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Re: Request for information on book purchasing
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Request for information on book purchasing
- From: Warren Holder <warren.holder@utoronto.ca>
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 2008 18:43:45 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I hope this doesn't come across as too crass, but in my mind it nearly all comes down to the money issue. I work in a large academic library and at the moment it seems to me as if I can get the most e-books at the best price by negotiating directly with the publishers. I am happy to talk to a vendor of whatever stripe (book jobber, serial agent, etc. ) who will offer us similar discounts. I think there should be a business case especially in the humanities and social sciences where I predict we will buy both versions for a while. Have any of you seen a bundled price for a book purchase? Warren Holder Electronic Resources Co-ordinator University of Toronto Libraries 130 St. George Street Toronto, Ontario CANADA M5S 1A5 warren.holder@utoronto.ca www.library.utoronto.ca/its/warren.html Engelland, Joachim wrote: > Dear Roel, > > With reference to your question on how to order e-books: > > At Walter de Gruyter we have just developed with Atypon an > integrated ebook/ejournal content delivery platform, and > therefore the questions you raise in your third paragraph with > reference to the fulfilment process have been foremost in our > minds. The challenge has been to define a process that involves > as little disruption to the librarian at the same time as > recognising that the content delivery path is different for > digital content to that of the physical book. With these > requirements in mind we have a workflow in place that allows > you to order e-book titles exactly the same way as printed > books. The process in outline is as follows: > > 1) Order with your preferred book seller or library vendor > (Blackwell, YBP, Harrassowitz, Starkmann etc. - the same as you > use for printed books) > > 2) We will require with the order the email address of the > librarian responsible for the e-acquisition, which could be the > Acquisition Librarian or the E-content acquisition specialist. > > 3) The book seller or library vendor then places the order with > our fulfillment partner (which is the same as for printed books: > Rhenus Medien Logistik). > > 4) Your invoicing will come from your library vendor or > bookseller (just as with your printed books) > > 5) The additional and important step is that you will get an > email from our customer service team at Walter de Gruyter > letting you know how to register and set up and administer > access to this content. This email will also contain a list of > all the newly purchased items. > > We are hopeful that this process will prove to meet the needs > of librarians acquiring a variety of e-content. Your direct > feedback to me on this would be most welcome. Similarly if > other readers have specific feedback on this process please do > not hesitate to contact me directly. > > Many thanks > > Joachim Engelland > Verlag Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG > Director Electronic Business > > -----Urspr=FCngliche Nachricht----- > Von: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Im Auftrag von Tilly R (UB) > Gesendet: Donnerstag, 21. August 2008 00:33 > An: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu > Betreff: RE: Request for information on book purchasing > > Dear Joe, > > I have been following your opinions for some time and find them > very interesting especially on the book ordering issue. > > First of all in answer to your request on monographic orders we > at the university library do not distinguish in the ordering of > monographs. We have two main book suppliers domestic and foreign. > In my view we have a contract with the bookseller and he has to > supply as offered. We don't think its sound business to be > preselecting the orders (you might be tempted to take the best > bits out), in some cases grey literature is the exception. > > We at the university have a policy of supporting the local > bookseller so they can provide the best service for our > university students and staff. > > What I'm more interested in and that's a fundamental question how > are we (librarians) going to order e-books from: Bookseller, > Wholesaler, or straight from the Publisher. I'm asking this with > the Big Deal (journals) in mind, with its advantages and > disadvantages. And the fact that most publishers are presenting > impractical pricing models main issues in the discussions are: > packages, simultaneous users and site (access) definitions. > > If you have any views or opinions on this I would appreciate these. > > Regards, > Roel Tilly > University of Maastricht > Mail Address: > PO Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht
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