SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 24
Maximizing the impact of your research
@charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
What is impact
and why do we care about it?
Why?
competition for funding
huge growth in outputs
fight for visibility and usage
drive for accountability
cult of impact
@charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
Why? Impact opens (secret) doors
@charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
5
Academic
impact
NEWTON
Image: Logo My Photo
Image: 365gaming.nl
Image:
financialdirector.co.uk
Image: shop.lego.com
Economic
and
societal
impact
Who is responsible for impact?
Press offic e
Press & comms
PR team
Communic ations
team
Marketing and
communications
Researc h offic e
Research support
Resea rch d evelop ment
Research
administrators
Research
communications
manager
Researc h outputs adviser
Researc h operations
REF
team
Imp a ct
officers
Imp a ct
cha mp ions
Project team
Research
assistants
Co-authors
Library
Repository
team
Scholarly
communications
Department
Fac ulty
Institutes
Centres
Researchers
Research
partners
Research and
enterprise
Knowled ge
excha nge
Web team
Event team
Social media
team
Funders
Staff
development
team
Public
engagement
offic e
Who is
responsible
for impact?
You
are!
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Conferences / meetings
Academic networking / profile sites (e.g.…
Conversations with colleagues
Institutional websites / repositories
Email
Social networking sites (e.g. LinkedIn, Twitter,…
Your own blog / website
Subject-based websites / repositories (e.g. arXiv,…
Posts on other blogs / websites
Discussion lists
Multimedia sharing sites (e.g. Slideshare, YouTube)
In which of the following ways do you currently create awareness
of or share materials relating to your work?
(n = 2,826)
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Conferences / meetings
Academic networking / profile sites (e.g.…
Conversations with colleagues
Institutional websites / repositories
Email
Social networking sites (e.g. LinkedIn, Twitter,…
Your own blog / website
Subject-based websites / repositories (e.g. arXiv,…
Posts on other blogs / websites
Discussion lists
Multimedia sharing sites (e.g. Slideshare, YouTube)
In which of the following ways do you currently create awareness
of or share materials relating to your work?
(n = 2,826)
“When you see the
CVs of big
academics, they’ve
done all these
things. It wasn’t a
strategy – they just
did them.”
So what should your strategy be?
Publications still at the heart of impact
Imagecredit:SupergirlShadowbyJasonRatliff
OMG she’s
had a paper in
Nature!
Impact is built on readership
During
the project
On
publication
Ongoing
Put as many outputs
as possible online
Submit for posters
and other speaking
engagements
Build up a network
of people interested
in your work
Connect the final
publication to other
related outputs
Summarize your
work in plain
language
Tell people that you
have published!
Keep the work alive
by connecting it to
new materials
Measure which
communications
were most effective
and do more
Put as many outputs online as possible
Institutional
repository
Documents
Data
Conference
proceedings
Articles
Books
Theses
Slideshare
Slide decks
Documents
Images
Videos
Figshare
Figures
Datasets
Videos
Github
Code
Documentation
YouTube
Video
Build up a network of interested people
Social media
Follow / connect with
relevant people
Join relevant groups
Follow relevant hashtags
Like / share / comment on other
people’s posts
Ask questions / share updates of
your own
Blogs
Follow and
comment on
blogs in the
field
Volunteer to
write a guest
post
Academic networks
Set up a profile
Connect with
relevant people
Ask / answer
questions
Share work
(legally!)
Email
Collect details
at
conferences
Connect, summarize, communicate
Use the network you’ve built up to
make sure that your work finds its audience
Update repositories, blog posts etc with links to
the final article, and use Kudos to connect the
article back to those other resources
Create a plain language summary of your work so
that it can be found and
understood by a broader audience
Brief background: what is Kudos?
Plain
language
explanations
Trackable
links for
sharing
Range of metrics
against which to map
efforts to explain and
share
@charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
ATTENTION INTEREST DESIRE ACTION
Measure which efforts are working
Press
coverageClicks
Views
Mapping actions to results
”
Communications do increase impact
Nanyang Technological Institute study, 2015
Explaining and sharing via Kudos
correlated to
higher downloads of
full text on publisher sites
23%
@charlierapple @growkudos
In summary:
how to maximize the impact
of your work?
During
the project
On
publication
Ongoing
Put as many outputs
as possible online
Submit for posters
and other speaking
engagements
Build up a network
of people interested
in your work
Connect the final
publication to other
related outputs
Summarize your
work in plain
language
Tell people that you
have published!
Keep the work alive
by connecting it to
new materials
Measure which
communications
were most effective
and do more
During
the project
On
publication
Ongoing
Sign up for LinkedIn
and start making
connections
Sign up for Kudos
and use it to manage
communications
around your next
publication
Come back to Kudos
to learn how best to
focus your future
impact strategy
⇒ linkedin.com ⇒ growkudos.com

