Internet Archaeology Archive: Fifth annual report 1999-2000
1. Activities and Progress
i. Major objectives
During its second year of continuation funding the project
continued to focus on the transition from an eLib project to a self-funding service.
With this in mind we have:
continued to consolidate our position as the leading electronic journal for
archaeology
put in place a mechanism for authentication and revenue collection
continued to promote electronic publication with major archaeological funding
agencies
investigated further sources of revenue, such as advertising
continued to develop our business plan
ii. Main activities
Our main activities during our fifth year focussed in the
following areas:
producing Issues 6, 7 & 8;
putting in place a mechanism for institutional subscriptions to raise revenue to
support the journal into the future
developing further themed issues for future publication;
promoting intarch-interest as an active discussion list;
commissioning a series of evaluations;
soliciting high quality contributions for subsequent issues;
establishing a series of academic Advisory Editors from around the world;
revising our editorial policy and producing guidelines for authors;
promoting the journal at national and international conferences;
establishing the reputation of the journal with national funding bodies,
including English Heritage, Historic Scotland and the AHRB;
running and contributing to professional workshops on electronic
publication;
continuing the metadata index to issues of the journal using the Dublin Core
standard and depositing the metadata records with the Archaeology Data Service.
iii. Project outputs
In line with these activities, our main outputs have been:
publication of Issues 7 & 8 (see Appendix I for contents list), with Issue 9
currently in preparation;
revised editorial policy & guidelines for authors (Appendix VII);
subscription collection system with associated documentation (Appendix IX);
three evaluation reports (see Appendix VIII);
workshops on electronic publication and conference presentations (Appendix
III).
iv. Particular successes
The number of registered readers continues to grow at an impressive rate. By the
end of August 2000 the number exceeded 24,364, up over 7,000 during the year.
Although our evaluation reports indicate that many of these are casual browsers
rather than regular readers, we are still confident that several thousand readers
come back to the journal several times each year. In the year from 1 April 1999 to 31
March 2000 the journal's web pages received over 719,549 successful requests for
pages, an increase of some 56% over the previous year (see Appendix VI). Monthly hit
figures are now running at an average of 40,000 per month.
The journal has continued to attracted contributions carrying external funding,
including further reports on the important excavations at the Anglo-Saxon site at
West Heslerton, supported by English Heritage.
We continue to be encouraged by the increase in the number of high quality
scholarly contributions which are being offered for publication with the journal (see
Appendix II). We have developed the concept of themed issues and we believe it is an
indication of the increasing acceptance of electronic publication in archaeology that
many leading scholars are now accepting our invitations to publish in the
journal.
The journal has continued to gain external recognition, featuring in a
substantial colour article in The Sunday Times on the use of computers in
archaeology during the course of the year, and a citation in Scientific
American.
Following the introduction of institutional subscriptions for UK institutions in
the *.ac.uk domain in May 2000 we have gained 14 university subscribers and one
national institution (The British Museum) - at 29 August 2000. We anticipate some 20
institutional subscribers by the end of the year which is very encouraging given that
there are only 27 archaeology departments in UK higher education.
2. Learning from the process of implementation
i. Staffing and skills range:
Judith Winters has continued to serve as the
journal's Editor (working four days a week). We also employ a part-time Administrator
and bring in a freelance Copy Editor as needed. We recognise that the project depends
upon our ability to maintain a number of part-time staff with a range of skills (e.g.
Editor, Administrator, Copy Editor) and a range of consultants with skills in technical
development areas (e.g. databases, preparation of cgi scripts).
ii. Income generation and future funding:
The majority of our income is likely
to come from subscriptions and we have proceeded on the basis that:
for the year 2000 institutional subscriptions only would be collected;
the annual charge would be in the order of 100 plus VAT ($180);
authentication would be ATHENS compatible;
subscribers would include overseas and non-HE institutions;
that a subscription service is more appropriate than a licensing model;
in subsequent years charging might be extended to individual readers, requiring
any system adopted to be compatible with individual charging in the future
After discussion with a number of partners (see 'Charging options' paper in Appendix
X) we have contracted SWETS to provide the necessary authentication via NESLI, using
ATHENS for higher education institutions. IP authentication for other institutions is
undertaken in house by the journal. The previous journal HTTP authentication has been
maintained for individual access. Fulfilment is being undertaken by Turpin Distribution
Services Ltd (now part owned by Swets).
Following discussion of the possibilities of revenue generation from sponsorship
(see Appendix X) we are attempting to attract a small number of directly relevant
'banners' for the journal's home page and issue contents pages from archaeological book
publishers and providers of archaeology postgraduate courses, although we do not expect
this to generate large sums.
We also continue to pursue publication subventions and are in discussion with a
number of archaeological projects about potential future publication in the journal
using project funds to help finance the publication.
We remain confident that the journal will become self-supporting, although we are
not yet 100% sure that sufficient funding will be available in the year after September
2001 (see Appendix IV).
iii. Project management:
The project is largely run through an Executive
Committee, which now meets every month, with business between meetings largely being
conducted by email. The Steering Committee meets bi-annually and maintains a strategic
overview and responsibility for policy development (see Appendix V).
iv. Sustainability:
We are confident that the journal is sustainable in the
long term. A number of national archaeological agencies are now actively promoting
electronic publication and a significant culture change is under way which has already
led to an increase in the number of high profile archaeological projects approaching
the journal at an early stage to discuss potential publication.
v. Influences of eLib and other programmes:
Although several university
librarians and a number of those in JISC have expressed interest in our search for
solutions and have provided useful support, it is our experience that the eLib
programme itself has offered little in terms of shared experiences or central support
from which we might have benefited. We have, however, benefited from direct contacts
with a sister ejournal, Sociological Research Online, which has developed a comparable
authentication and charging mechanism.
vi. Changes to our plan:
Our plans for the collection of subscriptions have
slowly evolved during the year in discussion with a number of potential partners. We
now have a mechanism in place for the *.ac.uk domain and plan its expansion to cover
institutions in other parts of the world during the next year.
