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Re: 2006 BioOne Progress Report Now Available
I was delighted to hear about BioOne's "commitment to evolve to
better meet the needs of its stake-holders," but I would be
interested to learn as well about the fortunes of one subgroup of
stakeholders, the shareholders, which, in BioOne's case, are
principally professional societies.
What portion of their operating expenses are offset by the income
from BioOne? How does this compare to, say, three years ago and
how is it forecast to evolve three years from now? If there are
print as well as online editions, what is the expected future
(and profitability) of the print editions?
If in time a publication evolved such that its only edition were
electronic, available exclusively through BioOne, would the
revenue from BioOne be sufficient to offset the publication's
expenses? If not, is the professional society prepared to
subsidize the BioOne edition indefinitely? If the expectation is
to derive revenue through an Open Access model (as some
participating publishers apparently do now), how is that revenue
forecast to increase and at what time will it exceed the
operating costs of any particular publication?
In other words, what is the longer-term plan?
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: "Lauren Kane" <lauren@arl.org>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Thursday, February 08, 2007 4:56 PM
Subject: 2006 BioOne Progress Report Now Available
2006 BioOne Progress Report Now Available
Washington, DC (February 8, 2007)
At an average cost to subscribing institutions of $0.75 per
full-text download, BioOne remains one of the highest quality,
lowest cost options for electronic access to current content. A
complete report detailing BioOne's evolution last year is now
available in the 2006 BioOne Progress Report at
http://www.bioone.org/pdf/ BioOne06ProgressRpt.pdf. This
publicly available report illustrates BioOne's increasing
relevance and value to the scholarly community as an
alternative, not-for-profit online publisher. In addition to
describing past and present activities and achievements, the
report highlights BioOne's continued commitment to evolve to
better meet the needs of its stake-holders.
BioOne is now home to 125 publications from 91 publishers
across three collections: BioOne.1, BioOne.2, and Open Access.
Paid subscribers at the end of 2006 included nearly 1,000
global institutions and organizations, plus many hundreds more
accessing through no or low cost developing world programs.
BioOne registered over 5.9 million hits in 2006 to abstracts
and full-texts, with at least 258,000 unique visitors to the
site each month.
###
About BioOne
Established in 2000, BioOne is the product of innovative
collaboration between scientific societies, libraries, academe,
and the private sector, who seek a sustainable, mission-driven
alternative to commercial publishing. BioOne brings to the Web
a uniquely valuable aggregation of the full-texts of
high-impact bioscience research journals. Most of BioOne's
titles are published by small societies and not-for-profit
publishers. BioOne provides integrated, cost-effective access
to a thoroughly linked information resource of interrelated
journals focused on the biological, ecological, and
environmental sciences.
###