How to Maximize the Impact of your Research Paper - ResearchBib
There are basically 3 consistent requirements that authors look for which include:
- They want their work published quickly
- They want their work found quickly
- They want help to comply with funding mandates
Try Twitter
You likely have heard how fast and abundant Twitter is growing. In fact, it's been said through the latest Pew Research that the number of online users who are using Twitter on a normal day has actually doubled since 2011 and even quadrupled since 2010. Additionally, academics and universities are even finding Twitter to be a great resource for using papers and cultivating downloads. Knowing this, it would only make sense to use Twitter to gain exposure and increase the reach of your published research. But how do you do this? Or, should you even try? Twitter, from its very beginning in 2006, has evolved and grown into a huge online tool for communicating quickly and promoting 'whatever' to targeted niches of users. This includes research papers.
It enables you to broaden your reach which is outside your typical audience to help increase great usage and downloads of your papers. You are even able to update your followers various times each day quickly which will increase the reach you get of your research.
A few tips when using Twiter:
- Make your tweets interesting. For instance, grab a finding from your paper or tweet a question that is already answered in your research
- Use hashtags which help put your tweet out there in relevant searches
- Attract more attention by changing up your tweets
- Keep your characters of your tweets to no more than 120 characters
- Keep track of what is working so you can use that strategy again for your next research paper
Open Access Articles
Studies suggest that open-access articles are more frequently and immediately cited as opposed to non-open-access articles. You get a much greater research impact with increased citation rates. By maximizing your work's exposure, you are maximizing the impact of your research as well. Publish in open-access journals or similar sites. You can find a list of various journals in the Directory of Open Access Journals; however, you might have to pay a fee.
Retain your Copyright
Remember when you sign over to a publisher, it can limit you from disseminating your work. If you retain your copyright, you will be able to increase your dissemination options and maximize the reach of your work by being able to gain a wider audience.
ResearchBib News Sep 10, 2015