Social media: The art of self-promotion

Social media is a powerful tool for promoting your own work and interacting with your research community – so get yourself out there!

Guest contributor Steve Hurst

self-promotion-naturejobs-blog

{credit}Image credit: Venimo{/credit}

If you have a question about deer or goat behaviour, then Dr Alan McElligott is your go-to guy. His research on the evolution, ecology and communication of large mammals, particularly ungulates, has seen him appear on a diverse set of media outlets, from the BBC to Modern Farmer and countless others.

When Alan’s latest co-authored paper ‘Intrasexual selection drives sensitivity to pitch, formants and duration in the competitive calls of fallow bucks’ was published, his first thought was to contact his institution’s press department, but his second – like an ever increasing number of researchers – was to expand the reach of his work beyond the usual scientific community through social networking sites.

Last year a survey by Nature found that nearly 50% of researchers have a professional presence online and, of the subset of scholars who said they ‘regularly visited’ social media sites, 37% visited Twitter daily. Alan uses Twitter and likes to engage with other people who are interested in his work. Continue reading

Publishing initiative makes research widely available to read and share

Macmillan Science and Education, the parent group of Nature Publishing Group, has today announced an initiative that will make research articles on nature.com widely available to read and share.

The initiative aims to support collaborative research and make it easy for readers to share a wealth of scientific knowledge with researchers and scientists worldwide.

From today, subscribers to 49 journals on nature.com will be able to share the full-text articles of interest with colleagues who do not have a subscription. This will be done through a shareable web link on nature.com that will go through to a read-only version of published research. To add to this, more than 100 global media outlets and blogs that report on the findings of articles published on nature.com will be able to provide their own readers with a link to a full text, read-only view of the original scientific paper.

Watch the video demonstration of how this works here.

video pic 2

“In today’s global, internet-enabled world, we think we can meet the needs of science and society better,” says Steven Inchcoombe, CEO of Nature Publishing Group.

He continues: “We’re committed to adapting to meet the needs of the community, and to basing our decisions on an evidence-based approach. We are conducting our own ‘experiment’ to understand how best to help the sharing of knowledge in a sustainable way. Working with authors, readers, libraries and journalists, we hope to learn a lot.”

Listen to Steven Inchcoombe, CEO of Nature Publishing Group and Timo Hannay, Chief Executive of Digital Science talk about the launch here.

 

https://vimeo.com/user13098047/review/113262768/539fc2ff23

The initiative includes Nature, the Nature family of journals and fifteen other quality science journals.  This means scientists and students at more than 6,000 universities and organisations worldwide will be able to share article to aid collaboration, for personal, non-commercial use.

Digital Science’s portfolio company Readcube has developed the technology behind the initiative and further functionality will give subscribers the option to annotate, share comments and highlight text with colleagues.

Nature Publishing Group has also released a new beta policy to accompany the initiative. It will be adapted and refined over a one year period, based on community feedback. The policy is based on reasonable use. More detail is available here.

Follow the hashtag #scishare for updates on the pilot process.