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Re: Homer Simpson at the NIH
David,
If there is less money in the system, the bigger players are
better positioned to survive; if there is more money in the
system, the bigger players are better positioned to survive.
The issue is not the size of the market; it is the maturity of
the market. Publishing is close to a no-growth business. In
no-growth markets, consolidation is a likely, if not inevitable,
strategy.
The only reason that academic journals are published by such a
huge number of publishers--unlike, say, college texts (6 players
in the U.S. have 85% of the market)--is that the not-for-profit
status of many of the players makes them resistant to some
aspects of the marketplace. That is neither good nor bad; it is
what it is. If all journals publishers were publicly traded and
thus subject to Wall Street's stern review, consolidation would
come quickly; we would be down to three publishers in 5 years.
The large players (most of whom are commercial) have learned to
work with the restrictions on growth. They develop budget
allocation strategies (the Big Deal) and solicit professional
society publications. Their growth (NOT the market's growth,
which is nill) is slowed down by the NFPs, but it is not stopped.
Incidentally, I can't help remarking that this long thread has as
its subject line "Homer Simpson at the NIH."
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Prosser" <david.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2007 11:21 AM
Subject: RE: Homer Simpson at the NIH
I'm happy to use publishers other than the American Physical
Society as examples. The trouble is that few publishers
(commercial or non-commercial) have been as open as the APS in
giving their revenue per article. However, if you would rather
then let's use the example of Optics Express which I understand
makes a surplus (and is open access, incidentally) on a
publication charge of $1,200 or so (dependent on the length of
the paper).
Joe contends that if there is less money in the system it is
the big players who are best placed to survive. I'm just
wondering if that necessarily true as some (not all, some)
smaller publishers (both commercial and non-commercial) appear
to operate on less revenue per paper.
David C Prosser PhD
Director
SPARC Europe
E-mail: david.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk