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Survey of Library Database Licensing Practices Published
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Survey of Library Database Licensing Practices Published
- From: primarydat@aol.com
- Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2007 18:20:25 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Primary Research Group has published The Survey of Library Database Licensing Practices (ISBN #: 1-57440-093-2). The study presents data from 90 libraries - corporate, legal, college, public, state, and non-profit libraries - about their database licensing practices. Just a few of the study's thousands of findings are: The mean number of independent licenses for electronic content held by the libraries in the sample tripled from 2000 to 2007. 19.42% of the licenses held by the libraries in the sample restricted the number of simultaneous users. Consortium purchases accounted for a mean of 30% of the database licenses by the libraries in the sample. The mean perceived price increase for electronic and electronic/print combination journals was 10.64%. Database purchases through consortiums over the past two years appear to be increasing. Half of all respondents indicated that consortium contracts as a percentage of all contracts have remained the same, while 23% reported growth of less than 5%. Another 19% reported growth of more than 5%, while only 7% reported that the percentage of contracts through consortiums had decreased. The majority of our sample, 82%, had never attempted to negotiate any special language on the provision of interlibrary loan materials through email or other internet technology. College/university libraries - single largest consortium partners - accounted for a mean of just over 41% of contracts, twice as much as for public or government and non-profit libraries. Participants reported spending an average of $7,300 on dues and fees to consortiums. Libraries reported mean price increases for full text and newspaper and magazine databases of 9.43% in the past year. The mean reported annual increase in the price of medical and biochemical information was 8.13%. Participants estimated spending an average of 290.49 hours of library staff time reviewing contract terms from vendors of all kinds of licenses for content in the past year. A shade more than 7% of the libraries in the sample had ever been threatened by a publisher or information vendor with any form of legal action for contract abrogation. Nineteen percent of libraries with expenditures below $35,000 believed they had a good idea of what others were paying for their licenses, nearly four times the rate of libraries with database expenditures exceeding $500,000. Twenty-three percent of the libraries in the sample currently had institutional digital repositories. Just over 14% of all libraries surveyed indicated that they extensively used free access to back issues of some journals that have an embargo period before articles become available without charge. A mean of just over 24% of the electronic or electronic/print journal subscriptions maintained by survey participants guaranteed perpetual access to archives. Just 15% of libraries used an internal charge back system for end users to help pay for the library's database licenses. Libraries in the U.S. were slightly more likely than non-U.S libraries to do this. Over a third of all respondents indicated that their course materials on reserve were roughly equal degree paper and electronic. A mean of 4.35 librarians in the libraries sampled spent at least 10% of their work time reviewing and choosing new electronic resources. Librarians in the sample estimated that just over a third of the sets of access and usage statistics they received from vendors of electronic information could be considered "highly reliable." Just under 10% of all libraries surveyed reported that they had ever canceled a content license because of the provider's inability to effectively deal with service interruption issues. More than half of the participating libraries are from the USA, and the rest are from Canada, Australia, the UK, and other countries. Four hundred tables of data are broken out by type and size of library, as well as for overall level of database expenditure. For more information, go to www.primaryresearch.com. James Moses, Research Director Primary Research Group Inc. www.primaryresearch.com
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