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Promoting your research using social media
Doctoral workshop presented at McMaster UniversityHamilton, Canada 4th November 2015
http://hazelhall.orghttp://slideshare.net/hazelhall
@hazelh
Workshop topics
1. Established and new measures of academic impact
2. Consideration of the range of social media tools available to help promote your research and increase its potential impact (academic and wide)
3. Recommendations on which tools to use for developing an online presence as a researcher
Established measures of academic impact
Bibliometric indicators measure “academic” impact of individuals’ output
Quantity and quality of publications Quantity and quality of citations to those publications Codified in citation databases
http://jis.sagepub.com/reports/most-cited
Established impact measures
Bibliometric indicators measure “academic” impact
Quantity of publications Quantity of citations to those publications
http://webofknowledge.com
Alternative impact measures
Altmetrics assess the impact of individual output using various criteria across a range of platforms
recommended by others praised by opinion leaders mentioned in social media etc.
downloaded acknowledged included in syllabi quoted in the press cited in policy documents
Judgements of esteem rely on more than “mere” publication record.
Visibility is becoming increasingly important for personal research impact and the reputational benefits that this brings:
Collaboration approaches Speaking invitations Committee service
files.figshare.com/1067961/56_impacts_preprint_5_26_13.pdf
Center for the Study of Interdisciplinarity (CSID), University of North Texas (2011)
http://hazelhall.org/2013/07/14/altmetrics-achieving-and-measuring-success-in-communicating-research-in-the-digital-age/
But what about wider impact?Research reach policy action improvements
Exploration of the extent to which LIS research projects influence practice (2011)
Creation of outputs to support the use and execution of research by librarians and information scientists (2012)
http://lisresearchcoalition.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/rilies1_report.pdf
Activities to ensure that investment in research deliver social and economic benefit
Ensure project has high level support Include target research audience(s) in the execution of the research Take into account target audience(s) preferences for consuming research output Present output in a way that is accessible to the target audience
Much of this is about how the work is disseminated, in particular:
output format (content creation) accessibility (sharing)
- and this is where social media come in…
There are lots of places “to be”(Local profiles)CV services
e.g. LinkedInResource sharing sites
e.g. Flickr, Pinterest, SlideShare, SoundCloud, Vimeo, YouTube
ID services e.g. Orcid, ResearcherID
Profile services e.g. Academia.edu, Google Scholar,
ResearchGateBlogging and microblogging platforms
e.g. CoverItLive, Medium, Quora, The Conversation, Tumblr, Twitter WordPress
Impact measurement tools e.g. Klout
Collaboration sites e.g. Citeulike, Mendeley
Social networking sites e.g. Facebook, Google+, Lanyrd
So where should you be?For wide dissemination of publications
ID services (e.g. Orcid, ResearcherID) and research profile services (e.g. Academia.edu, Google Scholar, ResearchGate)
For wide dissemination of presentations Resource sharing sites (e.g. SlideShare, SoundCloud, Vimeo,
YouTube)
If you are interested in tracking your impact Impact measurement tools (e.g. Klout)
If you want to keep up to date/others updated Twitter
- and to provide a directory of it all About.me
16
So where should you be: essentials?
1. Your CV on LinkedIn ✓2. Your academic identity registered on ID services (e.g. Orcid,
ResearcherID)
So where should you be: essentials?
1. Your CV on LinkedIn ✓2. Your academic identity registered on ID services (e.g. Orcid,
ResearcherID) ✓3. Your publication track record on profile services (e.g. Academia.edu
, Google Scholar, ResearchGate)
So where should you be: essentials?
1. Your CV on LinkedIn ✓2. Your academic identity registered on ID services (e.g. Orcid,
ResearcherID) ✓3. Your publication track record on profile services (e.g. Academia.edu
, Google Scholar, ResearchGate) ✓4. Links to the above from About.me
Should you set up a personal blog?
1. Do you want/need a full “independent” online profile?2. Do you enjoy writing?3. Are you prepared to give up your free time to blog regularly?4. What will be your communications strategy?
What will you call your blog? What will it cover? How often will you post to it? How will you direct traffic to it?
Some blog examplesResearch students in the Centre for Social Informatics at Edinburgh Napier University
Iris Buunk: http://theknowledgeexplorer.org @irisbuunk
Lyndsey Jenkins: http://lyndseyjenkins.org/ @LJenk2015
John Mowbray: http://johnmowbray.org @jmowb_napier
Frances Ryan: http://justaphd.com @cleverfrances
25
Blog alternatives
In-house news platform Update function on LinkedIn Ad hoc blogging on Medium, guest contributions to The Conversation
Resources
For further detail on individual services mentioned in this presentation see Using social media to promote your research by Hazel Hall.
The London School of Economics blog Maximising the impact of academic research is well worth following
Sharing the DREaM blueprint gives an account of how social media extended the reach of an AHRC project in 2011/12
social media planning 30
https://theconversation.com/mind-the-gender-gap-why-women-must-still-fight-for-equality-in-science-32923
Contact Hazel Hall
http://hazelhall.orghttp://slideshare.net/hazelhall
@hazelhh.hall@napier.ac.uk+44 0131 455 2760
Promoting your research using social media
Doctoral workshop presented at McMaster UniversityHamilton, Canada 4th November 2015
http://hazelhall.orghttp://slideshare.net/hazelhall
@hazelh
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