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RE: universities experiment with paying OA fees
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: universities experiment with paying OA fees
- From: <Toby.GREEN@oecd.org>
- Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2008 18:29:21 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Adam, Thanks for your posting and for introducing me to your platform. I've looked at the Lessig books. It's a nice, clean interface. I like the clip feature. I didn't like that I can only print off pages one-by-one - this would be very tedious if I wanted to read a chapter on the train home tonight. I disagree with your view that selling subscriptions is increasingly inefficient. In my experience, it is quite the reverse. Selling books by the one, whether in print or online, is inefficient. Think about the costs involved in deciding to buy a book on a one-by-one basis and then the transaction costs involved in making the purchase. According to ALA data from around 2000, the administrative cost of buying a single printed book is around $50. I guess it might be a little lower for a digital copy today, for the sake of argument let's say it is half - that's still $25 per book. The administrative cost of subscribing to a multi-issue print journal was around $75 c.2000, it's probably lower for online-only journals, but for the sake of argument, let's stick with $75. Let's say I've got ten books. On a one-by-one basis how many would I really sell to a library? Two, three? Maybe five? If the books sell for $50 each then my potential income from the library might be five times fifty (250) less trade discount and my one-by-one marketing and admin costs. The library has spent $375 (5x50)+(5X25). Now let's think from the publisher's viewpoint. If I can reduce my trade discount to subscription terms (we all know they are lower than bookseller terms) and if I can reduce my marketing and admin costs by bundling my books together, I can pass some of these savings onto the librarian in the form of a lower, bundle, subscription price. How about all ten books for $250? The total cost to the librarian is now 250 + 75 = $325. This is a $50 saving on buying five books on a one-by-one basis and they've got twice as many books. My net income is going to be higher because I've reduced my transaction and admin costs. So we're both happier. I've also provided a better service to the librarian's reader community because they now have access to all ten books. Half my authors will be happier because all ten books are now being exposed to potential readers at that library. This model works when a library needs a good number of all the titles published - in this example, when they need half the books. If they only need one or two titles, then they're better off buying by-the-one. For this reason, we offer librarians the choice of bundles of books and books by-the-one. Of course, if I can lower my costs still further, then I can make the point at which it's better value to subscribe to a bundle lower. The numbers point to one clear conclusion: it is better value for both librarians and publishers to offer bundles of books on subscription. It is also better for readers (more stuff to choose from) and authors (more potential readers with access). I don't know what this says about the 'value and quality of individual copyrights' but I think it says a lot about the value a publisher can add to the process of making authors' works accessible to as many readers as possible in a cost-efficient and sustainable manner. I also know that we're just as stringent about quality as we were before we went digital - the last thing we want to do is to spend money publishing a book which no-one wants to read because if we publish titles no-one reads the librarians will stop subscribing. This isn't a business model just for the big publishers and aggregators. We publish 250 books annually which makes us mid-sized, I guess. We offer a bundle with all 250, but also smaller, thematic, bundles - some with just ten books. We've got more than a thousand libraries subscribing to our book bundles and the number is growing nicely. The bigger boys might be having trouble getting their deals to 'stick' but I bet that's because they haven't got the value proposition right (i.e. they're asking for too much money). But this doesn't invalidate the inherent efficiency of bundling over a one-by-one business model for librarians, publishers, readers and authors. Toby Green OECD Publishing -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Adam Hodgkin Sent: 19 June, 2008 2:06 AM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Re: universities experiment with paying OA fees Why should the advantages of scale always accrue to the big battalions? The big publisher's, big aggregator's, model for selling subscriptions is increasingly inefficient. There have been problems in making 'big deals' stick recently. One suspects that the consortia negotiated sizable price reductions. The value and quality of individual copyrights is lost within these bulk transactions and ultimately that makes for slack and inefficient decisions by publishers and editors (and librarians). The Exact Editions platform allows publishers to create their own lists of licensable digital editions on a very modest upfront investment (our costs are largely covered by a low commission on sales). We started this digital licensing to institutions (educational and other institutions are subscribing) with some of our consumer magazine partners. And it works: http://www.exacteditions.com/exact/login.do?username=shop.en.inst We have just launched e-commerce services for two small publishers: http://www.exacteditions.com/sawdays http://www.exacteditions.com/debretts .... add "/library" to those urls and you will find the prices that those publishers are charging for institutional access. And would be keen to help small/medium academic publishers to get their books on-line digital resources, in a framework in which each book is licensable on its own to individuals or institutions. If you are not familiar with the exacteditions platform, some free Lessig titles to sample: https://www.exacteditions.com/exact/login.do?username=trial.lessig Of course, we hope/expect that our platform will become a big and influential network through which small publishers can gain some of the advantages of scale which accrue to the big aggregators. But the emphasis with our system is on buliding the brand and the commercial identity of the individual publisher, small though she may be. The publishers should control and manage their own pricing and subscription decisions and data. There is no reason why this has to be abdicated to intermediaries. The future of publishing lies with small, innovative, fashion conscious, quirky, quality-minde publishers and it always has done. Some of them will become big! Adam Hodgkin adam.hodgkin@exacteditions.com http://exacteditions.blogspot.com/ On 18 Jun 2008, at 00:24, David Prosser wrote: > Sandy > > I did say that I wasn't going to convince you! OK, so what's > the answer? The current subscription-based models won't work > long-term for small and society publishers as all the comments > you make about consolidation and the power of the large players > definitely apply here (they can tie-in budgets in big, > multi-year deals and they have massive sales forces). So, if > OA does not offer a survival strategy, then what? Too often in > the debate we here about why OA won't work, but little about > what the alternative is. Let's have the model that will allow > small and society publisher to thrive in the world market. > > I'm not suggesting that the OA route is going to be easy for > small and society publishers, but I still argue that for some > it will be the best strategy for long-term survival. It allows > them to compete on what they do best, it scales with increases > in research funding, and it doesn't require large-scale sales > infrastructures. Transition will be difficult, but nothing > compared to the difficulties of not transitioning! > Subscription budgets are not going to suddenly increase and I > don't think that we can expect a world-wide ban on commercial > journal publishers. More of the same means a slow (if they're > lucky!) squeezing-out of the smaller publishers. > > (A quick word on comparisons to brick-and-mortar businesses - > the barriers to entry in the scholarly communications market > have never been so low. Intellectual capital is much more > important than financial capital in launching a journal. This > makes scholarly publishing very different from bookshops, > restaurants, and supermarkets.) > > By the way, I would love to have a look around Princeton - is > that an invitation? > > David
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