brochure get noticed

24
Get Noticed Promoting your article for maximum impact

Upload: hesham-n-mustafa

Post on 20-Feb-2017

311 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Brochure Get Noticed

Get NoticedPromoting your article for maximum impact

Page 2: Brochure Get Noticed

2Get Noticed

Page 3: Brochure Get Noticed

3Get Noticed

GET NOTICED

More than one million scientific articles are published each year, and that number is rising. So it’s increasingly important for you to find ways to make your article stand out.

While there is much that publishers and editors can do to help, as the paper’s author you are often best placed to explain why your findings are so important or novel.

This brochure shows you what Elsevier does and what you can do yourself to ensure that your article gets the attention it deserves.

Page 4: Brochure Get Noticed

4Get Noticed

PREPARING YOUR ARTICLE

When writing your article it’s important to choose the right journal. The journal with the right scope can be key to reaching your target audience. The easiest way for finding an Elsevier journal is using Journal Finder: journalfinder.elsevier.com.

Also, a good abstract is instrumental. Make sure that your abstract clearly and concisely explains what is new in your paper and why that is important.

SEO Optimizing your article for search engines – Search Engine Optimization (SEO) – helps to ensure it appears higher in the results returned by search engines such as Google. This helps you attract more readers, gain higher visibility in the academic community and potentially increase citations.

Below are a few SEO guidelines:

• Usekeywords,especiallyinthetitleandabstract.

• Addcaptionswithkeywordstoallphotographs,images,graphsandtables.

• Addtitlesorsubheadings(withkeywords)tothedifferentsections of your article.

For more detailed information on how to use SEO, see our guideline: elsevier.com/earlycareer/guides.

GIvE YOUR RESEARCh ThE ImPACT IT DESERvESContent innovations enable you to present your work in a more powerful form, and make your article stand out from the crowd. You can take advantage of the features, including the AudioSlides, Graphical Abstracts, Virtual Microscope, Interactive Map Viewer and 3D Molecular Models, on ScienceDirect to enhance your article’s value for readers.

Find out which content innovations are available for journals in your research field: elsevier.com/about/content-innovation.

1

Page 5: Brochure Get Noticed

5GET NOTICED

‘Audioslides were a great tool for to get the message across to busy professionals and the general public in 5 minutes with pretty pictures to make it accessible. Also, it is free so anyone can use it and the resulting presentations are open access. I think it is a fantastic vehicle to get the research out there.’

ThANh-LAN GLUCkmAN PhD student, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge,UK

AudioSlidesAudioSlides are short, webcast-style presentations, which allow you topresentyourresearchinyourownwords.Elsevieroffersyou the option of creating your own unique AudioSlides presentation which complement your research and provides readers with a short, succinct overview of the article content. These appear alongside your article once it is published on Elsevier’s ScienceDirect platform, home to one-quarter of the world’s STM journal and book content.

AudioSlides are free to access and easy to share, independently from the article, with colleagues, (influential) bloggers and on social media including YouTube.

Make the most of your AudioSlides with our useful Tips and Tricks: elsevier.com/audioslides.

Graphical abstractsA Graphical Abstract is a visual summary of the main findings of the article that is placed as part of your article an ScienceDirect and will turn up in online search result lists. It will help people to understand the key point of your article at a glance. You can make use of our professional illustration services at the Elsevier webshop: webshop.elsevier.com.

You can use your graphical abstract as a promotional tool by for example tweeting it, sharing it on social media or sending it to an (influential) blogger. Always add a link to your article.

Page 6: Brochure Get Noticed

6Get Noticed

Page 7: Brochure Get Noticed

7Get Noticed

PUBLIShING YOUR ARTICLE

YOUR ARTICLE ON SCIENCEDIRECTElsevier will publish your article on ScienceDirect, a leading information solution providing authoritative, full-text scientific, technical and medical content from Elsevier.By optimizing the platform and indexing all content, Elsevier works to ensure that your article is more visible and can be found more easily by search engines, library discovery services, A&I databases, and other innovative search and discovery tools.

Your article will be accessible immediately after acceptance, and have a unique DOI (Digital Object Identifier), that will always link to the latest available version of your article. Elsevier also participates in the multi-publisher initiative CrossRef, which enables articles that cite you to link directly to your paper. The CrossMark logo in online PDF or HTML documents helps readers to verify that they are using the most recent and reliable version.

TABLE Of CONTENTS ALERTWhen your article is published, a link is sent to everyone who has subscribed to the journal’s free Table of Contents email alert.