3. Evaluation results
i. Forms of evaluation
Three evaluation reports were commissioned during the year:
an Infologistix Ltd investigation of the previous year's access statistics,
detailing trends, international usage, etc
a poll, and subsequent contacting, of librarians of non-subscribing academic
institutions - conducted by a University of York MSc student
a review of on-line indexes and ejournals, encouraging links to the journal where
none exist and the updating of out-of-date links - also conducted by an MSc
student
ii. Results
The evaluation reports are attached as Appendix VIII.
4. Future development
i. Main objectives during the coming year
Publication of Issues 9 & 10. Our objective for the next
reporting period will be the publication of Issues 9 & 10 of the journal. Issue 9
will be a further themed issue on the petrology of ceramics from the Near East
utilising QTVR thin section slides.
Authentication and licensing. To continue the implementation of
our established system for institutional subscription collection, expanding to cover
North America and Australasia
Further development of Subvention Funding. To attract articles
of high scholarly content which bring publication subvention funding from the
research sponsoring agencies.
Further evaluation. To build on our evaluation reports from
Infologistix to develop a more detailed understanding of the requirements of authors
and users.
Expanding content to cover World archaeology. To attract further
overseas contributions.
ii. Planned changes in overall direction
We do not anticipate any major changes
in editorial direction. We are putting continued emphasis on increasing our readership,
revenue generation, and increasing the number of quality contributions being offered to
the journal.
iii. Development beyond project time frame
The journal has core funding for one
further year. We hope to:
maintain production levels at two issues per year;
develop our readership to 30,000 registered users of whom 75% visit the journal
more than once every two months;
increase the number of overseas contributions we can attract to the journal;
generate sufficient revenue from institutional subscriptions to cover two-thirds
of our costs by September 2001; and,
attract articles of high scholarly content which bring publication funding from
the research sponsoring agencies which will cover one-third or our costs by September
2001.
The core funding is declining and our predictions for revenue have been reduced to
take account of the delays in introducing a charging mechanism. Nonetheless, we have
also reduced our costs (principally through a reduction in staffing levels) and so will
remain viable until at least September 2001.We believe we are on target to turn the
journal into a self-funding product. The University of York has indicated that if we
can produce a viable business plan and demonstrate realistic income streams it will
underwrite staff salaries beyond the project end date.
Dr Michael Heyworth
Dr Julian Richards
Council for British Archaeology
Department of Archaeology
Bowes Morrell House
University of York
111 Walmgate
The King's Manor
York YO1 9WA
York YO1 2EP
tel 01904 671417
tel 01904 433930
fax 01904 671384
fax 01904 433939
email mikeheyworth@britarch.ac.uk
email jdr1@york.ac.uk
29 August 2000
List of appendices
Table of contents of seventh and eighth issues, 1999-2000
Forthcoming contributions
List of formal presentations undertaken 1999 & 2000
Financial report (to 30 April 2000) and projections
Steering Committee minutes
Web server statistics for Internet Archaeology (1 April 1999 31 March
2000)
Editorial policy & Guidelines for authors
Evaluation Reports: World Wide Web links; Institutional subscriptions (summary);
Readership trends and patterns
Subscriptions announcements, Subscription order form & Subscription FAQs
Discussion document relating to revenue generation through advertising &
Charging options paper
Appendix I
Table of contents of seventh and eighth issues, 1999-2000
Appendix II
Forthcoming contributions
Appendix III
List of formal presentations undertaken 1999 &
2000
September
16th - Bournemouth, EAA, `Publishing Archaeology in the New Millennium'. Judith
Winters gave a paper in this session on `Internet Archaeology: where do we go from
here?'.
December
13-14th - Judith Winters, Val Kinsler and Alan Vince ran a course on 'Publishing
Archaeology on the Web: an introduction' at the University of Oxford's Department of
Continuing Eduction.
2000
February
23rd - `Internet Archaeology: publishing beyond print' by Judith Winters. A talk
on the opportunities and enjoyment of archaeology on the web, to the Friends of
Gwynedd Archaeological Trust, Neuadd Rhos, University of Bangor, Wales.
April
6th Julian Richards presented a paper on behalf of the journal at the SAA
conference in Philadelphia. Internet Archaeology: Where Next? by Julian D. Richards,
Michael P Heyworth and Judith Winters.
6th: - Judith Winters made a presentation titled 'Internet Archaeology:
publication beyond print' in the From Data to Information session at the IFA annual
conference in Brighton.
Appendix IV
Financial report (to 30 April 2000) and projections
Appendix V
Steering Committee minutes
The Project's Steering Committee met on two
occasions:
1 December 1999
5 June 2000
The Steering Committee incorporates the functions of the former Editorial Board
and Technical Panel. It now meets on a bi-annual basis.
Appendix VI
Web server statistics for Internet Archaeology, 1 April 1999 - 31 March
2000
Appendix VII
Editorial policy
Guidelines for authors
Appendix VIIIE
Evaluation Reports:
World Wide Web links
Institutional subscriptions (summary)
Readership trends and patterns
Appendix IX
Subscription announcements
Subscription order form
Subscription FAQs
Appendix X
Discussion document relating to revenue generation through advertising
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