Title: LIS 901B: Summer 2005 Lecture 3
1LIS 901B Summer 2005Lecture 3
- Acquisitions Funding
- Acquisitions Gifts
2Acquisitions Budgets
- Who prepares/authorizes
- Organization of a budget
- Allocation method
- Establishing a budget
- Adjustments/revisions
- Accounting
- Auditing requirements
3Budget
- Definition of materials expenditure changing
- Proliferation and cost of electronic resources
- Materials are often a protected budget category
- Access expenditures
- Traditional ILL invoices
- Subsidized, unmediated document delivery
- Online searching expenses
- Bibliographic utilities
4Budget (cont.)
- Acquisitions direct-cost expenditures
- Cost of materials
- Shipping and handling costs
- Book vendor supplied shelf-ready expenses
- Record enrichment costs for newly purchased items
- PromptCat or purchased government document
cataloging expenses - Aggregator bibliographic records
- Binding
5Budget (cont.)
- Allocating funds within materials budget
- Serials
- Automatic ship (i.e. approval plans)
- Slips and firm order materials
- Electronic/digital resources
- Accounting issues
- Segregation of duties
- Fund account structure
- Tracking high-cost/high-growth categories
6Budget (cont.)
- Should be separated into various funds designated
according to type of material to be acquired,
regardless of size of organization - Small public library may have separate funds for
fiction, reference works, local history, etc. - Large research institution may have separate
funds for humanities, social sciences and
science, etc.
7Budget (cont.)
- Should, and probably required, to be separated by
donations and endowments, etc. - Allows tracking of trends and control of
individual accounts
8Financial Management
- Budgeting
- Operations budgeting
- Unit cost assessment
- Collections budgeting
- Purchase price negotiations
- Vendor performance monitoring
- Price projections
9Allocation Methods Depend Upon 3 Factors Plus
Politics
- Internal library factors and politics
- Organization, past practice, purpose of
allocation (control or guideline) - Institutional needs and politics
- Mission, goals, budget control, financial
condition - Extra-institutional factors and politics
- Politics, values, accountability. Social
expectations, outside agencies (control or
monitor)
106 Allocation Methods
- Historical (we always do it this way)
- Zero-based (not historical)
- Formula (weighted ratios, , - )
- Ranking (priorities, strengths, numbers)
- Percentages (represents community)
- Modeling (e.g. conspectus if we spend this the
collection will look like that in 5 years)
11Allocation in Research Libraries
- Based upon differing factors and differing
weights given to factors, e.g. - Departmental enrollment (majors) or student FTE
in departmental courses - Ratio of serials to monographs
- Ratio of grad to undergrad students
- Strengths or weaknesses of collection measured
against curriculum - Changes in curriculum
- Circulation and other measures of use
- Ratio of electronic to paper-based media
12Allocation in Public Libraries
- Differences in service communities
- Ratio of bestsellers to general titles
- Ratio of fiction to nonfiction
- Demand
- discretionary funds for patron requests
- Formats Serials
- Formats Electronic, paper, non-paper media
13Allocation in School Libraries
- Curriculum and curriculum changes
- Number of students
- Grades of students and number of students per
grade - Aging of collection
- Replacement of lost books
- Formats Electronic, paper and non-paper media
- State standards
14Allocation in Special Libraries
- Needs of clients
- Number of clients
- Immediate access to materials or to information
- Importance of electronic materials
- Number of subject areas
- Ratio of serials to monographs
15Acquisition of Electronic Resources
- Very little standardization from library to
library with regard to selection and ordering
process - High cost, leading libraries to pursue the
formation of consortia to increase purchasing
power
16Acquisitions Process for Electronic Resources
- After electronic resource selected, standard
acquisitions functions of verifying bibliographic
information, identifying pricing options, and
determining terms of availability are challenging - A single database or electronic journal may be
available from multiple sources, each with
different search software, retrieval capabilities
and user functions - Acquisitions librarians must work closely with
vendors - Placing an order may be a challenge because
standard ordering procedures and forms may need
to be supplemented with info on number of users,
etc.