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

La actualidad más candente (8)

A guide to using twitter - for researchers
A guide to using twitter - for researchersA guide to using twitter - for researchers
A guide to using twitter - for researchers
 
Pass the WD-40: Running your communications program like a well-oiled machine
Pass the WD-40: Running your communications program like a well-oiled machinePass the WD-40: Running your communications program like a well-oiled machine
Pass the WD-40: Running your communications program like a well-oiled machine
 
Building a user research library for local government
Building a user research library for local governmentBuilding a user research library for local government
Building a user research library for local government
 
Council of Science Editors - Viewing Social Media Through Different Lenses
Council of Science Editors - Viewing Social Media Through Different LensesCouncil of Science Editors - Viewing Social Media Through Different Lenses
Council of Science Editors - Viewing Social Media Through Different Lenses
 
ORCID Implementations - Kudos (C. Rapple)
ORCID Implementations - Kudos (C. Rapple)ORCID Implementations - Kudos (C. Rapple)
ORCID Implementations - Kudos (C. Rapple)
 
SpringerNature and its sharing strategy on ReadCube
SpringerNature and its sharing  strategy on  ReadCubeSpringerNature and its sharing  strategy on  ReadCube
SpringerNature and its sharing strategy on ReadCube
 
Web-based Tools for Today's Researcher | October 2014
Web-based Tools for Today's Researcher | October 2014Web-based Tools for Today's Researcher | October 2014
Web-based Tools for Today's Researcher | October 2014
 
Research Visibility and Impact in Africa
Research Visibility and Impact in AfricaResearch Visibility and Impact in Africa
Research Visibility and Impact in Africa
 

Similar a Maximising the impact of your research

21st century learning social media
21st century learning   social media21st century learning   social media
21st century learning social media
lpnicholas
 
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.finalSocial media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
Nuuko, Inc.
 
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agenciesSlide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
Rashmi Sinha
 
Cipd social networking Aug 2010
Cipd social networking Aug 2010Cipd social networking Aug 2010
Cipd social networking Aug 2010
Media Matters
 

Similar a Maximising the impact of your research (20)

Igpcommretreat
IgpcommretreatIgpcommretreat
Igpcommretreat
 
Using social media to enhance your research and professional development
Using social media to enhance your research and professional developmentUsing social media to enhance your research and professional development
Using social media to enhance your research and professional development
 
Newagent sept2011
Newagent sept2011Newagent sept2011
Newagent sept2011
 
Vetmedclass
VetmedclassVetmedclass
Vetmedclass
 
Twitter in agriculture
Twitter in agricultureTwitter in agriculture
Twitter in agriculture
 
21st Century Research Profiles
21st Century Research Profiles21st Century Research Profiles
21st Century Research Profiles
 
21st century learning social media
21st century learning   social media21st century learning   social media
21st century learning social media
 
How to Accelerate the Dissemination & Impact of Your Research Work
How to Accelerate the Dissemination & Impact of Your Research WorkHow to Accelerate the Dissemination & Impact of Your Research Work
How to Accelerate the Dissemination & Impact of Your Research Work
 
Managing your online profile
Managing your online profileManaging your online profile
Managing your online profile
 
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.finalSocial media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
Social media bootcamp presentation 071311.final
 
Content Marketing for Creatives
Content Marketing for CreativesContent Marketing for Creatives
Content Marketing for Creatives
 
