How to start a journal and beat the academic publishing racket
Academic publishing is a multi-billion pound industry , with profit margins reportedly higher than those of Apple, Google and Amazon . It has always struck me as a racket: academics sign over their work to private businesses for free, and then their universities pay the same businesses hefty fees in order to read what they publish. Academics are also responsible for editing these journals and providing the peer-reviews, usually for free.
It hasn’t always been this way. In a remarkable brief history of the academic publishing industry, Stephen Buranyi highlights the key role of Robert Maxwell, a brash business tycoon whose greatest desire was to “be a millionaire”. Maxwell arrived on the scene just after the Second World War, which was a key turning point in academic history. The post-war years saw a huge growth in the number of people attending higher education and also in the academic publishing trade. In 1950, there were 10,000 journals published worldwide, but by 1980, this was had reached 62,000 . Robert Maxwell and other businessmen capitalised on this growth and took the opportunity to privatise what had previously been a largely non-profit sector. There is now growing awareness that this industry is both ludicrous and detrimental, unwieldily costly and harmful to the progression of science . However, solutions are slow in coming. While open-access journals are growing, the majority of these charge fees for publication that far outstrip real costs . For these reasons, I have been intrigued and encouraged to see the development of peer-reviewed open access journals which do not charge authors to publish with them. These include the International Journal of Music, Health and Wellbeing (IJMHW) , whose Principal Editor is Dr James Williams , Senior Lecturer at the University of Derby, and Psychreg Journal of Psychology (PJP) , whose Chief Editor is Dennis Relojo-Howell , founder of leading psychology blog Psychreg . These journals offer a solution that previously would have been regarded as impossible: they are both free to the authors and free to readers. I spoke to Williams and Relojo-Howell to understand more about their journals.
Why start a peer-reviewed academic journal?
As both Williams and Relojo-Howell attested, self-publishing an academic journal is a significant amount of work. So why do it? Williams said his motivation arose from his experience as a PhD Student and early career researcher. “Acceptance of manuscripts in current musicology-based journals can sometimes feel a little elitist. Editors and traditional publishers prefer to go with already-known academics, and are less likely to take on manuscripts from early-career scholars”. Williams also described his dissatisfaction with the traditional academic publishing industry, and its money-oriented focus. IJMHW meets this gap by focusing on publishing the work of early career researchers, and by managing all copy-editing and manuscript management in-house. Relojo-Howell’s motivation was different. As a psychology blog editor, he had begun to receive blog post submissions that were overly long and technical. These posts weren’t suitable for publication as blog posts, but he could see their importance and academic merit. He created the journal to provide an outlet for these articles, and to broaden the overall scope of Psychreg .
Ten steps for starting a journal
Whatever the focus of your journal, the steps for setting one up are similar.
- Build a website that will home your journal. A full description of this process is beyond the capacity of this article (and my expertise!) but the key parts of this are to buy a domain name, find a web hosting company and then prepare the content within this. Popular web-creation platforms are wordpress.com, wix.com and weebly.com. Relojo-Howell suggested that it’s also worth looking into the Public Knowledge Project : this provides Open Journal Systems (OJS), federally funded software designed to support the set up and management of open access journals.
- Set up an editorial board. Both Williams and Relojo-Howell highlighted the importance of this. First, this group can provide the strategic direction and support that can get your journal started and help it grow. Second, this group can provide credibility to the project. As Relojo-Howell said, “When I started, potential contributors were only interested in who was on the editorial board. I have never been asked about the journal’s impact factor”.
- Involve associate editors who can provide support. Williams described the importance of including a multi-skilled team. “We have editors with different areas of expertise and varying skillsets, including people who are familiar with copy-editing and academic publishing”.
- Manage your submissions. Traditional journals use manuscript-management software, but this comes with a steep price tag. “I contacted Emerald about their systems”, Relojo-Howell said, “but they asked for £38k”. Open Journal Systems (OJS) provides an alternative, free-to-use alternative, but this isn’t necessary. “I use a spread-sheet to keep on top of submissions”, Williams said. “It works fine”.
- Copy-edit and type-set your articles. While this may feel like a challenge, both Williams and Relojo-Howell said it was possible to do using widely available software. Williams said that he uses Word and Adobe programs to provide a professional-looking finish to his articles. Relojo-Howell commented on the fonts he uses: “I use a combination of paid-for fonts and some free Google fonts”.
