The best revenue models and funding sources for your digital resources | Jisc

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-04-10

Summary:

Use the link to access the full text guide.  The Executive Summary opens as follows: "There are fewer barriers than ever before for those who wish to build something on the web, whether an online journal, a website with tools for teaching, or a digitised collection of rare and unique materials. Today’s builders may be individuals, institutions or social enterprises, in addition to more traditional ‘publishers’ of digital resources. Recent and growing enthusiasm among faculty and students for digital humanities suggests that this moment of digital creation and innovation is far from over. This is evidenced by the growth of workshops, The Humanities and Technology (THAT) camps, the Jisc Summer of Student Innovation competition and other training opportunities, as well as the movement of funders in the cultural heritage sector to support digital work. Whether a digital project was created with a significant grant from public funds or subsidised by the hard work and volunteer effort of a devoted group of partners, whether its content is made freely available or not, there are substantial costs involved in keeping the resource up and running and delivering value to those who use it. Identifying sources for that ongoing support is not obvious or easy, as funders’ programmes often target innovation and not ongoing operations. With the support of the Jisc-led Strategic Content Alliance (SCA), Ithaka S+R has developed this guide to support those who are actively managing digital projects and are seeking to develop funding models that will permit them to continue investing in their projects, for the benefit of their users, over time. This report updates Sustainability and Revenue Models for Online Academic Resources (2008) in two major ways: first, by expanding the list of revenue models covered in order to take into account emerging models, including highlighting those methods that are compatible with open access. Second, the report places the notion of ‘revenue generation’ in the context of the fuller range of funding activities we have observed in higher education and the cultural sector. In addition to practices more often seen in the commercial world like advertising and corporate sponsorships, the report devotes time to discussions of a range of philanthropic sources of support as well as support offered by host institutions. While this updated guide is substantially expanded from the original and updated to include new and more current examples and illustrations, we are deeply aware of just how rapidly revenue models change, along with the digital projects that use them. We hope that the examples offered in this guide are useful and permit project leaders to quickly determine which methods may be best suited to their needs. We hope that the greatest value of this guide and its articles will be as a framework, a starting point to encourage project leaders to develop new ideas for supporting their work, before gathering the most current data, and actively testing these ideas against the specific circumstances of their projects and their audiences ..."

Link:

http://www.jisc.ac.uk/reports/the-best-revenue-models-and-funding-sources-for-your-digital-resources

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.jisc oa.case oa.funders oa.business_models oa.digital_humanities oa.digital_scholarship oa.ch oa.glam oa.libraries oa.colleges oa.universities oa.sustainability oa.guides oa.hei oa.economics_of oa.humanities oa.ssh

Date tagged:

04/10/2014, 12:36

Date published:

04/10/2014, 08:35