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agenciesSlide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
Slide share nonprofit_gov_agencies
 
Estratègies per comunicar la recerca
Estratègies per comunicar la recerca Estratègies per comunicar la recerca
Estratègies per comunicar la recerca
 
An Intro to Social Media
An Intro to Social MediaAn Intro to Social Media
An Intro to Social Media
 
Increasing Employee Engagement using Social Media
Increasing Employee Engagement using Social MediaIncreasing Employee Engagement using Social Media
Increasing Employee Engagement using Social Media
 
Cipd social networking Aug 2010
Cipd social networking Aug 2010Cipd social networking Aug 2010
Cipd social networking Aug 2010
 
Social Media For Business, Can It Work?
Social Media For Business, Can It Work?Social Media For Business, Can It Work?
Social Media For Business, Can It Work?
 
Academic online profile development - NARTI Workshop - Salford Business School
Academic online profile development - NARTI Workshop - Salford Business SchoolAcademic online profile development - NARTI Workshop - Salford Business School
Academic online profile development - NARTI Workshop - Salford Business School
 
Using social media for impact
Using social media for impactUsing social media for impact
Using social media for impact
 
Using social media to disseminate academic work
Using social media to disseminate academic work Using social media to disseminate academic work
Using social media to disseminate academic work
 

Más de Kudos

Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
Kudos
 

Más de Kudos (20)

Building a narrative for researchers around Open Research Impact
Building a narrative for researchers around Open Research ImpactBuilding a narrative for researchers around Open Research Impact
Building a narrative for researchers around Open Research Impact
 
Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
Kudos for Research Groups: collaborative planning, management, measurement an...
 
Research dissemination: what's happening, what's missing, what's next? (ARMS ...
Research dissemination: what's happening, what's missing, what's next? (ARMS ...Research dissemination: what's happening, what's missing, what's next? (ARMS ...
Research dissemination: what's happening, what's missing, what's next? (ARMS ...
 
Broadening the Definition of Altmetrics - 5am conference - David Sommer
Broadening the Definition of Altmetrics - 5am conference -  David SommerBroadening the Definition of Altmetrics - 5am conference -  David Sommer
Broadening the Definition of Altmetrics - 5am conference - David Sommer
 
Accelerating research impact using Kudos - EB 2018
Accelerating research impact using Kudos - EB 2018Accelerating research impact using Kudos - EB 2018
Accelerating research impact using Kudos - EB 2018
 
Raising awareness of and engagement with precision medicine
Raising awareness of and engagement with precision medicineRaising awareness of and engagement with precision medicine
Raising awareness of and engagement with precision medicine
 
Broadening the reach and visibility of published research: workshop at the 20...
Broadening the reach and visibility of published research: workshop at the 20...Broadening the reach and visibility of published research: workshop at the 20...
Broadening the reach and visibility of published research: workshop at the 20...
 
Data diving: understanding reputation management for researchers
Data diving: understanding reputation management for researchersData diving: understanding reputation management for researchers
Data diving: understanding reputation management for researchers
 
Maximizing the Exposure of your Research
Maximizing the Exposure of your ResearchMaximizing the Exposure of your Research
Maximizing the Exposure of your Research
 
Tools for Increasing Research Impact
Tools for Increasing Research ImpactTools for Increasing Research Impact
Tools for Increasing Research Impact
 
Inspiring authors to participate in the visibility and impact of their work
Inspiring authors to participate in the visibility and impact of their workInspiring authors to participate in the visibility and impact of their work
Inspiring authors to participate in the visibility and impact of their work
 
Hit the ground running - Top tips to immediately improve your user experience 
Hit the ground running - Top tips to immediately improve your user experience Hit the ground running - Top tips to immediately improve your user experience 
Hit the ground running - Top tips to immediately improve your user experience 
 
What’s My Motivation, Darling? Inspiring Researchers to Build an Measure the ...
What’s My Motivation, Darling? Inspiring Researchers to Build an Measure the ...What’s My Motivation, Darling? Inspiring Researchers to Build an Measure the ...
What’s My Motivation, Darling? Inspiring Researchers to Build an Measure the ...
 
