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Introduction: A guide of guides

ThereRecent alreadyyears existhave seen something of a number of richly detailed guides, reports, and resources that provide valuable insights about the practicalities of launching an Open Access press. However, one of the challenges forflourishing Open Access presses, particularlyoften ifbeing theyset areup new,to smallerserve ora runparticular byscholarly academics,community. Within the Open Book Collective, which has produced this toolkit as part of the COPIM project, we would like to see many more such initiatives getting going. A key argument we make is that the sheerscholarly amountcommunity is best served by a bibliodiverse publishing landscape . This means different kinds of informationbooks, alreadypublished availablein candifferent beplaces, overwhelming.crucially by different kinds of publishers.

In line with the aims of the Open Book Collective. this toolkit is aimed particularly at smaller and scholar-led Open Access publishers. Supporting such publishers is, for us, part of the principle of 'scaling small' that underpins much of what we do. For example, Janneke Adema and Sam Moore, in a piece that sits in dialogue with Lucy Barnes and Rupert Gatti's work, write that

scaling small involves the creation of infrastructures that allow many presses to thrive at multiple scales, instead of taking up a competitive model in which some presses grow stronger in expense of others, or by usurping others (Barnes and Gatti 2019). What is needed here is an investment in and maintenance of robust open source public infrastructure that allows this diversity to exist, instead of outsourcing the necessary digital processes to commercial entities or platforms. 

This toolkit, and the Open Book Collective more widely, is one such public infrastructure. Expertise on publishing should not be hidden away or hoarded, it should be widely and publicly available. The toolkit seeks to contribute towards that effort.

We know that simply providing 'more' information about publishing will not in any straightforward way address the knowledge gaps that can sometimes characterise parts of the Open Access publishing landscape. Much of the information that could be of use to publishers in fact already exists, in publicly accessible form.

However, the challenge for many publishers is finding a path through the diverse range of resources available. Part of the aim of this resource, therefore,then, is to helprespond to this challenge, by helping publishers better navigate some of the key insights that have already been compiled, whether in other toolkits or in some of the wider sets of reports and resources that have been produced in recent years. Specifically, we aim to pull out those insights that are particularly relevant to smaller and scholar-academic-led Open Access publishers. In this respect, the toolkit is a kind of guide of guides.

There are, though, some issues and challenges that are specific to smaller and scholar-academic-led publishers. So in many sections, we supplement existing resources with further information, as well as advice about where to prioritise. ThisIn toolkitthis isrespect, produced by the Open Book Collective team, as part of the COPIM project. Wewe draw on the extensive experience of the COPIM team in sections,team, as well as integrating advice and case studies from publishers that they have provided to us directly.

This resource is not complete. Publishing changes. Open Access changes. We therefore welcome any and all comments on the content included in the Toolkit. Any observations can be sent directly to info@openbookcollective.org. Or, you can leave comments directly on the text by marking up sections using hypothes.is and joining the OBC Toolkit group. All are welcome.

We hope you find the Toolkit of use.

-- The OBC Team