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Re: Reply to David Prosser
Here's my rationale for being particularly concerned about
smaller (and, yes, NFP publishers) in an OA environment
They tend to operate on lower profit (surplus) margins than
commercial publishers - various studies have indicated ballpark
margins (see, for example,
http://www.alpsp.org/publications/pub8.htm) and others have shown
that NFP prices, page for page, are lower
OA publishing is, in principle, no more alarming for small/NFP
publishers than for large ones. However, one of the
(understandable) objectives of OA's enthusiasts seems to be to
reduce the costs of the system. This can only be done in two
ways: by reducing costs (which may be harder if you're small,
with less leverage on suppliers) and by reducing profit/surplus.
If you had less profit/surplus to start with, it stands to reason
that a given reduction will hurt you more.
OA self-archiving is, potentially, damaging to both kinds of
publisher; if it transpires that users are perfectly happy to
migrate to the 'good enough' free version, it would be bizarre to
assume that subscriptions/licences would survive indefinitely.
But once again, a publisher operating on slimmer margins will be
more vulnerable.
There is a separate point (sometimes conflated with the above)
about what is done with the profit/surplus. NFP publishers,
unlike their commercial colleagues, are not allowed, either by
their mission or their tax status to disburse it into private
hands. They must plough it back into the pursuit of their
organisational mission. In the case of learned societies, this
tends to be about support and dissemination of research, and
public education. It follows that in many ways OA is helpful to
their mission; at the same time, the other ways they achieve
their mission (running conferences, offering bursaries, public
education programs, even funding research) is often highly
dependent, at present, on the proceeds of the publishing
activity.
Thus, if the surplus is reduced, this will have a knock-on effect
on the society's highly beneficial other activities. It may not
destroy the society, but it will very likely affect a range of
its activities
Sally Morris, Chief Executive
Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers
Email: sally.morris@alpsp.org
Website: www.alpsp.org
----- Original Message -----
From: "Joseph J. Esposito" <espositoj@gmail.com>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Sunday, September 17, 2006 11:31 PM
Subject: Reply to David Prosser
David Prosser wrote:
"Could you provide a paper where the your claim that 'The call
for Open Access is simply diminishing the NFPs.' is explored in
more detail?"
This is a fair question. I know of no such paper.
Perhaps this would be a good time for the participants in
not-for-profit academic publishing to offer their thoughts on
this matter. In any number of offline discussions, I have been
told of the problems that OA poses for the NFPs, but David is
not out of bounds in asking to hear the evidence. Could the NFP
publishers who are part of this mailgroup share some of their
comments with David and others who are of his point of view?
If people keep silent, it is hard to see why the advocates of
OA would temper their activism.
As some NFP staff members may have institutional constraints on
public statements, I would be happy to forward their anonymous
comments to this list, assuming I can get them by the stern
gaze of our moderator.
There is one item in David's post, however, to which I am
compelled to respond personally:
"It would also be useful to have an explanation for why in your
view open access is a greater threat to NFPs than, say, the
continued success of big deal offerings from large publishers."
I don't know where this question comes from. I have never been
a supporter of the so-called "big deals" from a library's point
of view. The "big deal" substitutes quantity for quality. But
if these bundled packages have been successful, it is because
libraries [and/or their readers] have wanted them.
Joe Esposito