Helping your books stand out
Helping your books stand outHelping your books stand out
Helping your books stand out
 
The Kaleidoscope of Impact: same data, different perspectives, constantly cha...
The Kaleidoscope of Impact: same data, different perspectives, constantly cha...The Kaleidoscope of Impact: same data, different perspectives, constantly cha...
The Kaleidoscope of Impact: same data, different perspectives, constantly cha...
 
Use of social media by scholarly authors
Use of social media by scholarly authorsUse of social media by scholarly authors
Use of social media by scholarly authors
 
From socially to scholarly and back again
From socially to scholarly and back againFrom socially to scholarly and back again
From socially to scholarly and back again
 
Is there a role for the library in increasing the impact of research?
Is there a role for the library in increasing the impact of research?Is there a role for the library in increasing the impact of research?
Is there a role for the library in increasing the impact of research?
 
Availability ≠ accessibility: Broadening the impact and accessibility of open...
Availability ≠ accessibility: Broadening the impact and accessibility of open...Availability ≠ accessibility: Broadening the impact and accessibility of open...
Availability ≠ accessibility: Broadening the impact and accessibility of open...
 
Kudos – Greater Research Impact (David Sommer - APE 2015)
Kudos – Greater Research Impact (David Sommer - APE 2015)Kudos – Greater Research Impact (David Sommer - APE 2015)
Kudos – Greater Research Impact (David Sommer - APE 2015)
 

Último

1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
QucHHunhnh
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
ZurliaSoop
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
QucHHunhnh
 

Último (20)

Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptxDyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
Dyslexia AI Workshop for Slideshare.pptx
 
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
 
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptxUnit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
Unit-IV- Pharma. Marketing Channels.pptx
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
 
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
Asian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptx
Asian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptxAsian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptx
Asian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptx
 
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
How to Give a Domain for a Field in Odoo 17
 
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
2024-NATIONAL-LEARNING-CAMP-AND-OTHER.pptx
 
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
PROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docxPROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docx
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
 
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdfFood safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
 
Magic bus Group work1and 2 (Team 3).pptx
Magic bus Group work1and 2 (Team 3).pptxMagic bus Group work1and 2 (Team 3).pptx
Magic bus Group work1and 2 (Team 3).pptx
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 