EDITORS’ ChOICE Your article may be selected for Editors’ Choice: the top five articles the editor has chosen to highlight from those published in their journal over the past 12 months. Editors write a recommendation illustrating why they have chosen these articles and the papers are freely accessible to all readers for up to one year.

RESEARCh hIGhLIGhTS APPResearch Highlights is a free Elsevier app for smartphones and tablets that highlights your article to users on the basis of search terms. Readers can preview your article abstract in-app, then send the full text link to their inbox. See more at: researchhighlights.elsevier.com

2

Page 8: Brochure Get Noticed

8Get Noticed

Page 9: Brochure Get Noticed

9Get Noticed

PROmOTING YOUR ARTICLE

CONfERENCESPresenting and networking at conferences personalizes your work, giving it a face and a voice, and it can create new opportunities for collaboration. Make sure you connect with other delegates on Facebook and LinkedIn, and direct them to your website or blog.

If you create a poster for a conference, perhaps accompanied by flyers, you can also post them on your website, and provide links on your blog, social media profiles, online CV, or institutional page.

mEDIA RELATIONSResearch statementIf you would like journalists, media outlets and the public to pick up on your published paper, it can help to have a brief statement prepared which explains the significance of your research and its key outcomes in simple language. This statement can be used as a basis for press releases or sharing on social media.

make use of your institution’s communications channelsIf you’re affiliated with a particular institution, chances are that it sends out press releases to local media, and publishes one or more internal newsletters. Increasingly, institutions also have their own press office andPR/mediastaff.Getintouchwiththemtoseewhattheycandotohelp you promote your published paper.

3

Page 10: Brochure Get Noticed

10Get Noticed

media outreach by ElsevierElsevier promotes selected research papers to the global scientific media.

The channels available for this are: press releases, the Elsevier Research Selection (bi-weekly email sent out to more than 1600 subscribing journalists) and Elsevier Connect (Elsevier’s online platform with daily stories by science, technology and health professionals).

If you think your article is interesting for a wider audience and/or would like more information about any of the above, contact us at [email protected] to explore the possibilities.

GET STARTED

Write a research statement

Share your research statement with relations and (influential bloggers)

Make use of your institution’s communication channels

Contact Elsevier if you think your article is interesting for a wider audience

ShARE YOUR ARTICLE Sharing your research and findings can help you make a greater impact in your community, leading to better collaborations and potential new ideas and innovations. Millions of researchers have access to your formal publication hosted on ScienceDirect helping users to find, access, and cite your research using the best available version.

Page 11: Brochure Get Noticed

11Get Noticed

Share link Elsevier will send you a ‘share link’: a personal, customized short link that you will receive after final publication of your article. It provides 50 days free access to your newly-published article on ScienceDirect to anyone clicking on the link. We encourage you to share this link on social media. After 50 days the share link will still work but automatically revert to a link to your full text article. The more links there are to your article from a range of relevant websites, the more readers you’ll attract and the higher it will appear on search engine results.

mENDELEY

Mendeley is a powerful reference manager and an academic social net-work with more than 3 million users. Create a free account to discover relevant research, connect and collaborate with the global community.

GET STARTED

Start a free account at mendeley.com and explore

BE DISCOvERED ONLINEIt’s important people can find you and links to your publications online. If you have a personal page at your institute, include links to the final version your articles on that page. There are also a few easy tools available to help you increase your online visibility.

Page 12: Brochure Get Noticed

12Get Noticed

ORCID AND SCOPUS AUThOR PROfILES

Elsevier’s Scopus is the world’s largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature and it features smart tools to track, analyze and visualize research. When you’ve published an article in any peer-reviewed journal, you automatically have a Scopus profile. It is a good idea to check and update your profile containing the right publications.

ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor ID) seeks to remedy the systemic name ambiguity problems seen in scholarly research by assigning unique identifiers linkable to an individual’s research output.

You can now update both your Scopus and your ORCID at orcid.scopusfeedback.com. Please follow the easy steps online.

LINkEDIN

This networking site is used professionally by 65 percent of the researchers we surveyed. Create a profile and post your latest accomplishments.

You can enhance your profile by adding research findings, articles, images, videos, SlideShare presentations and audio recordings (for example, your AudioSlides presentation). You can also join relevant groups and connect with other researchers in your discipline.

