A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Standard

A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin. / Jex, Catherine; Colgan, William; Garde, Adam A.; Ineson, Jon R.; Hambly, Adam; Kim, Hyojin; Koch, Julian; Kokfelt, T.F.; Larsen, Signe Hillerup; Lindström, Sofie; Lode, Stefanie; Madsen, Rasmus Bødker; Olivarius, Mette; Saalmann, Kerstin; Seidenkrantz, Marit S L; Stemmerik, Lars; Svennevig, Kristian.

2021. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jex, C, Colgan, W, Garde, AA, Ineson, JR, Hambly, A, Kim, H, Koch, J, Kokfelt, TF, Larsen, SH, Lindström, S, Lode, S, Madsen, RB, Olivarius, M, Saalmann, K, Seidenkrantz, MSL, Stemmerik, L & Svennevig, K 2021, 'A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.', EGU General Assembly 2021, 19/04/2021 - 30/04/2021. <https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU21/EGU21-7168.html>

APA

Jex, C., Colgan, W., Garde, A. A., Ineson, J. R., Hambly, A., Kim, H., Koch, J., Kokfelt, T. F., Larsen, S. H., Lindström, S., Lode, S., Madsen, R. B., Olivarius, M., Saalmann, K., Seidenkrantz, M. S. L., Stemmerik, L., & Svennevig, K. (2021). A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021. https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU21/EGU21-7168.html

Vancouver

Jex C, Colgan W, Garde AA, Ineson JR, Hambly A, Kim H et al. A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.. 2021. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021.

Author

Jex, Catherine ; Colgan, William ; Garde, Adam A. ; Ineson, Jon R. ; Hambly, Adam ; Kim, Hyojin ; Koch, Julian ; Kokfelt, T.F. ; Larsen, Signe Hillerup ; Lindström, Sofie ; Lode, Stefanie ; Madsen, Rasmus Bødker ; Olivarius, Mette ; Saalmann, Kerstin ; Seidenkrantz, Marit S L ; Stemmerik, Lars ; Svennevig, Kristian. / A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{bfce3bf18a7541749670cdb6657ce3ff,
title = "A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.",
abstract = "One active journal. Fourteen legacy titles. More than 3000 articles published since 1893 – some digitised, some not. One full-time member of staff. A small team of dedicated geoscientists. Limited budget. PlanS. Open-source journal software. If these are the ingredients, what is the recipe? Like many surveys, the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) has a long history of publishing. Our full catalogue of titles extends back to 1893 and our current title, GEUS Bulletin (www.geusbulletin.org; formerly Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin), has been active since 2003. Our journals have always been grassroots initiatives – run by scientists, for scientists. But two years ago, amid the fast-changing demands of digital publishing, the Survey faced a quandary: should we continue publishing our own journal? At a time of rapid proliferation of journals for any discipline imaginable, what niche did a geographically-focused journal fill? What should we modernise? Could we relaunch as an online, diamond open-access journal on our existing budget? Could we implement more of the services our authors wanted and attract more authors beyond our traditional audience? Two years later, we have successfully re-launched our collection of journals, without increasing our overall budget. Using open-source solutions, we have transformed our print-focused publication workflow to a new online, open-access platform and data repository. We are currently migrating our entire back catalogue of legacy titles to the same platform. Although we only have visitor data for our new platform since November 2020, we can see early signs of increased article views (c. +82% in Nov–Dec 2020, compared with the same months in 2018 and 2019) and a jump in traffic from external websites like Google Scholar (from 5% before re-launch to 35% after re-launch). In this presentation, we present a recipe that we hope other geological surveys, societies and institutions can follow when launching (or relaunching) their own journals using open-source solutions. We review the options available to small survey or society publishers on a limited budget, from journal hosting to typesetting. We highlight the advantages of non-profit open-access publishing and open source, community-driven solutions that currently exist. We close by highlighting the barriers that remain for small non-profit publishers when balancing discoverability, journal impact and compliance with the latest open-access initiatives such as Plan S, and web accessibility regulations. It is still early days for GEUS Bulletin, but we see the adoption of open-source platforms as the key ingredient to our potential for success in the coming years. Such platforms allow us to offer diamond open-access publishing and a data repository, while maintaining our non-profit, publishing model with neither author nor reader fees. ",
author = "Catherine Jex and William Colgan and Garde, {Adam A.} and Ineson, {Jon R.} and Adam Hambly and Hyojin Kim and Julian Koch and T.F. Kokfelt and Larsen, {Signe Hillerup} and Sofie Lindstr{\"o}m and Stefanie Lode and Madsen, {Rasmus B{\o}dker} and Mette Olivarius and Kerstin Saalmann and Seidenkrantz, {Marit S L} and Lars Stemmerik and Kristian Svennevig",
year = "2021",
language = "English",
note = "EGU General Assembly 2021 : Online ; Conference date: 19-04-2021 Through 30-04-2021",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - A recipe for launvhing a diamond open-access journal with a century of geological knowledge in the pantry: Lessons learned from GEUS Bulletin.