17Three Requirements of Budgets
- They should be an estimate, often itemized, of
expected income and expense - They should be a plan of operation based upon
such an estimate - They should serve as an estimated allotment of
funds for a given period
18Electronic Resources Defy These Requirements
- These materials have such a variety of payment
plans that it is hard to estimate what expense
they will cause - These materials demand peripheral support which
makes it difficult to develop a plan of operation
without that support in place - These materials are being published without much
advance notice and are also politically sensitive
since they decrease funds available for other
formats
19Pricing Models for Electronic Resources
- If library subscribes to print version,
electronic version can be accessed at no
additional charge - If library subscribes to print version, there may
be a small additional charge for access to
electronic version - Some electronic versions are available without
subscription to print version, at same
subscription cost as print - Some publishers offer an electronic only
subscription for slightly less than print
20Pricing Models for Electronic Resources (cont.)
- Some publications are only available
electronically and they carry their own cost for
subscription - Some publishers and aggregators operate on a
pure bundling model where a library or
consortium must license the entire list of their
journals with no individual selections possible - Some aggregators of electronic journals and
databases offer a pay-per-view option that allows
users to enter an account number already
established to access articles from journals that
are not on subscription - Many electronic products are, of course, freely
available on the web
21Budgeting Access Issues
- Publisher can define location of usage, e.g.
building, IP address - Price may be based on number of simultaneous
users or number of ports - Price may be based on number of passwords issued,
size of acquisitions budget, or dollars spent
with publisher - May be additional charges for printing or
downloading
22Budgeting Access Issues (cont.)
- Prices may be computed according to whether the
product is networked or stands alone, the number
of transactions, the number of users or FTEs - ILL rights may be restricted
- May be special conditions regarding backfiles or
prior usage
23Budgeting Other Issues
- Overlap of titles offered by different providers
and package deals that cause duplication - Confusion exists over exactly what the library
owns - Lack of stable price lists
24Budgeting for Electronic Resources
- All purchases of electronic resources and
subscriptions are taken from the general
materials budget of the library - Some electronic resources or subscriptions are
taken off the top of the budget before the
materials budget is allocated - Some libraries set aside a certain percentage of
the materials budget for electronic resources, or
they may set up a spending ratio of books to
serials to electronic resources in order to make
allocations
25Budgeting for Electronic Resources (cont.)
- Some libraries allow a portion of their materials
budget to cover hardware costs, processing costs
(e.g. bibliographic records) as well as software
costs - Some libraries require purchases of electronic
resources through team selection or at least with
a check-off system so that a wide-ranging review
of a product is made before it is finally
selected for purchase. This approach is also
helpful regarding the broad range of subject
matters that may be included in an electronic
resource, so coordination across disciplines and
between subject specialists and technical experts
can be achieved
26Budgeting for Electronic Resources (cont.)
- Consortium purchases
- Information at the article level
- Document delivery service
- Block for titles owned in print?
27Tracking Electronic Resources Prices
- Local library estimates
- Working with vendors to track expenditures
- Ordering through a bibliographic utility
- Adding a position for electronic services
28Budgeting Tips
- Acquire expensive titles through political
efforts contact departments, donors, consortia
memberships - Track electronic expenditures using expense codes
in online acquisitions system - Make case that electronic resources are not a
panacea which will replace print and other media
and may not provide cost savings for the library
in the long-run - User outreach is important
- Planning is important involve as many staff as
necessary
29Cost Analysis of Acquisitions and Cataloging
- Define the function to be measured.
- Determine the unit of measure and the number of
units produced on an annual basis - Determine labor cost for the function being
measured - Identify annual costs for supplies and operating
expenses for the function in question
30Cost Analysis (cont.)