GET STARTED

Create a profile on linkedin.com

Add a picture and your CV

Reposition the publication section to a more prominent position at the top of your profile

Page 13: Brochure Get Noticed

13Get Noticed

Include any relevant honors and awards

Enhance your profile with images, Graphical Abstracts, AudioSlides and video

PERSONAL wEBSITE

Whereas LinkedIn is good for connecting and summarizing your research, your own website gives people a better sense of who you are. Create a personal professional website highlighting your research findings, achievements, publications and ambitions. Post videos or images to create a buzz around posters or conference presentations. Always include links to your articles, and link to your website in your email signature, and on all of your online and social media profiles, to get maximum exposure. You can also add links to your academic social networks, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and other accounts.

GET STARTED

Pick a url at which to register your website. Try your name or a combination of initials and last name. You can check availability of urls and register them on sites such as GoDaddy, or DomainRegistry.com.

Once you’ve registered a url, you can start creating your website. UseaplatformsuchasWordPress, Weebly, Yola or Jigsy.

Notallwebsitesofferhosting,butWordPress,WeeblyandYolaareamongthosethatdo.Ifaplatformdoesn’tofferhosting,youcanfindacommercial provider which does.

Usekeywordsinthetextandmetadatatoincreasethenumberof visitors who find your page through search engine searches.

For more information see elsevier.com/earlycareer/guides

Page 14: Brochure Get Noticed

14Get Noticed

BLOG

Blogsareproventobeeffectiveinpromotingyourresearchandhavingan impact. You can promote in-depth conversation via your blog, and build credibility by sharing information and responding to feedback from other researchers. Blogs require a regular time commitment. You may consider your blog a good exercise in learning how to communicate science to the public.

Once you’ve started your blog, write regular updates to showcase your research undertakings and other topics of interest. Make sure you provide links to your journal articles and publications. Readers can follow and subscribe to your posts, leave comments, and start conversations.

GET STARTED

Register with one of the several blogging websites and start designing your website.

Invite friends and colleagues from your network to follow your blog.

Someofthemostpopularsitesofferingsimple-to-usebloggingareBlogger, WordPress, TypePad and MovableType.

SOCIAL mEDIAEvery day, scholarly articles receive 12,000 new mentions across social media, news and blogs: that’s one mention every seven seconds! It’s a powerful medium for reaching your potential readers.

You don’t have to be on all social media – it can be best to find one or two channels that suit you and your purposes.

Page 15: Brochure Get Noticed

15Get Noticed

fACEBOOk

Facebook is a popular social media tool, but you can also leverage it for professional purposes. You can share photos, status updates and links regarding your research with your Facebook friends. Recent research1

shows that the richness of the content that you share on Facebook raises the impact of the post, i.e. posting images and videos during business hours has a positive impact on Facebook likes and comments.

You can also join groups catering for your field of expertise, connect with like-minded research professionals and use Facebook as a collaborative space to share with fellow researchers.

GET STARTED

Make a profile on facebook.com

If you want to keep your regular profile for only social purposes, create an author page for your professional endeavors

Invite fellow researchers to be a friend

Discuss ideas and carry out debates

Link to your articles

Share images, videos and audio recordings, e.g. AudioSlides, and a Graphical Abstract

Recruit participants for research

Join groups related to your research field

1 Sabate, Ferran, 2014. “Factors Influencing popularity of branded content in Facebook fan pages”. European Management Journal. DOI: 10.1016/j.emj.2014.05.001

Page 16: Brochure Get Noticed

16Get Noticed

wEChAT

WeChat is a fast growing instant messaging social network in China, but you can also leverage it for professional purposes. This mobile-based appoffersyouagreatwaytosharephotos,statusupdatesandlinksregarding your research with your WeChat friends.

You can also join groups catering for your field of expertise, connect with like-minded research professionals and use WeChat as a collaborative space to share with fellow researchers.

GET STARTED

Install the app on your mobile phone

Sign up with your phone number and make a profile

Add your friends to your Contacts by scanning your mobile contacts or searching their WeChat ID, phone number, or QQ ID

Invite fellow researchers to be a friend

Discuss ideas and carry out debates in your groups

Link to your articles

Share images, status updates and links regarding your research

Ask your friends to add you to groups related to your research field

S

Page 17: Brochure Get Noticed

17Get Noticed

wEIBO*

KnownasChineseTwitter,Weiboisoneofthemostpopularsocialnetwork in China. It gives you a chance to share quick thoughts using no more than 140 characters and 9 pictures. Today, millions of people are active on Weibo. It’s a great way to share your current research, publications and links to new blog posts.

GET STARTED

Make a profile on weibo.com

If you want yourself and your research field to be discovered easier, apply for verification for your account

Follow other researchers and thereby increase your own following

Post regular content, e.g. links to hot papers, events and conferences

Respond promptly to direct messages and comments

Repost. By promoting other members of your community you are raising your own profile at the same time

Useimages.Apictureistwiceaslikelytoberepostedastext

* “Weibo” is often used generically to refer to Sina Weibo.

