UK small businesses’
access to academic and professional information is good – but could be
better
Staff in high-tech small businesses (small and medium-sized
enterprises, or SMEs) in the UK - with 250 employees or fewer - place a high
value on, and make considerable use of, research articles and other academic
and professional information. Their access to such information is good,
and improving, although it could be even better, according to a new study from
the Publishing Research Consortium.
The main findings for small businesses, from an analysis of over 1000
completed responses covering several other sectors, were as follows:
- Across the board,
28% of respondents in small businesses said that their journal access was
‘good’ or ‘excellent’, 56% that it varied, and 17%
that it was ‘poor’ or ‘very poor’.
- However, of those
who considered information to be an important success factor for their
organisation, 71% found access to research articles ‘easy’ or
‘very easy’, while 29% felt it was ‘fairly
difficult’ or ‘very difficult’.
- 60% felt that access
was easier than five years ago.
- Despite this, more
than half had experienced some recent difficulty in obtaining one or more
articles, representing 10-20% of articles read annually.
- Although they use a
wide range of access channels, they find current pay-per-view (PPV)
arrangements costly and difficult, and ‘walk-in’ access at a
local university inconvenient.
What can publishers do to improve access for these users? A number
of suggestions are made:
- Pay-per-view access
could be made simpler, with more appropriate payment mechanisms for
companies rather than individuals, and – above all – cheaper.
- Licences for Higher
Education Institutions could be extended to provide online, rather than
just walk-in, access (with appropriate safeguards) for local businesses.
- A comprehensive,
centrally administered national licence could be negotiated.
Bob Campbell, Chair of
the Publishing Research Consortium steering group, commented:
The
so-called ‘access gap’ for small businesses has often been cited as
a problem in the current scholarly communication system, without much idea of
its extent. This study is an important first step in improving our
understanding of how staff in small businesses use journals and what can be
done to achieve even greater access.
Notes for editors
The full study, ‘Access by small and medium-sized UK enterprises
to professional and academic information’, carried out by Mark Ware Consulting Ltd for the Publishing Research
Consortium, is available (together with a detailed Companion Report containing
full statistical analyses and results for all sectors, including universities
and colleges, hospitals and medical schools, research institutes and large
companies) at http://www.publishingresearch.net/SMEaccess.htm
The Publishing Research Consortium (http://www.publishingresearch.net)
is a group of associations and publishers, which supports
global research into scholarly communication in order to enable evidence-based
discussion. The PRC’s objective is to support work that is
scientific and pro-scholarship, in order to promote an understanding of the
role of publishing and its impact on research and teaching.
Publishing Research Consortium
(info@publishingresearch.net)