Maximise your impact and visibility
Having your article published is only the first step to sharing your research with the world.
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With more than a million new publications every year, getting your work seen, read and appreciated can be frustrating and time-consuming.
Decoding the secrets of successful self-promotion can be mystifying and tedious, not to mention uncomfortable and discouraging. We believe your time and energy would be far better spent on your research. That’s why we’ve cut through the confusion and created the following resources to assist with getting your work seen by a global audience.
Set yourself up for success
If you follow these simple tips before your article is even published, promotion will be a breeze. Not only will your article be easy to find and connect with, but you’ll have an audience of eager advocates just waiting to help you spread the word.
Prepare for the fact that many researchers still discover articles through search engines or journal contents pages and optimise your title and abstract. Before your article is published, think about how these things could help steer readers toward your work.
Your title should leave no room for doubt about the subject of your article.
Do | Don't |
---|---|
keep it short | use long, specific, compound names |
use keywords | include non-standard abbreviations and symbols |
include familiar, searchable terms | choose subjective terms like ‘novel’ |
Bad examples:
- Superamphiphobic coatings prepared by the combination of palygorskite and organosilanes
- Fabrication of superamphiphobic coatings under PAL, 1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorodecyltriethoxysilane and tetraethoxysilane
- Novel superamphiphobic coatings
Good example:
- Durable and self-healing superamphiphobic coatings repellent event to hot liquids
Your abstract should follow the same rules and:
- be written in plain English that’s easy to understand and clearly conveys the importance of your work in just a few words
- set out the objectives of the work
- summarise the key findings
- emphasise (without overstating) the significance and potential impact of the research
Because webpages often only display abstracts and then link to the full text, your abstract can be the deciding factor in whether or not a reader decides to click through to your article.
Think about the keywords you’d use to search for your article and include them in your article’s title and abstract. The more you use those exact words, the better your chances of rising through the ranks and appearing at the top of search results.
While you’re writing up your research or waiting for it to be published, think about how you could grab your readers’ attention with a visual hook that draws them into reading your words.
Design a graphical abstract
This should be a simple representation of what the reader can expect when they click through to your article.
Do | Don't |
---|---|
keep your text between 15 and 25 words | include more than one or two key elements |
focus only on the key findings and their importance | use graphs or spectra or anything that’s too detailed or difficult to read |
use easily recognisable words and phrases that can be read quickly. | repeat information that’s already in the title. |
Produce a video abstract
Offer a quick insight into the focus of your research with a video abstract. With all major social media platforms now incorporating video options, it’s a great tool to engage more people with your research and also a really easy way for them to share your work with others.
This kind of art fills two functions: it can convince a reader to take a closer look and double as an eye-catching social media post.
It’s never too early to start developing a network of valuable contacts, like-minded colleagues and allies in related fields.
As soon as you’re ready to publish your research, these are the people who will be eagerly waiting to read it – without any extra effort on your part. And, if you follow our tips below, they might even be excited enough to introduce your work to their own audience, who could then go on to share it with more people, and so on...
In person
If you’re at a conference or event, have a business card ready and a quick introduction prepared about who you are and what you do. But remember: you’re building relationships at this point, so be sure to ask other people about themselves. They may be working on something you’re interested in and when the time comes you can help each other get the word out.
Online
Have you joined any academic social networking sites, like , or ? These online forums are great places to find like-minded scientists. Start by participating in discussions around your research topic and commenting on other people’s work. After a while, this will probably lead to conversations about your work and then you’ll get the opportunity to share your research without any awkwardness.
With a multitude of new research being published every day, it’s hard to pick out the really important stuff. So make it easy for your audience. Draft a brief summary of your research that can be quickly and easily understood. In fact, write two! One for people in your field and one for everyone else.
Having a ready-to-go summary that uses plain English to explain complex ideas and technical terms will help you connect with researchers in allied fields, members of the media and even policy makers. And preparing two simple summaries means you’ll never have to scramble to describe your research in an engaging and concise way – no matter who you’re speaking to.
Where it’s useful to have a simple summary at the ready:
- at conferences or networking events
- in press releases
- during oral presentations
- anywhere a lay summary is required, like Kudos or ScholarOne
The longer your work is online and visible, the more chance it has to attract attention, generate excitement and gain citations.
By submitting your un-reviewed manuscript to a preprint server like , you can start circulating your research before publication. And, because preprints receive DOIs during the ChemRxiv posting process, they are fully citable and part of the scientific record. In fact, you can start getting citations 30 seconds after posting.
At the ÀË»¨Ö±²¥, we support our community of chemical scientists in sharing new research findings before and after publication in our journals. That’s why we encourage preprints, but other publishers may have different pre-publication policies.