Maximising the impact of your research

  • 1. Maximizing the impact of your research @charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
  • 2. What is impact and why do we care about it?
  • 3. Why? competition for funding huge growth in outputs fight for visibility and usage drive for accountability cult of impact @charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
  • 4. Why? Impact opens (secret) doors @charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
  • 7. Who is responsible for impact?
  • 8. Press offic e Press & comms PR team Communic ations team Marketing and communications Researc h offic e Research support Resea rch d evelop ment Research administrators Research communications manager Researc h outputs adviser Researc h operations REF team Imp a ct officers Imp a ct cha mp ions Project team Research assistants Co-authors Library Repository team Scholarly communications Department Fac ulty Institutes Centres Researchers Research partners Research and enterprise Knowled ge excha nge Web team Event team Social media team Funders Staff development team Public engagement offic e Who is responsible for impact? You are!
  • 9. 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Conferences / meetings Academic networking / profile sites (e.g.… Conversations with colleagues Institutional websites / repositories Email Social networking sites (e.g. LinkedIn, Twitter,… Your own blog / website Subject-based websites / repositories (e.g. arXiv,… Posts on other blogs / websites Discussion lists Multimedia sharing sites (e.g. Slideshare, YouTube) In which of the following ways do you currently create awareness of or share materials relating to your work? (n = 2,826)
  • 10. 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Conferences / meetings Academic networking / profile sites (e.g.… Conversations with colleagues Institutional websites / repositories Email Social networking sites (e.g. LinkedIn, Twitter,… Your own blog / website Subject-based websites / repositories (e.g. arXiv,… Posts on other blogs / websites Discussion lists Multimedia sharing sites (e.g. Slideshare, YouTube) In which of the following ways do you currently create awareness of or share materials relating to your work? (n = 2,826) “When you see the CVs of big academics, they’ve done all these things. It wasn’t a strategy – they just did them.”
  • 11. So what should your strategy be?
  • 12. Publications still at the heart of impact Imagecredit:SupergirlShadowbyJasonRatliff OMG she’s had a paper in Nature!
  • 13. Impact is built on readership
  • 14. During the project On publication Ongoing Put as many outputs as possible online Submit for posters and other speaking engagements Build up a network of people interested in your work Connect the final publication to other related outputs Summarize your work in plain language Tell people that you have published! Keep the work alive by connecting it to new materials Measure which communications were most effective and do more
  • 15. Put as many outputs online as possible Institutional repository Documents Data Conference proceedings Articles Books Theses Slideshare Slide decks Documents Images Videos Figshare Figures Datasets Videos Github Code Documentation YouTube Video
  • 16. Build up a network of interested people Social media Follow / connect with relevant people Join relevant groups Follow relevant hashtags Like / share / comment on other people’s posts Ask questions / share updates of your own Blogs Follow and comment on blogs in the field Volunteer to write a guest post Academic networks Set up a profile Connect with relevant people Ask / answer questions Share work (legally!) Email Collect details at conferences
  • 17. Connect, summarize, communicate Use the network you’ve built up to make sure that your work finds its audience Update repositories, blog posts etc with links to the final article, and use Kudos to connect the article back to those other resources Create a plain language summary of your work so that it can be found and understood by a broader audience
  • 18. Brief background: what is Kudos? Plain language explanations Trackable links for sharing Range of metrics against which to map efforts to explain and share @charlierapple @growkudos www.growkudos.com
  • 19. ATTENTION INTEREST DESIRE ACTION Measure which efforts are working Press coverageClicks Views
  • 20. Mapping actions to results ”
  • 21. Communications do increase impact Nanyang Technological Institute study, 2015 Explaining and sharing via Kudos correlated to higher downloads of full text on publisher sites 23% @charlierapple @growkudos
  • 22. In summary: how to maximize the impact of your work?
  • 23. During the project On publication Ongoing Put as many outputs as possible online Submit for posters and other speaking engagements Build up a network of people interested in your work Connect the final publication to other related outputs Summarize your work in plain language Tell people that you have published! Keep the work alive by connecting it to new materials Measure which communications were most effective and do more
  • 24. During the project On publication Ongoing Sign up for LinkedIn and start making connections Sign up for Kudos and use it to manage communications around your next publication Come back to Kudos to learn how best to focus your future impact strategy ⇒ linkedin.com ⇒ growkudos.com

