Maximize Your Article Citations
One of the most effective ways to increase the visibility and citations of your articles is to ensure they are correctly linked and visible on your main academic profiles. These platforms serve as your scientific business card and are consulted by colleagues, institutions, and publication evaluators.
You're right: there are many platforms, but not all of them have the same weight or impact in strictly scientific and citation terms. Here's a selection of the main recommended platforms, prioritizing:
- Institutional and academic recognition
- Direct relationship with citations or metrics
- Access to the scientific community
- Interoperability with indexing and editorial systems
Recommended Academic Platforms
Platform | Purpose | Scientific Relevance |
---|---|---|
ORCID | Unique identity and link with other databases | |
Google Scholar | Citations and publication visibility | |
ResearchGate | Scientific community and direct download | |
Scopus/WoS | Bibliometric metrics and formal evaluation | |
Publons | Reviewer activity and professional recognition | |
bioRxiv/medRxiv | Early dissemination (preprint) | |
Academia.edu | General dissemination, more citations in Google |
Below are detailed descriptions of these and other platforms that can help you disseminate your publications, connect with other researchers, and improve your citation metrics.
✅ ORCID
Your unique academic identifier. Keeping your profile updated (with articles, reviews, and activities) allows publishers, institutions, and search engines to correctly recognize and link your scientific output.
✅ Google Scholar
One of the most consulted platforms for tracking citations. Make sure to include all your publications and correct any incorrect authorship.
✅ ResearchGate
An active academic network where you can share your articles, interact with other researchers, and answer questions related to your work.
✅ Academia.edu
Another widely used network, especially in social sciences, education, medicine, and biology. It also allows uploading full files, abstracts, and contacting colleagues.
✅ Mendeley
Bibliographic manager with a public profile and integrated academic network.
✅ Publons / Web of Science
Showcase your work as a reviewer and author, linked with Web of Science.
✅ bioRxiv / medRxiv
Specialized platforms for disseminating preprints in biology and medicine, respectively. Crucial for early visibility.
✅ SSRN
Especially useful for preprints in social sciences, law, and economics.
✅ Figshare & Zenodo
Platforms for sharing data, figures, presentations, or articles with DOI. Essential for open data.
✅ ScienceOpen
Open science platform for publication, review, and discovery of articles.
✅ Researcher App
Mobile app to follow journals and disseminate recent publications.
📲 Social Media for Promoting Your Scientific Article
Social media has become a powerful tool for increasing the visibility of scientific articles. While they don't replace traditional academic platforms, they can effectively complement your dissemination strategy, attracting potential readers, researchers, and collaborators.
Ideal for scientific publications and academic achievements. Allows including links, visual summaries, and scientific hashtags.
🔗 Visit LinkedIn
Recommended for: doctors, researchers, editors, and science professionals.
Broad-reach platform. Useful for sharing articles in scientific communities and institutional pages.
🔗 Visit Facebook
Recommended for: students, general networks, thematic groups, and institutional dissemination.
Highly visual. Ideal for infographics, covers, graphic abstracts, and key phrases. Use stories or reels for greater impact.
🔗 Visit Instagram
Recommended for: young researchers, visual communication, and outreach events.
🎥 TikTok
Growing use in science communication. You can create short videos to summarize articles or present key data.
🔗 Visit TikTok
Recommended for: increasing reach among young audiences, virality, creative promotion.
⚠️ General Recommendations
- Do not trivialize the content: summarize without losing scientific rigor.
- Use your own images or those with a free license.
- Pay attention to language: accessible, but professional.
- Measure traffic: use shortened links (e.g., Bitly) to track clicks to the article.
Conclusion: Social media can significantly increase the readership and eventual citation of your articles if used with strategy, quality, and consistency.