When you’re ready to publish your work, you want to make sure it gets seen by the world’s top scientists.
Publishing with the ÀË»¨Ö±²¥ means automatic access to a global audience. Our journals are read and cited by individuals in 140 different countries, with 48 of the world’s 50 top rated institutions for chemistry having access to everything in our current journal portfolio.
You could reach an even wider audience if our editors pick your article to highlight in ÀË»¨Ö±²¥ World or to the global scientific media.
Professional promotion service
Promote your research. Accelerate its impact.
Exciting developments deserve maximum exposure. We work with Editage to help you prepare and share the highest quality version of your research.
Spread the word
Follow these simple tips and tricks to maximise the impact of your work and increase your influence among your audience.
When it comes to finding and building your audience, social media is one of the most valuable tools at your fingertips.
Platforms like X (Twitter), Facebook and LinkedIn let you communicate directly and quickly with a vast network of potential readers. Many of these people are eager to champion your work… they just don’t know it yet.
- Include hashtags to link your work with popular topics so that more people can find your articles.
- Be friendly: follow and interact with others in your field, comment on their posts and start conversations.
- Build a community by responding to tweets, comments and questions.
- Add images to draw attention to your posts.
- Consider time zones: if you want your post to be read by people in the US, Europe or Asia (for example), time your post to coincide with their tea breaks and lunches, or schedule multiple posts to maximise the likelihood of more people seeing your research
- Tag the journal you’re published in so we can retweet you!
Sharing your work is not pushy or egotistical. Sharing your work is helpful and professional.
A lot of people in your existing network will be interested in your research. They just need a reminder that it’s out there.
- Share with your email contacts. Add a link in your email signature to make it easy for your contacts to click through to your article. You can also include links to your website, LinkedIn page or other social media accounts.
- Share with your colleagues. When you publish with the ÀË»¨Ö±²¥, you get free eprints. You can also choose to order professionally printed colour copies of your article. Sharing them with your colleagues is an easy way to foster relationships and generate interest.
- Share with your social media followers. Once again, social media is your friend. But don’t just post links to your own work. Show your followers that all the content you share is valuable by sprinkling links to your articles amongst other stories that people in your field will find interesting.
Take any and every opportunity to talk about your publication.
When you go to an event where you know there’ll be people with an interest in your area of research, take some flyers and hand out them out to everyone you talk to. And don’t be afraid to be creative. For example, your flyer could be a summary of a talk you’ve given on the subject or a mini version of your poster.
When poster or oral abstracts are called for, submit your research ahead of events for a chance to present alongside leaders in the field.
Whenever you give a speech about your research, reach an even wider audience by making your presentation available online afterwards with a platform like SlideShare.
You might be surprised by how many tools you already have in your toolkit.
For example, make full use of your institution's communications channels:
- Is there an internal newsletter you could make an announcement in?
- Are there screens you could promote your work on?
- Does your institution or department have social media accounts that could share a link to your work?
- Is there a press department that could help you with a press release?
- Does your institution have a subscription to the journal you're published in?
If your institution does not yet have a subscription to the journal you're published in, speak to your librarian and recommend it for the next subscription year.
There’s no one-size-fits-all strategy for promotion. A lot depends on you, your audience, the topic of your article and the field you’re working in.
Use trackable links to find out where your readers are coming from, and keep an eye on your articles’ views, downloads and citations. Altmetrics are also extremely useful in tracking the immediate and uncited impact of your work based on the attention your article receives from blogs, tweets, news articles and other media.
Not sure how to generate trackable links or analyse altmetrics? Kudos can help. Find out how to easily measure, monitor and maximise the impact of your published work.
Keep checking on how well your articles are performing and be prepared to adjust and finesse your strategy, perhaps by using different channels. Once you know which communication tactics are working (and which aren’t) you can use your time and energy in the most effective way.
If you can answer ‘yes, yes and yes’ to the next three questions, it would definitely be worth creating a press release to shine a spotlight on your work.
- Is my research something the general public would be interested in?
- Have I reached conclusions that are applicable for a non-scientific audience?
- Would my research change anything in people’s everyday lives?
Tips for writing an attention-grabbing press release:
- Use an eye-catching heading
- Open with the most intriguing aspect of your findings
- Focus on the practical applications of how your research will change the world
- Give the journalist enough information to understand the mechanics
- Use plain English and err on the side of ‘over-explaining’
- Include images of your work or your team.
- Weave in quotes from other people involved in the research
- Make it personal: explain why you’re so excited about this research
If you decide that a press release is appropriate, contact your institution’s press office and make the most of the expertise of your press officers to help you craft a press release you can share with the most relevant outlets.
And finally… don’t forget to let us know if you're planning to press release your work so we can help you get the word out.