Notas del editor

  1. Just to add to that brief biography of Kudos, Sally Hardy and the Regional Studies Association have been fantastic champions of what we are doing so thank you very much for that support as well as for having me here today!
  2. I thought it would be helpful to start by thinking about why everyone is talking about impact – why organizations like the RSA are focusing conferences on it!
  3. Academia is under pressure in a number of ways. In most countries, funding is at an all time low and so winning grants is increasingly competitive. Despite this, more and more research is taking place and therefore the literature is growing at an ever faster pace, and it’s increasingly hard to ensure that your work finds its audience. And yet you are expected to find an audience, both within and often beyond the field – there’s a growing demand for public engagement with research, even public accountability, which has created this strong focus on impact which I only half-jokingly call a cult of impact.
  4. And of course the impact of your work is inherently bound up with your personal reputation. I was doing a project earlier this year where I was talking to researchers about the nature of reputation – what they think it consists of, how they manage it, how they measure the effect of their efforts. One researcher made the relatively obvious point to me that “reputation opens doors”. But what surprised me was another researcher saying that reputation is not “opening doors” in the sense of helping you get the job, or the impression you make when you get to interview - it’s about whether you’ll even get a chance to apply – whether you even know that job exists. She flagged up just how many things like jobs, funding, opportunities for volunteering and making connections –don’t get advertised; those “recruiting” turn to who they know – so you’ve got to be “known” and of course one of the best ways to get started is to do work that gets known and make sure that you maximize the impact of that work. So in that sense, “reputation” and “impact” are almost synonymous here. Impact is important on a personal level because it opens doors. And sometimes they’re “secret” doors that you wouldn’t even see if the impact you’d created with earlier work wasn’t opening them for you. http://www.shutterstock.com/pic-287437913/stock-photo-secret-door-in-the-bookcase-mysterious-library-with-candle-lighting-with-vintage-stuff.html
  5. How else do we define impact? Two common ways, quoting the UK research councils: Firstly: Academic impact – “The demonstrable contribution that excellent research makes to academic advances, across and within disciplines” In case you aren’t following my visual analogy, this is academic advances - “standing on the shoulders of giants”
  6. Secondly, there’s Economic and societal impact: “the demonstrable contribution that excellent research makes to society and the economy, … by fostering economic performance and competitiveness increasing the effectiveness of public services and policy, enhancing quality of life, health and creative output.”
  7. Helping academic work have impact is almost a discipline within itself.
  8. I led a workshop at a conference earlier this year where we talked about who is responsible for impact and this jumble of people, teams, departments, professions is an attempt to summarize the conversation we had. Even just within the academic institution there are a lot of people who care about, or can play a role in, impact! But for me the most critical group here is the researchers – it’s you. Thinking back to the idea of impact “opening secret doors” – you have most to gain from increasing the impact of your work, and you are best placed to do this - from being able to involve potential audiences from the earliest stages of your projects, to being at the centre of the network of people most likely to be interested in or able to act on what you find.
  9. So what kinds of things can you be doing to grow your impact? Again, I surveyed almost 3,000 academics earlier this year to get a sense of the activities that are most popular, and most effective. The first part of that is easy to answer – you can see here that conferences are the most common approach to spreading the word about your work, following by academic networking sites such as Academia.edu or ResearchGate, conversations with colleagues, institutional websites and repositories, then email, social networking and so on. What is harder is for people to be able to track is the effectiveness of these different activities, to determine which of them are really helping to increase impact. That’s very much the problem that my colleagues and I set up Kudos to solve, so I’ll talk a bit more about that in a moment, but I think what this study showed is that while people still rely on trusted older mechanisms for communicating their work, they are increasingly experimenting with new approaches.
  10. One comment that really resonated with me during that project was someone pointing out that successful academics have typically done all of these things – not necessarily as part of a clear strategy, but these are the kinds of activities that correlate to impact. But for early career researchers these days, you do have to have a strategy – because it’s an increasingly competitive environment, and because some people will adopt these new approaches, you can’t any longer leave it to chance that your work will be found, applied, and cited. As one of my colleagues says, “crossing your fingers is not a strategy”.
  11. So what should your strategy be, in terms of maximizing the impact of your work? I’m going to home in now on your publications.
  12. We all know that close attention is paid to how and where you publish, and the performance of your work post-publication. I heard a great anecdote recently from a friend who had had a temp working in her lab. No-one had paid much attention to the temp until they learned that she’d had a paper in Nature. My friend said “suddenly we treated her like a rock star”. So rightly or wrongly, for the near future, it is your publications that will shape your career progress, so let’s focus on how you can increase their impact.
