Publish or Perish: A Researcher’s Best-Kept Secret

Introduction to Publish or Perish
If you haven’t heard of Publish or Perish, now is the time to get acquainted. Developed by Emerita Professor Anne-Wil Harzing of Middlesex University, London, this free software program has quietly become one of the most useful tools in an academic researcher’s toolkit, and it’s just as valuable for postgraduate students as it is for seasoned supervisors.
What Is Publish or Perish?
Publish or Perish (often abbreviated as PoP) is a desktop application available for Windows, macOS, and Linux that retrieves and analyses academic citations from multiple data sources, including Google Scholar, Crossref, Scopus, Web of Science, to name a few.
Rather than simply counting how many times a paper has been cited, PoP goes further by calculating a range of citation metrics that give you a richer picture of a scholar’s or a field’s research impact.
The software is free to download and use and has been continuously developed since its first public release in 2006. You can download it directly from harzing.com/resources/publish-or-perish.
Key Features Worth Knowing
The metrics PoP generates include the total number of papers and citations, the well-known h-index (which measures both the productivity and citation impact of a researcher), and several related indices. These figures can be exported to various formats for further analysis or inclusion in reports and applications.
For supervisors, this makes it an excellent tool for tracking your own research profile, preparing for performance appraisals, or building a case for promotion. For students, it opens a window into how research impact is measured in academia; something every postgraduate researcher needs to understand.
Using Publish or Perish for Literature Reviews
One of the most practical uses of PoP for postgraduate students is in conducting literature reviews. Rather than manually trawling through databases, students can use PoP to search by keyword, author, journal, or title, quickly identifying the most influential works in their field.
The ability to see which papers have accumulated the most citations helps you distinguish foundational, high-impact scholarship from more peripheral work, a critical skill when mapping your theoretical framework.
PoP also makes it easy to identify key authors in your discipline, which can inform your reading list and help you locate potential external examiners or conference contributors.
Practical Tips for Getting Started
Getting started with Publish or Perish is straightforward, but a few tips will save you time:
- Search by topic first, then narrow down by author or journal once you have a sense of the landscape.
- Cross-reference your results across more than one data source; Google Scholar tends to cast the widest net, but Crossref can be more precise for journal-specific searches.
- Don’t rely solely on citation counts to judge quality. A recently published paper may have fewer citations simply because it is new. Use PoP alongside your own critical reading.
- Save your queries so you can return to them as your research evolves.
Whether you are a postgraduate student building your first literature review or a supervisor managing your research profile, Publish or Perish offers something genuinely useful.
At the IMM Graduate School, where we are actively growing our research culture and capacity, tools like this help us engage with scholarship more strategically and confidently.
Reference
Harzing, A.W. (2007). Publish or Perish. Available from: https://harzing.com/resources/publish-or-perish
Frequently Asked Questions: Maximising Research Impact with Publish or Perish
1. What is Publish or Perish software and how does it assist academic researchers?
Publish or Perish (often abbreviated as PoP) is a free software application that retrieves and analyses academic citations from multiple prominent data sources, including Google Scholar, Crossref, Scopus, and Web of Science. It assists academic researchers and postgraduate students by calculating a wide range of citation metrics—such as the h-index and total citation counts—to help them evaluate research impact, prepare performance appraisals, and track influential scholarship efficiently.
2. How can postgraduate students utilise Publish or Perish to improve their literature reviews?
Postgraduate students can use Publish or Perish to conduct literature reviews by searching fields via keywords, specific authors, journals, or titles. The software lists search results based on citation volume, making it easy for students to distinguish foundational, high-impact studies from peripheral work. This structured data selection helps them trace the evolution of academic topics and effectively map their theoretical frameworks.
3. What are the best practices for conducting a citation search using Publish or Perish?
Best practices for using Publish or Perish include starting with a broad topical search before narrowing parameters down by specific authors or academic journals. Researchers should cross-reference search results across multiple data sources, using Google Scholar for wide coverage and Crossref for precise journal data. Furthermore, citation metrics must always be paired with critical evaluation, as newer papers require time to accumulate citations regardless of their intrinsic quality.
4. How does the IMM Graduate School incorporate Publish or Perish into its academic culture?
The IMM Graduate School promotes Publish or Perish as an invaluable component of its postgraduate research toolkit. Overseen by the faculty leadership, including Dr Helena van Wyk (Dean of Postgraduate Studies and Research), the institution introduces this platform to help both emerging scholars and experienced supervisors manage their research profiles, track international citation benchmarks, and engage with global scholarship strategically.
5. Why does the IMM Graduate School recommend Publish or Perish for postgraduate research supervisors?
The IMM Graduate School recommends Publish or Perish to supervisors because it simplifies the administration of tracking personal and institutional research metrics. Supervisors can use the application to verify citation trajectories, prepare academic reports for internal promotions or appraisals, and identify potential external examiners or international conference contributors within their respective disciplines.
6. Which programmes at the IMM Graduate School benefit from citation tracking software?
Citation tracking software such as Publish or Perish benefits all advanced research tracks within the IMM Graduate School, particularly postgraduate honours applications, master’s dissertations, and doctoral studies in business management, marketing, and supply chain management. Using this software ensures that student research meets international academic rigour and aligns with global publishing standards.