Source: https://www.waikato.ac.nz/library/services/researchers/research-impact/boost
10 Ways to Boost the Impact of Your Research
#1
Build a pathway to impact into your research planning
Consider your research
goals and the audience your research needs to reach. Make decisions
accordingly and consider all kinds of impact, scholarly and
non-scholarly.
Tip: Research and Enterprise can help with impact pathway planning in proposals
#2
Be strategic about choosing keywords and titles
Think carefully when
choosing keywords and titles. Remember that your research will generally
appear higher in search results where a keyword is used multiple times,
especially in the title and abstract.
Tip: Take note of the most-used keywords in your field.
#3
Get an ORCID ID and use it as much as possible
In your email signature,
in any online profiles, in submissions, wherever you can. Ensure that
you’ve automated as much profile building as possible.
Tip: Go to http://orcid.org for more details
#4
Use identifiers to ensure you get credit for your work
Using persistent
identifiers such as ORCID ID and DOIs minimises the risk that your work
will be misattributed and optimises the ability of various tools to
gather and report on impact and attention.
Tip: Attend one of our "Raising your profile" workshops to find out more
#5
Make sure all your profiles are correct and linked
Check that your name,
affiliation and publications are correct in all databases (IRIS, Scopus,
Web of Science, Google Scholar etc). Link profiles and add additional
identifiers wherever possible
Tip: See our Profiles Checklist for ideas on what else can be linked
#6
Publish Open Access
According to recent
research, Open Access articles receive on average 18% more citations
than non Open Access articles (Piwowar, 2018).
Tip: Attend one of our 'Measuring and Maximising the Impact of Your Research' workshops
#7
Deposit your work into Research Commons, your Open Access repository
Many publishing contracts
allow articles to be deposited in repositories under certain
conditions, even if you haven’t paid a fee for it to be made Open
Access.
Tip: Deposit via IRIS or email researchcommons@waikato.ac.nz
#8
Share outputs other than your manuscripts
If appropriate, consider
sharing your data sets, software or other digital resources. With the
appropriate identifiers, these can then be credited back to you as other
researchers make use of them.
Tip: Your Academic Liaison Librarian can help you with this
#9
Promote your work
Make your work as visible
as possible. Share it wherever you can, for example, at conferences, on
your personal website, through social media or online academic
networks.
Tip: The University's Media and PR manager can help with this
#10
Consider writing for a wider audience
Writing for a wider
audience, for example by publishing a lay summary or a blog can open up
your research to a wider range of readers, including influencers and
policymakers as well as the public, enhancing impact outside of academia
Tip: The Conversation is a great way to get your research read by the public
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