Dear G.

Elsevier is doing exactly what you ask for
http://online.wsj.com/article/PR-CO-20131217-903941.html

At least two of these are financed through SCOAP(3). That might be worth a 
discussion.

Yours sincerely
Wouter

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Graham Triggs
Sent: donderdag 19 december 2013 16:05
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Elsevier, Flip your journals to Gold OA and/or offer an 
acceptable Hybrid Model

On 18 December 2013 12:47, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
1. Flip your journals to Gold OA. Start with high ranked journals, because
as you know most researchers still care. Although the true cost of
publishing remains unclear (http://doi.org/kxz), I think it's safe to say,
that with an APC between $1500 and $3000 you still can make solid profit.
Probably not as much as with the subscription model, but still reasonable.
And if you really have a high ranked journal you can indeed increase the
price to whatever the demand on researcher side will support.

Others publisher are doing it:
http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/PressRelease/pressReleaseId-109721.html
Why not Elsevier?

Every single one of those are association / society journals. So this wouldn't 
be a commercial decision by a publisher, but a political one by the association 
/ society. After all, you can't really advocate open access, if your own 
journals aren't.

Simply making a hybrid journal into open access only would not be sustainable, 
unless a significant proportion of the articles are already utilising the open 
access option.

2. Offer an acceptable hybrid model. Avoid double dipping on an
institutional/consortium/national level (not on a global level as you do
now). We explicitly requested Elsevier to do so in Switzerland. However
Elsevier refused to come up with a solution that reduces our subscription
price according the amount of paid hybrid of our authors. Elsevier argued,
subscription and OA are two independent things and shouldn't be mixed
financially. This might be true for Elsevier, where local sales manager
obviously are not aware, what's going on about OA in the own company. But
it isn't true for any institution which has to care about its budget.

I realise local budgetary issues are a concern. And if you do not have outside 
funding for research that includes the publication cost of an OA option, then 
making use of an OA option is going to be impossible whilst you are paying a 
subscription.

But this is not "double dipping". It's just a question of institution / 
national affordability.

How
can an institution justify additional hybrid costs in a budget if only a
tiny share will immediately come back with reduced global list prices.
This may temporary work in UK, but I¹m quite sure they soon will realize
that Hybrid without reducing the direct subscription cost is not
sustainable.

In theory, Open Access publishing ought to be justifiable in it's own right, in 
terms of doing the right thing and maximizing the benefit of funding in 
research.

Where the money comes from, how you allocate funds, etc. are a different 
matter, and it may well be that given the funding that you have, an Open Access 
option may only be an illusion of a choice.

But Hybrid is reducing the direct subscription cost - for Elsevier, it appears 
to be a very minor activity in their hybrid journals, so it is having minimal 
effect. But if you look at Embo Journal, various Springer hybrid journals - 
there are documented cases of the subscription costs not just increasing by a 
lesser amount, but actually reducing in price.

And yes, other publishers are doing it:
http://www.rsc.org/publishing/librarians/goldforgold.asp
Why not Elsevier?

The publishing arm of a royal society. So, it is a political decision to 
expedite the transition to Open Access.

And you are right, there is no reason why Elesvier couldn't use the 
subscription income as a limited promotion to drive the adoption of Open Access.

(Note that under this model, as Open Access publishing increases, the 
subscription amount and the subsidy for next year's OA publishing would 
decrease. So the each year's expenditure would be made up of a decreasing 
amount of subscription, and an increasing amount of Open Access APC payments).

There is no reason why they can't offer such a promotion, but there is also no 
reason - for them - why they should. That isn't just an issue about revenue / 
profit either - there will be agreements in place that may make this tricky, 
there is investment and re-organisation that would be needed to cope with the 
transition, and then there are still people questioning trust of paying to 
publish instead of paying to read.

Whilst we are all very vocal about wanting Open Access, it still doesn't quite 
translate to the entire community just yet.

G
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