Page 18: Brochure Get Noticed

18Get Noticed

TwITTER

Twitter gives you a chance to share quick thoughts using no more than 140 characters. Today, one third of all scholars are active on Twitter. It’s a great way to share your current research, publications and links to new blog posts.

GET STARTED

Make a profile on twitter.com

Follow other researchers and thereby increase your own following

Post regular content, e.g. links to hot papers, events and conferences

Respond promptly to direct messages and comments

Retweet. By promoting other members of your community you are raising your own profile at the same time

Useimages.Apictureistwiceaslikelytoberetweetedastext

REDDIT SITE On the popular bookmarking site Reddit, people share interesting articles in sections dedicated to a wide range of topics, including specific scientific fields. This is a way to communicate with a wider audience on your research topic.

Page 19: Brochure Get Noticed

19Get Noticed

GOOGLE+

Google+ makes it easier for you to be discovered online, and it’s integrated with other Google services such as Gmail and YouTube.

GET STARTED

Start an account or upgrade your current one if you have a Gmail or YouTube account

Introduce yourself and add a picture

Connect with fellow researchers

Share links to your articles, AudioSlides, Graphical Abstract, and conferences

UseGoogleHangoutstoholdonlinevideomeetingswhereyoucanshare and view documents

wIkIPEDIA Wikipedia is the well-known, free, online encyclopedia where registered users can create and edit entries. Not everyone can have a Wikipedia page; once you’ve published several books and articles, and have gained a solid reputation in your field, you have a better chance of successfully obtaining one. Links to your article from a Wikipedia page will dramatically increase your SEO. You can try to include an entry with a link to your article on a relevant topic page. Wikipedia has many guidelines for writing an entry, so check its website for more details.

Page 20: Brochure Get Noticed

20GET NOTICED

Page 21: Brochure Get Noticed

21Get Noticed

mONITOR YOUR ARTICLE

After promoting your article, you’ll want to know how it’s been received. Elsevier helps you monitor your success in a variety of ways.

mY RESEARCh DAShBOARDAny author who has published at least one article with Elsevier within the last 10 years will be invited to register for a personalized dashboard,offering:•Earlyfeedbackonhowyourpublicationsarebeingdownloaded,

shared and cited;•dataaboutthegeographiclocationsandresearchdisciplines

of your readers; •detailedinformationaboutsearchtermsusedinScienceDirect

to find your publications; and•acomparisonoftheperformanceofyourarticlewithotherarticles

Have you not been invited to register for your personal dashboard yet? Don’t worry, as it will certainly happen soon. In the meantime, you will continue to receive our current services: •CiteAlert,aweeklyservicethatautomaticallynotifiesyoubyemail

when your work is cited by an article in an Elsevier-published journal.•ArticleUsageAlerts,aquarterlyemailforauthorsnotifying

them of the usage of their article for the first year after publication.

ALTmETRICSWho’s talking about papers online and what’s being said? Altmetrics allow you to track and analyze online activity around your article.

Online article mentions are monitored from social media sites (e.g. Twitter, Facebook, Google+), science blogs, many mainstream media outlets (including the NY Times, The Guardian, non-English language publications like Die Zeit and Le Monde and special interest publications like Scientific American, and New Scientist) and reference managers for mentions of academic papers.

4

Page 22: Brochure Get Noticed

22Get Noticed

CONCLUSION

Getting noticed today means using the abundant online and social media tools available to better promote your research findings and publications to a wider audience of researchers. As a result, not only will your research become more visible, but you’ll also attract more readers, potentially increase citations, build a stronger reputation and expand your professional network. Theeffortsyoumakeonlinetodaywillmake you stronger offline tomorrow – so get involved, and get noticed!

Page 23: Brochure Get Noticed

23Get Noticed

Page 24: Brochure Get Noticed

Useful LinksAuthors’ Homeelsevier.com/authors

Authors’Updateelsevier.com/authors-update

Promote your workelsevier.com/promote-your-work

Sharing your articleelsevier.com/sharing-articles

Publishing Campuspublishingcampus.com

Journal Finderjournalfinder.elsevier.com

Ethics in Research & Publicationethics.elsevier.com

Postdoc Free Access Programelsevier.com/postdoc-free-access

ElsevierConnectelsevier.com/elsevierconnect

Elsevier Newsroomelsevier.com/about/elsevier-newsroom

Elsevier Webshopwebshop.elsevier.com

© January 2015 by Elsevier. All rights reserved.