- Apply for an International Standard Serial Number (ISSN). For us in the UK, this involves submitting an application to the British Library . Williams suggested that the British Library will expect to see evidence of around 3-4 previous publications and a commitment to continue publishing on a regular basis.
- Plan how to give your articles a Digital Object Identifier (DOI). DOIs are a string of numbers, letters and symbols used to permanently identify an article of document and link it to the web. Relojo-Howell recommends using Zenodo for this purpose. Initially funded by EU project funding, Zenodo is now open to all research outputs and offers its services free of charge for open access publishers.
- Wider registration. There are a variety of international platforms with which to register journals, including Web of Science, PubMed and SCOPUS . This may be a longer term process, however. Dom Mitchell , from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) has stated, “DOAJ requires that an open access journal has published 5 original research articles, among other things, before we will consider it for indexing… We also require that the journal has an ISSN which has been registered *and* fully confirmed.”
Other considerations
- Finding peer-reviewers. My colleagues who edit traditional journals have described to me the challenges of finding peer-reviewers. While Williams and Relojo-Howell suggested this could also be challenging with new, open access journals, Williams suggested a personal touch could help support a positive response rate. “We approach academics who are working closely in the field of the article, and send personal requests. 60 or 70 per cent of the time, they agree”.
- Clarify that you are a genuine academic ground-roots initiative . Unfortunately, at the same time that the genuine open-access field is growing, the number of predatory journals is proliferating at great speed. In a previous post , I clarify the warning signs of academic spam emails. However, if your potential contributors are concerned, let them know that the first clear distinction is that predatory journals ask for large sums of money and usually offer to rush through submissions at great speed. The second clear distinction is your academic board. You can signpost potential contributors to contact your board members for reassurances, if they are concerned.
Is it worth it?
Both Williams and Relojo-Howell admitted that their journals were time consuming and offered no financial benefits. However, what is clear is that starting these journals offers significant job satisfaction. As Williams said, “I saw it as a real problem – I wanted to help other graduating PhD music students… I don’t think I have reaped any rewards for myself, but I do know a lot of people now. It’s great for networking”. Similarly, for Relojo-Howell, the reward lies in contributing towards open science: “I wanted to demonstrate that dissemination of science can be reconstructed to become more democratic – a science that is shared for wider consumption”.
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Funded phd opportunity in mental health, 64 comments.
Thank you for this article. It happens to be the right one to have answered some of my questions on starting a journal. Very useful.
Really glad it was helpful Sakila!
Thank you for the very good information !
Thanks for your kind feedback 🙂
Nice and genuine content. Great job….
It was informative, and an impressive endeavour. Well you must have grown in experience, It would seem that you are honest about this. It did sound like a great idea. I guess it’s good to know what you are getting into. I guess many of the authors published authors will then acknowledge the journal, and/or You. There must be transferable skills. Some things even when not immediately aparent will, I guess you get respect. And people know your name. Not-for-profit thought would have prestige.
Very Good Information. Thanks.
Turely impressive information, well explained. All publisher’s need to promote early scholarly works and recognize the contributions of newcomers. Thanks,
Thank you, This is very helpful.
Thanks for your feedback Valentine!
Useful information. Thanks
Useful information! Thank you
Xavier Benedict India
This is very usefull and informative. Thanks
Just the information I was looking for thanks
Very useful article!!
Hi Judith, DOAJ requires that an open access journal has published 5 original research articles, among other things, before we will consider it for indexing, not that a journal has been running for 5 years. We also require that the journal has an ISSN which has been registered *and* fully confirmed. Thank, Dom
Thanks Dom, for this correction!
Greetings.Really it is more informative.if you give appointment I will call you to discuss. Kind regards Dr.VPR SIVAKUMAR
Many years I started one and learnt many of these by hard lessons. Thanks for documenting them all together in one piece
Are you still publishing?
Thank you for this! As a new PhD student working as a research assistant, I am astounded at how elitist and sometimes, ignorant those in charge of academic journals are when it comes to critical race theory submissions. I am seriously contemplating teaming up with fellow music colleagues, critical race theory scholars and professors to begin or our own academic journal. My motto: If they don’t accept you, create your own path and empower yourself! It is ON now!
M also on same route Kelly nice to see you with same thinking
Thank you Judith. Your article is informative and guiding, and providing genuine thoughts. I most appreciate it. Great job. Good luck. – Milton
Thank you Judith. Is it possible to start without a PhD yet? I have a huge gap, I want to fill.
