The rapid advancement of AI tools like ChatGPT, DeepSeek, and Adobe Firefly is transforming scholarly publishing, necessitating agility and adaptation to stay relevant. In today's post from ORIGINal Thoughts, author Chhavi Chauhan, PhD, aims to guide editorial professionals in ethically leveraging AI to enhance efficiency, stakeholder engagement, and workflow optimization while fostering a collaborative and forward-thinking mindset.
By creating work that follows accessibility recommendations, authors will not only make their research available to a wider audience, they may also enjoy a smoother path to publication.
AI is still very much a hot topic, but with the European Accessibility Act deadline, second Trump administration, growing research fraud, and misuse of technology, there is a whole new slate of issues for publishers to think about.
The author of today’s ORIGINal Thoughts post, Bailey Creamer, has an all-too-relatable answer to the question we posed to her when we asked her to write for the blog (“Why did you go into scholarly publishing?”). She says: “I still don’t have a good answer. It wasn’t my singular passion. I fell into it completely by accident.” For so many of us, we too “fell into” our careers in this industry. Bailey shares how she got here and what transferrable skills she gathered from her diverse work experiences that enabled her success.
KGL hosted a well-attended webinar on on the impact of upcoming accessibility mandates for digital publishing. We've compiled a selection of the most frequently asked questions (FAQs), grouped by topic for easy reference.
The 2024 KGL Accucoms Librarian Survey Report highlights how librarians play a critical role in connecting authors with publishers.
Editorial assistants are the glue that holds any editorial office together. They are the members of the team who keep things moving, pay close attention to all of the moving parts from checklists, perform initial quality control, chase editors and reviewers, and send manuscripts to production, among other tasks.
Contrary to the claims every year that “print is dead,” print brands are actually growing—up to $231.66 billion by 2028.
Are you looking for effective ways to engage your journal community, drive online usage, and boost citations? Podcasts might be just the solution. In today’s ORIGINal Thoughts post, Glenn Collins explores how podcasts offer a cost-effective and accessible way to share journal research with a broad audience. This engaging format allows busy researchers to stay up-to-date with the latest findings, even on the go.