  13. And publication impact is ultimately driven by readership. Whether we’re talking about academic impact, or broader societal and economic impact, people can’t cite your work or apply your work if they can’t find it and read it. So be strategic about making sure people find your work! Have a checklist of things you can do
  14. This is the checklist that I’ve put together for myself – I’ll go through some of these points in more detail to suggest tools and techniques you could use but essentially I break it down into three stages of activity. During the project I’ll try to put as many outputs as possible online, and I’ll be looking for conferences where I can showcase my work and putting forward a submission, and I’ll be building up a network of people that are interested in my work. Then at the point of publication, I’ll make sure I’m joining the dots between the materials I’ve already put online and the publication when it goes live. At that point I’ll also add a plain language summary – I’ll talk a bit more in a moment about why that’s helpful – and, critically, obviously – I’ll tell people that I have published something! Actually I say obvious but it has taken me some time to overcome my modesty in doing this, and I think that is something many of us suffer from that inhibits the impact of our work. Then afterwards I’ll make sure I keep connecting the work to newer materials, either things I’ve created, or things it’s gone on to influence – for me, that might be press coverage or someone else’s related project, for you that might be a policy document or evidence of how your work has been applied in practice. Measurement is key to everything I do. Like anyone, I don’t have much time to be doing this kind of thing and I’ve got to find ways of focusing on the tools and techniques that are most effective. So let’s have a closer look at some of the tools I’d recommend.
  15. Firstly, if you’re in an institution, do consult your library or research office or communications team about tools they can put at your disposal. There might be an institutional repository where you can put documents, data, and indeed your publications in due course – and there might be people able to help you in publicising the outputs of your work. But there are also plenty of sites that you can use by yourself. I’m sure you’ll be familiar with Slideshare, but did you know that can use it for documents, infographics and videos as well as slide decks? And you’ve probably heard of Figshare too – where you can put figures, data and video – one of the best things about Figshare is that you will get a “digital objective identifier” or DOI for everything you put in there, which is more “persistent” than a URL and therefore provides a more future-proof way of storing and linking to your work. Other popular sites include Github for code, YouTube for video, I’m sure you all have your own places where you’re storing stuff online! I’m not necessarily suggesting that you would set up and use all of these platforms – you’ll pick those that are most relevant to the type of materials you create – but what I am encouraging is to think early on during your work about what kind of outputs you’re creating and whether it’s possible or appropriate to start putting them online, because then you can use them to start building the visibility and impact of your work from the earliest possible stage.
  16. The other thing you can be doing during the lifespan of the project, and indeed, something you’ll be doing all the time throughout your career, is building up a network of people whose work you’re interested in, who therefore might be interested in your work too. Now obviously there are academic networks like Academia.edu or ResearchGate – and these can be great, in that they are popular among academics already so you’ll probably find it easy to find and connect with people you’re interested in. But they’re restricted to academic users –so you’re restricting yourself to academic impact if you only communicate through those networks. And in fact academics are strongly represented in general social networks, like Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, blogs – so exploring those to find and follow relevant people may be a better use of your time, because you’ll be opening yourself up for connections with a broader audience and therefore broadening the potential reach and impact of your work. I know people are often concerned about the effort involved in building a social network but I think this is getting easier and easier as the sites grow in popularity and behavioural norms have started to emerge. So if you’re using Twitter, start with someone you know is on there – mine their followers to find other people you might know – follow what they’re saying, and see who interacts with their work-related postings to find other potentially interesting people that you can follow. It’s very common that they will start to follow you back, particularly once you start liking their posts, resharing them or posting interesting links or comments of your own. Certainly I’ve worked with a lot of academics who were surprised and pleased at how quickly they were able to build an online network, and actually to get value from it in terms of being able to pose questions to that group and have useful debates and collaborative discussions - as well, of course, as building the visibility of their work, which we’ll come on to. But if you’re really not comfortable with social media, don’t forget about good old email. It’s still a widely used communication tool so when you’re at conferences and things do make sure you try and get the email address of people you meet who you might want to follow up with in future – don’t be shy about asking to connect in person or online!
