Can’t Disrupt This: Elsevier and the 25.2 Billion Dollar A Year
Academic Publishing Business
Jason Schmitt
Dec 22, 20159
Twenty years ago (December 18, 1995), Forbes predicted academic
publisher Elsevier’s relevancy and life in the digital age to be
short lived. In an article entitled “The internet’s first victim,”
journalist John Hayes highlights the technological imperative coming
toward the academic publisher’s profit margin with the growing
internet culture and said, “Cost-cutting librarians and
computer-literate professors are bypassing academic journals — bad
news for Elsevier.” After publication of the article, investors
seemed to heed Hayes’s rationale for Elsevier’s impeding demise.
Elsevier stock fell 7% in two days to $26 a share.
As the smoke settles twenty years later, one of the clear winners on
this longitudinal timeline of innovation is the very firm that
investors, journalists, and forecasters wrote off early as a
casualty to digital evolution: Elsevier. Perhaps to the chagrin of
many academics, the publisher has actually not been bruised nor
battered. In fact, the publisher’s health is stronger than ever. As
of 2015, the academic publishing market that Elsevier leads has an
annual revenue of $25.2 billion. According to its 2013 financials
Elsevier had a higher percentage of profit than Apple, Inc.
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