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Outsourcing Journals Production

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Title: Outsourcing Journals Production


1
Outsourcing Journals Production
  • Sharon Toop
  • Group Production Manager, Institute of Physics
    Publishing
  • John Strange
  • Group Production Director, Blackwell Publishing
    Ltd

2
Agenda
  • 9.30 9.45 Introduction JDS
  • 9.45 10.30 Outsourcing JDS
  • 10.30 11.00 Coffee
  • 11.00 11.45 Vendor Selection ST
  • 11.45 12.15 Breakout Groups discussion All
  • 12.15 12.45 Report back from breakout groups
    All
  • 1.00 2.00 Lunch
  • 2.00 2.45 Working offshore ST
  • 2.45 3.15 Cast study 1 (manufacturing in
    Singapore) JDS
  • 3.15 3.45 Tea
  • 3.45 4.15 Case study 2 (typesetting) ST
  • 4.15 - Questions

3
Sharon Toop brief biography
  • Joined IOP in January 1975 as an Editorial
    Assistant
  • and have stayed in Bristol ever since!
  • Journals Production Manager since 1985
  • brief spell with responsibility for books as well
    as journals production
  • overall responsibility for journals production
    strategy
  • introduced use of authors (LaTEX) files for
    print production (1989)
  • online publishing since 1994

4
Sharon Toop (continued)
  • Continuous process development and improvement
    during a time of rapid change in STM publishing
  • e-publishing developments
  • outsourcing offshore (live 2001)
  • growth in output (trebled 1996 2006)
  • faster publication times
  • cost reduction
  • Group Production Manager since 2004
  • ongoing responsibility for production strategy
  • overall responsibility for systems and processes
    within journals division
  • ATOM
  • Author Services

5
Institute of Physics Publishing
  • Owned by The Institute of Physics
  • a charity
  • a learned society
  • a professional association
  • Long publishing history
  • Proceedings of the Physical Society of London
    (1874)
  • International publisher of STM journals,
    magazines and electronic products
  • Journals turnover 22.4m (budget 2006)

6
Institute of Physics Publishing (continued)
  • Approx. 220 staff in Bristol
  • about half work directly on journals
    (publishing/production/development/sales
    marketing/customer service)
  • Overseas offices
  • sales marketing offices in Philadelphia (USA)
    and Munich (Germany)
  • editorial offices in Washington, DC (USA),
  • St Petersburg Moscow (Russia),
  • Beijing (China) and Tokyo (Japan)
  • All production managed from Bristol

7
Scale of journals operation (2006)
  • Regular (print e) journals
  • 31 titles
  • 120,000 pages
  • frequencies quarterly to weekly
  • Electronic-only journals
  • 11 titles
  • 55,000 pages
  • Total output 2006
  • 14,000 articles
  • 175,000 pages
  • and growing!

8
My experience.!
  • Blackwell Publishing (1993 - ) Academic,
    Scientific and Medical Publishing
  • Responsible for global production strategy
  • Books, journals and electronic products
  • Outsourced composition, manufacturing and
    distribution
  • Pearson Longman (1978 1992) Educational
    Publishing
  • Responsible for Schools Division production
    strategy
  • Administration and systems for Group as a whole
  • Special focus on composition and pre-press
  • Books
  • Outsourced composition, reproduction and
    manufacturing
  • Prior to 1978
  • 8 years in a small holiday guide publisher
  • 3 years in sales (printing company)
  • 3 years in works/factory management (printing
    company)

9
Who are Blackwell Publishing?
  • The worlds leading society publisher and is over
    75 years old.
  • Publish over 805 journals and 650 new books each
    year
  • Academic, Medical and Professional subjects
  • Partner with 665 academic and professional
    societies
  • 990 staff with offices in US, UK, Australia,
    China, Denmark, Germany, Singapore and Japan
  • Production facilities in US, UK, Australia and
    Japan
  • Outsource 100 composition and manufacturing
  • Overall sales revenue in excess of 200 million
    per annum

10
Outsourcing
  • What does it mean?
  • Why is it important?
  • What is really core business and, thus core
    competence?
  • What are the trends?
  • What are the critical success factors?

11
Outsourcing
  • What does it mean?
  • The delegation of one or more business functions
    (or processes) to a third party, who in turn
    delivers services to agreed criteria
  • Some other associated terminology
  • Offshoring the utilisation of a third party
    that is offshore (i.e. not domestic), normally
    to a region where labour costs are lower
  • Why is it important?
  • As domestic costs rise (especially labour costs),
    one is forced to try and locate parts of the
    world where you can buy services at a lower cost
    and, sometimes better quality with reduced lead
    times.

12
Outsourcing (contd)
  • Identify what is really core business and, thus
    core competence then focus internal resources
    on this which can then deliver-
  • Cost savings
  • Reduced lead times
  • Similar (or better quality)
  • Consistency
  • Scaleability
  • Areas that can be outsourced
  • Copy editing
  • Composition
  • Manufacturing
  • Distribution
  • Customer Services
  • Technology (support and development)
  • Some aspects of Finance (e.g. Purchase Ledger)
  • Rights and permissions
  • 24 x 7 help desks
  • Etc

13
Trends in outsourcing
  • Offshore outsourcing becoming very common (? the
    norm)
  • Europe far more experienced than US!!
  • Concerns about loss of jobs domestically but.?
  • Increasing breadth of outsourcing offerings
  • Vendors beginning to offer end-to-end solutions

14
What are the critical success factors?
  • Be very clear about What you want to outsource
  • Why you want to outsource
  • How you want to outsource
  • Define clearly the deliverables
  • The processes and procedures
  • Acceptable lead times
  • What you will supply
  • The costs
  • Payment terms
  • Communications
  • Disaster recovery plans
  • Assessment procedures
  • Arbitration
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