Email list hosting service & mailing list manager


UKSG webinar 27 September - "Identifiers: What are they good for and what should you be doing with them?" Maria Campbell 13 Sep 2016 10:17 UTC

Dear Colleagues,

Welcome back to the new academic year!

I am pleased to invite you to September's free UKSG webinar: " Identifiers: What are they good for and what should you be doing with them?"

http://www.uksg.org/webinars/identifiers

Date: Tuesday 27 September 2016
Time: 1300 BST (British Summer Time)
Duration: 45 minutes including Q&A (up to 60 minutes maximum if there is sufficient demand for an extended Q&A)

Speaker:
Josh Brown, ORCID Regional Director, Europe

Summary:
This webinar will provide an overview of the current PID landscape and will offer guidance on how PIDs for people (ORCID iDs) can be integrated in your systems, helping your researchers to take advantage of new and emerging services.

This is a free webinar and open to all. If you are interested, but unable to join the live event, please register anyway as a recording will be made available to all who register. If you have particular accessibility needs, please feel free to contact me on maria@uksg.org.

For more information and to register, please visit http://www.uksg.org/webinars/identifiers

Feedback from July's webinar: "An informative webinar suitable for all knowledge and experience levels." - Susannah Keill, Poole Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; 94% of survey respondents would recommend July's webinar.

Thank you for your attention. I hope you all enjoyed the summer break.

Maria

Maria Campbell
Digital Communications Associate, UKSG
E: maria@uksg.org

UKSG on Twitter: @UKSG
UKSG webinars: www.uksg.org/webinars and #UKSGwebinar
'UKSG Events' app: In the Apple App Store, Google Play Store or online at https://events.crowdcompass.com/uksgevents

############################

To unsubscribe from the SERIALST list:
write to: mailto:SERIALST-SIGNOFF-REQUEST@LISTSERV.NASIG.ORG
or click the following link:
http://listserv.nasig.org/scripts/wa-NASIG.exe?SUBED1=SERIALST&A=1