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To evaluate the financial implications of offering an online edition, a society should establish a financial baseline against which tocompare the journal’s projected future performance. This baseline analysis should include:
The baseline analysis provides a basis for assessing the financial risk that a society might incur, and the benefits that it mightenjoy, in moving to online distribution of its journal, whether via outsourcing or self-publishing . Most of the elements of a journal’s financial history are straightforward, and many societies monitorthis data as a matter of course. Below, we have provided some observations on additional revenue and cost analyses that a society may want to take intoconsideration. Some of this data will be necessary to support the analyses described in the previous sections.
Detailed and reliable data on its membership will allow a society to evaluate the potential effect of an online edition on itsmembership. Much of this data the society may already have at hand, including individual membership data by:
Sometimes this member data will need to be mined, cleaned, and normalized. The amount of effort that a society should expend onthis effort will depend on its ability to tolerate risk in projecting member behavior.
Besides the basic member data, more detailed behavioral and preference information may prove valuable in assessing the effectof online availability on membership. This information includes:
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