AU - Jex, Catherine

AU - Colgan, William

AU - Garde, Adam A.

AU - Ineson, Jon R.

AU - Hambly, Adam

AU - Kim, Hyojin

AU - Koch, Julian

AU - Kokfelt, T.F.

AU - Larsen, Signe Hillerup

AU - Lindström, Sofie

AU - Lode, Stefanie

AU - Madsen, Rasmus Bødker

AU - Olivarius, Mette

AU - Saalmann, Kerstin

AU - Seidenkrantz, Marit S L

AU - Stemmerik, Lars

AU - Svennevig, Kristian

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - One active journal. Fourteen legacy titles. More than 3000 articles published since 1893 – some digitised, some not. One full-time member of staff. A small team of dedicated geoscientists. Limited budget. PlanS. Open-source journal software. If these are the ingredients, what is the recipe? Like many surveys, the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) has a long history of publishing. Our full catalogue of titles extends back to 1893 and our current title, GEUS Bulletin (www.geusbulletin.org; formerly Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin), has been active since 2003. Our journals have always been grassroots initiatives – run by scientists, for scientists. But two years ago, amid the fast-changing demands of digital publishing, the Survey faced a quandary: should we continue publishing our own journal? At a time of rapid proliferation of journals for any discipline imaginable, what niche did a geographically-focused journal fill? What should we modernise? Could we relaunch as an online, diamond open-access journal on our existing budget? Could we implement more of the services our authors wanted and attract more authors beyond our traditional audience? Two years later, we have successfully re-launched our collection of journals, without increasing our overall budget. Using open-source solutions, we have transformed our print-focused publication workflow to a new online, open-access platform and data repository. We are currently migrating our entire back catalogue of legacy titles to the same platform. Although we only have visitor data for our new platform since November 2020, we can see early signs of increased article views (c. +82% in Nov–Dec 2020, compared with the same months in 2018 and 2019) and a jump in traffic from external websites like Google Scholar (from 5% before re-launch to 35% after re-launch). In this presentation, we present a recipe that we hope other geological surveys, societies and institutions can follow when launching (or relaunching) their own journals using open-source solutions. We review the options available to small survey or society publishers on a limited budget, from journal hosting to typesetting. We highlight the advantages of non-profit open-access publishing and open source, community-driven solutions that currently exist. We close by highlighting the barriers that remain for small non-profit publishers when balancing discoverability, journal impact and compliance with the latest open-access initiatives such as Plan S, and web accessibility regulations. It is still early days for GEUS Bulletin, but we see the adoption of open-source platforms as the key ingredient to our potential for success in the coming years. Such platforms allow us to offer diamond open-access publishing and a data repository, while maintaining our non-profit, publishing model with neither author nor reader fees.

AB - One active journal. Fourteen legacy titles. More than 3000 articles published since 1893 – some digitised, some not. One full-time member of staff. A small team of dedicated geoscientists. Limited budget. PlanS. Open-source journal software. If these are the ingredients, what is the recipe? Like many surveys, the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) has a long history of publishing. Our full catalogue of titles extends back to 1893 and our current title, GEUS Bulletin (www.geusbulletin.org; formerly Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin), has been active since 2003. Our journals have always been grassroots initiatives – run by scientists, for scientists. But two years ago, amid the fast-changing demands of digital publishing, the Survey faced a quandary: should we continue publishing our own journal? At a time of rapid proliferation of journals for any discipline imaginable, what niche did a geographically-focused journal fill? What should we modernise? Could we relaunch as an online, diamond open-access journal on our existing budget? Could we implement more of the services our authors wanted and attract more authors beyond our traditional audience? Two years later, we have successfully re-launched our collection of journals, without increasing our overall budget. Using open-source solutions, we have transformed our print-focused publication workflow to a new online, open-access platform and data repository. We are currently migrating our entire back catalogue of legacy titles to the same platform. Although we only have visitor data for our new platform since November 2020, we can see early signs of increased article views (c. +82% in Nov–Dec 2020, compared with the same months in 2018 and 2019) and a jump in traffic from external websites like Google Scholar (from 5% before re-launch to 35% after re-launch). In this presentation, we present a recipe that we hope other geological surveys, societies and institutions can follow when launching (or relaunching) their own journals using open-source solutions. We review the options available to small survey or society publishers on a limited budget, from journal hosting to typesetting. We highlight the advantages of non-profit open-access publishing and open source, community-driven solutions that currently exist. We close by highlighting the barriers that remain for small non-profit publishers when balancing discoverability, journal impact and compliance with the latest open-access initiatives such as Plan S, and web accessibility regulations. It is still early days for GEUS Bulletin, but we see the adoption of open-source platforms as the key ingredient to our potential for success in the coming years. Such platforms allow us to offer diamond open-access publishing and a data repository, while maintaining our non-profit, publishing model with neither author nor reader fees.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - EGU General Assembly 2021

Y2 - 19 April 2021 through 30 April 2021

ER -

ID: 360481038