Less research duplication. A researcher may find there is already an answer to their question.