Title: OA Publishing
1OA Publishing
- The impact of OA on institutional pricing and
licensing
2Overview
- Impact
- Institutional pricing
- Licensing
- Single titles
- Big deal
- Aggregators
- Types of OA
- Delayed OA
- Optional OA
- Full OA
- Business models and pricing
- Author-side fees
- Institutional memberships
- Third party support
3Types of OA
4Types of OA
- Delayed OA
- Journals offering original research articles
under subscription access controls upon
publication but making articles freely and
publicly available after a period of time. - Archive may be a one-time purchase, subscription,
or OA - Optional OA
- Journals offering original research articles
under subscription access controls unless author
or institution has paid fee to ensure that
article is freely and publicly available on
publication. - Optional Open Access journals may also be Delayed
OA journals. - Full OA
- Journals making original research articles freely
and publicly available immediately on
publication.
5Delayed OA
- Non-participating (mostly)
- HighWire Press hosted journals
- Toll free linking
- OA (recent) archive
- Society journals
- University press journals
- Commercial publishers
- Aggregators
- Represents thousands of journals, so awareness /
impact reduced overall
6Optional OA
- Participating (mostly)
- Commercial publishers
- Mixed participation
- University Presses
- Society publishers
- Non-participating
- Aggregators
- Permissions policies, deposit in OA repository go
hand-in-hand
7Full OA
- Commercial publishers
- BMC
- Industry-supported
- Society publishers
- Member supported
- Other nonprofit
- PLoS
- University press/Harvard
- Academic department
8Business models and pricing
9Revenue sources
- Dues and subscriptions
- Society membership
- Institutional membership
- Subscriptions (to non-OA content)
- Third party underwriting
- Industry ads, sponsorships, grants
- Foundation grants
- Government support
- Volunteer labor
- Society publishers
- Academic departments
- Author-side fees
- Submission fees
- Page charges
- Color charges
- Article processing charges ? OA
- Funding agencies
- Institutional memberships
10Funding agencies
- 35 funders have confirmed that they are willing
to fund article processing charges - 28 funders have an official policy in support of
open access - 25 of these funder policies encourage or in some
cases require funding recipients to deposit
resulting research articles in an open access
repository
11Funding agencies willing to pay article
processing fees
- International Human Frontier Science Program
Organization (International) - Israel Science Foundation (Israel)
- Max Planck Society (Germany)
- Medical Research Council (UK)
- National Health Service (UK)
- National Institutes of Health (US)
- National Science Foundation (US)
- Natural Environment Research Council (UK)
- Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk
Onderzoek (Netherlands) - Rockefeller Foundation (US)
- South African Medical Research Council (South
Africa) - Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research
(Sweden) - Swedish Research Council (Sweden)
- Swiss National Science Foundation (Switzerland)
- Wellcome Trust (UK)
- Academy of Finland (Finland)
- BIOTEC (Thailand)
- California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
(US) - Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Canada)
- Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(France) - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
(Spain) - Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy)
- Danmarks Grundforskningsfond (Denmark)
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany)
- FAPESP (Brazil)
- Fondazione Telethon (Italy)
- Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen
Forschung (Austria) - Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (Belgium)
- Health Research Board (Ireland)
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute (US)
- Indian Council of Medical Research (India)
- INSERM (France)
12Author-side fees sampler
13PLoS institutional membership
- PLoS institutional members pay annual fee, at
chosen level - Entitles affiliated scientists to reduced charges
for publication in flagship and community PLoS
journals - Provides libraries with access to institutional
usage reports for all PLoS publications - Lists member institutions on the PLoS web site
Members page, with list of articles published in
journals by affiliated authors - Other PLoS memberships
- Research funding agencies on behalf of
investigators, grantees - Consortial memberships
- Negotiated on case-by-case basis.
14Market response to PLoS institutional membership
- 100 colleges and universities
- Harvard
- Yale
- University of Amsterdam
- Kalamazoo College.
- http//www.plos.org/support/instmembers.html
- Open Society Institute pays for PLoS
institutional memberships on behalf of
universities and other organizations in 44
developing countries
15BMC institutional membership
- Prepay Membership
- Customers pay upfront for articles published by
their authorized users to be processed and
published. - On publication, full article processing charge
for journal minus discount that applies is
deducted from account. The higher the amount
paid in advance, the greater the discount given. - Postpay Membership
- Scientific and medical societies and groups are
invoiced in arrears for papers authored by their
members that have been published in journals
since last invoice date. - Invoice schedules are set on a monthly or
quarterly cycle. - Supporters Membership
- Flat rate annual membership fee based on the
number of science and medical researchers and
graduate students at institution. - Members of the institution are then given a 15
discount on the article processing charge when
publishing in our journals. - Market response
- 321 members, 33 countries
- http//www.biomedcentral.com/info/about/membership
16OUP
- Institutional rebates
- To be presented this afternoon
17Impact of OA on institutional pricing and
licensing
18What is the impact of OA on institutional pricing
and licensing?
19Institutional pricing
- Agents alert libraries to Full OA journals no
incentive to do more - Librarians not (yet?) devoting energies to
determining percentage of Optional and Delayed OA - Librarians can imagine time when they will wonder
why they have to pay so much for so little
content - Publishers asking for societies for guarantees on
behalf of library customers that purchased
archive will not be OA for, say, 20 years - Societies questioning whether institutional rates
need to be lowered if add Optional or mandatory OA
20Balancing institutional rates and OA fees
Recommendation margin management!
- Journal revenues historical reliance on
multiple revenue streams
- Journal costs focus on cost containment and
efficiency
- Member allocation
- Institutional subscriptions
- PPV
- Author-side fees
- Submission fees
- Page charges
- Processing charges
- Publication fees
- Color
- Data supplement
- Institutional memberships
- Language polishing
- Rights and permissions
- Industry government support
- Other
- Peer review
- Lower cost ms mgmt systems
- Journal franchises (multiple journal submissions,
shared reviews) - Printing
- Opt in / opt out
- Unbundled / no print
- Online platform
- Commodification
- Sales and marketing
- Institutions / consortia
- Author-side fee mgmt systems
- Outsourcing and offshoring
21Aggregator licensing
- Depends on
- Value of new content
- Amount of OA
- Embargo-Delayed OA squeeze
- ProQuest
- Negotiating lower royalty rates for Delayed OA or
significant proportion of Optional OA - Ovid
- Not known to negotiate lower royalty rates for
Delayed or Optional OA
22QAThank you!
- Cara S. Kaufman
- Partner, Kaufman-Wills Group
- 410 821 8035
- cara_at_kaufmanwills.com