"Scholar-led publishing: Scaling Small"
Presentation delivered during the workshop
BEYOND APCS: ALTERNATIVE OPEN ACCESS PUBLISHING BUSINESS MODELS
Royal Library, The Hague, Netherlands
April 5th and 6th, 2018
3. What is
sustainability?
• Single model or entire system?
• Commercially viable?
• Short or long term?
• Self-sustaining?
• Sustainability for who?
• For the Sciences of for the
Humanities too?
• Sustainable ecology?
4. Hence when the OA discussion shifts to sustainable business
models, it invariably becomes a discussion about the publishing
business. The implication is that what needs sustaining are the
publishers themselves. (…) From the scholarly perspective, what
needs sustaining is not publishers, but rather a communication
system that supports its culture of inquiry. That is to say, what
needs to be sustained ultimately is the culture of free critical
inquiry certified by the rigors of open collaboration.
David Ottina, 2013
7. Characteristics
of Academic-
Led Presses
• Community-based and led
• Open Access
• Commercialisation of Scholarship
• Not-for-Profit
• Experimental and Multimodal Scholarship
• Extension of Critical Work & Ethics of Care
8. Scaling Small
• Scaling through horizontal and vertical
collaborations
• Working to capacity: 50 books (punctum), 30
(LSP/OBP), 5 (OHP/Mattering)
• Transparency and openness about funding
models and costs
• Bringing down BPCs or fee-waivers
• Open source software, platforms and tools
• Resources and skills sharing
• Experimenting with a variety of different models:
- communal editing/publishing: Language
Science Press and OHP
- Crowd-sourcing/donations/consortia
9. Transparency
on costs
• Eve, Martin, ‘How much does it cost to run a small scholarly
publisher?’ (2017) Martin Paul
Eve https://www.martineve.com/2017/02/13/how-much-does-it-
cost-to-run-a-small-scholarly-publisher/
• Gatti, Rupert, ‘Introducing Some Data to the Open Access Debate:
OBP’s Business Model’ (2015) Open Book Publishers Blog
https://blogs.openbookpublishers.com/introducing-some-data-to-
the-open-access-debate-obps-business-model-part-one/
• Hall, Gary ‘Open Humanities Press: Funding and Organisation’
(2015) Media
Gifts http://garyhall.squarespace.com/journal/2015/6/13/open-
humanities-press-funding-and-organisation.html
• Nordhoff, Sebastian, ‘Calculating the costs of a community-driven
publisher’ (2016) Language Science Press Blog https://userblogs.fu-
berlin.de/langsci-press/2016/04/18/calculating-the-costs-of-a-
community-driven-publisher/
• Nordhoff, Sebastian, ‘What’s the cost of an open access book?’
(2015) Language Science Press Blog https://userblogs.fu-
berlin.de/langsci-press/2015/09/29/whats-the-cost-of-an-open-
access-book/
10. Scaling Small
• Scaling through horizontal and vertical
collaborations
• Working to capacity: 50 books (punctum), 30
(LSP/OBP), 5 (OHP/Mattering)
• Transparency and openness about funding
models and costs
• Bringing down BPCs or fee-waivers
• Open source software, platforms and tools
• Resource and skills sharing
• Experimenting with a variety of different models:
- communal editing/publishing: Language
Science Press and OHP
- Crowd-sourcing/donations/consortia
11.
12.
13.
14.
15. The outcome of a collaboration is rampant,
unforeseeable, and always unexpected.
Sometimes it may not turn out nicely, it may
even be harsh, but one thing is for sure: it
cannot be calculated, it has to be imagined
Florian Schneider