  17. So using some of those tools and techniques, you’ve been preparing for the point of publication and can now pull it all together to maximize the readership and impact of the journal article or book or chapter that you publish. You can see I’ve added the Kudos logo in the middle here – I’ll give you a whistlestop tour of our tool in a moment, I promise, but one of the key reasons we set it up is that we were doing all of these activities, posting our outputs online, communicating through social media and email, and it felt like they were happening in silos – separate activities, in separate website, not really building on each other, and not working as hard as they could together to build the impact of our publications. What we wanted was to be able to connect publications back to all these materials and resources that we’d been putting online, which often weren’t cited in our publications because they had only come into existence while the publication was in press, say, or because they weren’t really the kinds of things you would cite, but nonetheless it seemed helpful to connect them up. And on a related note of what is helpful, we also saw a need for a platform that would enable people to explain their work in plain language. If you’re seeking to broaden the impact of your work, you have to make it visible and understandable to people who won’t necessarily be using the same academic language as you – they might be people outside your field or discipline, with their own vernacular, or they might be practitioners or media or “citizen scholars” – so summarizing the work will help it show up in search results for queries that don’t use the formal language of the work itself, and then when people arrive at the work, a plain language explanation will also help them more quickly understand whether it will be useful or relevant for them.
  18. So I’ve touched a few times on what we’re doing at Kudos, and thought it would be useful to give you a quick overview of our toolkit. It is a simple process – it takes perhaps 20 minutes the first time you does this, and then perhaps 10 minutes each time you have a new publication. We provide you with a “profile” page for each thing you publish, where you can ”explain” it in plain language by answering two simple questions: what is it about, and why is it important. You can also add links to all your slides, data, videos, press coverage, anything else online that relates to the work. Then we give you a trackable link for sharing the work. If you’re a social media user, you can connect up your Facebook, Twitter or LInkedIn accounts and actually post to them directly from your Kudos page. But you can also take our trackable link and paste it into an email, or a blog post, or a presentation, or a reading list etc. It’s that trackable link that then enables us to map your communication effort against your publication metrics. What you see on the right there is our “matrix of metrics” and this is the only site where you can see in one place what you did to share your work, how many people acted on that, and what effect that’s had on views of your work, downloads, online discussion and citations.
  19. None of us has a lot of time for outreach efforts, so it’s critical that we keep track of whether using some of these tools and techniques is actually increasing the impact of our work. Measurement of impact is another area that is a discipline in and of itself – bibliometrics, scientometrics, altmetrics. Some of the potential metrics by which publication performance or impact is measured are more established and familiar than others – so citations is obviously the most recognized measure of academic impact, and underpins widely-used metrics like the Impact Factor (for journals) or the h-index (for people). But in the digital age there are many more metrics that can be tracked – such as how many times your work has been shared or mentioned online, clicks and views, downloads. I tend to look at them as a spectrum relating to different levels of engagement with a piece of work – so social likes shows that people have acknowledged the existence of work, have paid attention to it – but only if they actually click through and view it can you really say they’re interested, and only if they actually download it can you really say they read it, and only if they cited it can you really say they acted on it. Now, mostly, we’ll be seeking to improve those at the right-hand end of this spectrum, because those are the metrics by which we are evaluated, those are the metrics that traditionally stand for impact. The challenge that metrics researchers and practitioners face is to try to understand the relationships, if any, between these different metrics
  20. And the challenge for you is to understand the relationship between those metrics and your own efforts to improve them. And that’s something that Kudos helps with; by providing a central channel through which you can manage communications about your work, and by bringing together this wide range of publication metrics, we are gradually building up a dataset that can map communications to results, and in the process, map different kinds of metrics together. So we can not only give you the answers as to which kinds of communications tools or techniques are more or less effective for you to build impact, we can also start to answer the questions about which ”attention” metrics correlate to which “action” metrics. And a final advantage of that is that we can help you therefore to justify time spent on communications – to yourself, or to your supervisors and so on – because we can then show communications as a whole do increase impact.
  21. We were approached about this time last year by a research group at Nanyang Technological Institute in Singapore, and they asked if they could take a dump of our data and undertake some analysis of the effectiveness of what we’re doing. There were about 5,000 articles in a test group, which had been shared through Kudos, and a similarly sized control group of articles for which the Kudos tools had not been used. The team looked at average downloads of these articles on the various publishers’ websites, and found that articles for which the Kudos tools had been used had 23% higher downloads on average than those articles for which the tools weren’t used. So this is starting to become the kind of evidence that academics are looking for to inform an impact strategy and justify time spent implementing it!
  22. I started to do a separate slide and realised I was just recreating my checklist! I think some of these are more obvious than others – I’m sure you do already submit your work for conferences, and you probably do already have networks that you’re building up, whether in social networks, academic networks, or offline. So I’ve highlighted the 3 that I think are at the intersection of “most important” and “least likely to be happening already”! And these are my top 3 take-aways for you today - and to make that even easier I’ve distilled it down to three specific actions you can take!
  23. Thank you and good luck!