Thanks for sharing
Thank you for this. Can you possibly share some insights on choosing journal longevity, Do’s and Don’ts on website aesthetics, and also on a young journal’s guide to indexing? Much thanks!
Thank you for sharing this. I am planning to start my own journal and would need more of your guidance.
Thank you very much Judith, it is very important information.
Very useful post. It made me realise not to start a journal 😀 Typical academic activity: a lot of work with no financial reward
You will not find many academics who disagree with you!
I have been thinking of starting an academic journal since I graduated with my Doctorate in 2019. Your article has given me the impetus I needed. Thank you very much.
What, in you opinion is a steep price for publishing an article? I have been asked for anything between $100 and $3000. Thank you for your initiative
@Phillipa . Good. I too has such thoughts (dreams?) of starting a high quality maintaining Journal.
Ausom digital we help to start an academic journal with /open/closed/double blind review
Excellent article and just in time! We are considering starting a journal mostly but not only for African scientists but others from resource limited countries – we created a small society and are about to have our 5th conference and workshops in Kenya ( https://www.aibbc-society.org ). Our goal now is to provide a high quality journal with about 20 top internationally recognized scientists on the board plus leading African scientists and make sure scientists have an opportunity at open access for free avoiding the predatory journals. It’s a big task, but we hope we can achieve it. Your article was perfect timeing for us.
This is an amazing write-up, I must say. Perhaps all like minded people, who are intending to start a new journal (including myself) are going through the similar phase. My best wishes to all researchers.
I’m impressed with the level of information and simplicity of your presentation. Just begin the journey as a publisher. This piece has reassured me I’m in the right direction
Excellent resource. I am hoping to start a journal outfit and this write-up came in just handy for me. Thanks for the useful information therein.
We are planning to launch an open access book for the conference papers that we receive. Any advice on this? So we will get an ISBN instead. Do we need to get DOI numbers for the book chapters? What are the indexes that we can get our book on?
Great resource, highlighting the Science publication racket and how to start a really scientific and open research publication system in the form of a journal. Thank you for that
great sharing, thanks
Excellent info….100% true
Thank you so much for this detailed info. It gave a clear idea on how to start a journal and some key areas of concern. I am a Book Publisher myself and was looking to start a quality Journal with an objective of contributing to the society in whatever way possible.
Am really excited for the clarification. I have a starting point on how to go about it. Thank you so much
Am glad it was helpful Edwin!
If I’ve seen and read this article, my journal would have been 15 years old. Emerald was the first I contacted and the condition to host my journal was out of this world . Thanks
TQSM for sharing your knowledge. We are starting a journal publication house and these tips are crucial to us. TQ again!
Dr. Judith, Thank you very much for sharing this. Apparently I am pondering starting a journal for my University for possible publication of Faculty and Students’ research work.I also tried to look for peer-reviewed journals that coukld accept my own work but in vain. This information you have shered is very helpful to me. Thank you. Am Mwesigwa Simon Human Resource Manager/Quality Assurance Kampala University College Juba, South Sudan
Much appreciation for taking your time and effort to put forth such useful information, it will be handy to our endeavors
Highly informative. Thanks
Awesome article giving complete details about starting a journal… Thanks and regards
Excellent content. I’m not sure how to start a journal or how to do it successfully. However, you are given information about the journal. Therefore, many thanks for your article. I appreciate you taking the time to provide such useful information.
This is so informative. Thank you Dr. Judith
Thank you. Very helpful
Very helpful information. Thank you!
This is very good article for aspirants to start a Journal. Thank you.
This information was very useful for me. I’m starting a journal for 1 year and the challenges are great to attract good publications.
Is anyone here interested in submitting an article with us?
So, who get all the money that people pay to access or read journals?
The publishers.
Very useful information, Thank you.
I am a Uganda and i would like to open a journal for our universities in Uganda which will accept all research publication irrespective of field of study.. I need a consultant to contact me and we get into the details (+256775514926)
Thank you for this article. Very useful information!
Such a helpful article, thank you! I learned a great deal from Williams and Relojo-Howell‘s experience. The pricing model got me thinking about how to fund starting an open-source, grassroots academic journal. What advice or resources would you suggest for funding such a startup venture?
Very informative and inspiring
Excellent article on Journal publishing
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