Wednesday 21 October 2015

Author Services Ensuring your research makes an impact

 Source: http://authorservices.taylorandfrancis.com/ensuring-your-research-makes-an-impact/



Ensuring your research makes an impact




Becoming a published author is something worth
talking about, and everyone has a list of friends, colleagues, and
influential people they’d like to read their work. As your publisher, we
are committed to ensuring your research reaches as wide and diverse an
audience as possible. Working in partnership with you helps to achieve
this, so below are ten tried and tested tips for you to consider, all of
which will ensure that the right people find, read, and share your
published research.


Ten tips to maximize the impact of your research

1. Use your free author eprints

Eprints are a link you can share with up to 50 colleagues and
friends, giving them free access to your article. You can share your
eprint link in any way you like – some authors put it at the bottom of
their email signature, some email it to 50 people in their contacts
list, and some post it on social media (e.g., Twitter or Facebook).


Using the eprint link directs people to your article on Taylor &
Francis Online, enabling every download (and citation) to be tracked so
you can see the impact of your work. All named authors with email
addresses get 50 free eprints, so if you collaborated on a paper with
three other researchers, this means you get 50 free eprints each (that’s
200 eprints to share). Author feedback tells us this is a highly
effective way of drawing attention to your research, so please do use
them.


Tweet about eprintsThe
link will also continue to work after 50 people have downloaded your
article, by directing readers to the article’s abstract page. And, as
the author, you will always have free access via My authored works.




Find out more about using your eprints



2. Include your article in your email signature

Why not include a link to your research in your email signature,
alerting everyone you email to your latest article? Many of the people
you contact professionally are likely to be working in the same or
similar fields as you and this is a quick and easy way to tell them
you’re published. If you’d like a banner to add to the bottom of your
emails, then just fill out a banner request form and we’ll create one for you.


published-02

3. Add to your reading lists

Get your students reading and talking about your article by adding
it, or the journal it’s included in, to your course’s essential reading
list.


4. Update web pages

Lots of people browsing your institutional and departmental websites?
You can use this to your advantage by adding a link on your
departmental profile page, directing people to your latest article.


5. Use social media

Facebook and Twitter are increasingly popular tools amongst
researchers, whether they’re talking about developments in their
research field or posting about their latest publication. It’s also
quick and easy and, if people start talking about your article, it can
increase awareness and readers enormously. It’s also a great way to
reach media outlets, with the potential for journalists to pick up on
newsworthy research.


Find out more about how to tweet your research.


6. Update your profile on professional and academic networking sites

If you’re on Linkedin, Academia.edu,
ResearchGate, Mendeley, or any other professional or academic
networking site, you can include links to your article, building a
complete picture of your professional expertise and accomplishments.
People looking at your profile are already interested in you, and highly
likely to click through and read your research. Find out more about sharing your work,
including how to post links from these sites to your published article
on Taylor & Francis Online. We have contributed to, and endorse, STM’s Voluntary principles for article sharing on scholarly collaboration networks.


7. Post to discussion lists

It’s easy to post a short message to any discussion lists you are a
member of, letting people know that the journal’s latest issue, which
includes your article, is now available. You can register for the Table of Contents alert for the journal, and forward on the email as soon as it comes through.


8. Tell people on your blog

If you blog, don’t forget to tell your readers about your latest article. Find out how to make blogging work for you.


9. Video abstracts

Video abstracts
are one way to introduce people to your article, giving you the chance
to simply outline the focus of your article. This can be brief (five
minutes or less). Videos are becoming an increasingly popular way to
encourage others to read your research. If you are interested in
creating a video abstract, get in touch and we can help with guidance and support. We will also feature your video on Taylor & Francis Online.


10. Speak to your librarian

Check your institution has a subscription to the journal you published in. If not, recommend it for the next subscription year.


Did you know we work with Kudos, offering you a free set of tools to explain your research and share it with your networks, so you can maximize and monitor the visibility and impact of your articles?


Taylor & Francis is testing the Kudos service on 635 of our
journal titles, alerting authors who have published an article in one of
the selected journals to the service, so they can claim these articles
and grow “Kudos.” These emails include a personalized link to the
article(s), to make this process even easier. Find out more about Kudos.




Author Services Ensuring your research makes an impact

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