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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: "Michael Zeoli" <mzeoli@ybp.com>
- Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2008 20:39:13 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
We aggregators whose core businesses are Approval Plans with workflow support (MARC records with imbedded local data for batch load to ILS & batch invoice creation, online tools for various aspects of collecting - including real-time views on consortium and peer library activity) find this discussion highly interesting. Our first role has always been that of aggregating *appropriate* content for academic libraries (like academic publishers who edit and vet the works they publish, we too are a part of the filtering mechanism to libraries). As we refit our internal mechanisms to support ebooks, we are not only thinking along traditional lines, i.e. aggregating like titles one-by-one from 1500+ publishers and forcing them through our tens of thousands of approval plan profiles to reach the appropriate selectors in our customer libraries (still a valid process in e however), but we are beginning to work with libraries to define "approval packages" (as opposed to "approval books"). This process is more complex than a simple blanket order or standing order, as it incorporates experience and systems developed over several decades, allowing libraries better control over the dollars spent on content ingested while still benefiting from bulk purchasing (in price and in efficiency of delivery). The same reasons that created a space for aggregators in the academic print world should absolutely remain central to library acquisitions and collections in the coming years: aggregating content from thousands of publishers, providing definition and indexing to that content, providing delivery mechanisms supporting selection, ordering, comparison with peers, sharing of information and purchasing within consortia, and offering critical data customization and delivery to make the process of ingesting masses of content manageable for libraries with limited staff. There's a huge amount of value there that is in no way offset in the 'big deals.' As middlemen we are increasingly reaching out to publishers to share our experience with what libraries want and need a develop renewed partnerships as a critical percentage of content shifts to 'e' (e.g. when will publishers like Samuel French and Dramatists Play Service let us help them deliver their content online to our libraries? - Many of whom have blanket orders for these publishers - libraries hate those types of materials in the print format and would jump at the opportunity to purchase them in e; When will we be able to aggregate various groups of UP titles into these packages for rapid and immediate delivery to our customers without making the libraries either have to go to 50-70 individual sources, etc.). It seems to many of us that there is a renewed partnership between the publishers and aggregators just waiting for the season of the 'big deals' to pass. There are some terrific opportunities just waiting for people to start talking again. Mike ****************************** Director of Sales, Canada YBP Library Services 999 Maple Street Contoocook, NH 03229 mzeoli@ybp.com (603) 746-3102 ext. 3345 -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Karl Bridges Sent: Monday, June 23, 2008 6:48 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu; Joseph J. Esposito Subject: Re: universities experiment with paying OA fees I agree with this. I have no real argument with the idea of bundles of books in whatever format. My problem is that it inevitably is the case that those bundles contain a mixture of items so I end up buying ten items to get the 3 I really want. This seems especially a case with e-book collections. It just points out that vendors need to develop highly focused "bundles" that give the purchaser collections that are focused on their needs. I like the idea of thematic bundles. There needs to be an approach, call it "just in time bundling", where bundles can be quickly customized to the needs, if not of single users, at least to the needs of particular classes of libraries -- land grant, public, ect. -- which is what I think Toby was getting at. Quoting "Joseph J. Esposito" <espositoj@gmail.com>: > Toby has this exactly right. Kudos. Note the central economic > issue: lowering the administrative cost of effecting a sale. > > Joe Esposito > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Toby.GREEN@oecd.org > To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu > Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2008 3:29 PM > Subject: RE: universities experiment with paying OA fees > > 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.
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