- If equipment is needed to perform function being
measured, its cost should be included - Decide whether overhead (utilities, space, etc.)
should be included - Total all costs and divide by number of units
31Sources of Acquisitions Funds
- Appropriations
- Gifts
- Grants
- Other
- Endowment funds
32Controlling Acquisitions (Financial Management)
- Ordering and payment centers different
- Audit trails
- How long to keep records?
- Electronic records adequate?
- Some institutions may require purchase orders to
be issued from business office - Library loses control over what gets ordered and
when
33Controlling Acquisitions (Financial Management)
- Payment
- Centered in library or institutions business
office - Additional discounts for early payment/pre-payment
- Handling of statements and notices for unpaid
invoices - Deposit accounts
34(No Transcript)
35Electronic invoicing
- EDI Electronic Data
Interchange - EDI is not ...
- Eating Disorder Inventory
- Economic Development Institute
- Idi Amin
36EDI is EC (Electronic Commerce)
- EDI is not
- Free text electronic mail
- MARC
- Z39.50
- Bibliographic information
37EDI What is it?
- Transfer of business documents between
computers - Business transactions routine orders, claims,
invoices - Standard formats UN/EDIFACT, X12
- Computer to computer no human involvement
- Use of telecommunications networks
38EDI Benefits
- Improved service and business
- Increased accuracy
- Elimination of forms and postage costs
- Faster service
- Reduced stock inventory
- Fewer inquiries
- Time for other projects
- Required for doing business in some arenas
39Gifts and Exchanges
- Organizationally, found in different parts of
library - Labor-intensive
- Require high-level staff
- No money changes hands
40Exchanges
- Reciprocal
- Usually foreign publications
- Usually for serials
- Needs close monitoring for balance
- Requires special knowledge of languages,
geographic areas - Intense correspondence
41Positive Points of Exchanges
- Exchanges between international libraries are an
intercultural activity and an important gesture
of goodwill - Exchanges usually unaffected by subscription
price increases - Do not rely on currency conversion problems
- Certain titles only available on exchange
42Positive Points of Exchanges
- Many titles acquired through exchange would be
expensive to acquire - Some are hard-to-find U.S. government and foreign
university publications - Can be valuable additions to collection
- Small staff can administer an automated exchange
program
43Negative Points of Exchanges
- Can be very labor intensive
- Exchange partners may send publications
irregularly or not at all - Difficult to establish a reciprocal or cost
effective exchange agreement with unlisted
subscription costs
44Negative Points of Exchanges
- Exchange partners must often purchase the
journals and monographs they offer as barter to
other institutions - Exchange programs usually have hidden expenses,
such as the cost of shipping barter materials
45Gifts
- Can obtain unique titles
- Significant source of out-of-print material
- Valuable mixed in with much thats not
- Much duplication or out of scope of collection
- Needs clear policy
46Gifts (cont.)
- Requires tact when negotiating with donors
- May be asked to evaluate donation for tax
purposes - Tax forms
47Positive Points of Gifts
- Gifts can replace worn and missing items in a
library - Out-of-print desiderata often surface from gift
donations - Gifts can foster communication and goodwill in a
library community - Gifts may become heavily used or important
research additions to a collection
48Positive Points of Gifts
- Some titles that are not available by purchase
are available as gifts - Worthwhile gift materials not selected for
library collection can be put in a book sale,
sold to dealers, or given away to underfunded
libraries and institutions. Make sure this is
approved by donor
49Negative Points of Gifts
- Gifts require staff time and are costly to
process - Dealing with even well meaning gift donors is
frequently an aggravation to staff - Gifts take up precious space in a library
- Many collection managers give gifts a low
priority, so they may sit on review shelves for a
long time
50Negative Points of Gifts
- A large percentage of most gifts are not added to
the collection, which creates disposal problems - Overall, since most gift books added to a
collection are older editions, they will be less
frequently used by library patrons