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LIS 901B: Summer 2005 Lecture 2

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Title: LIS 901B: Summer 2005 Lecture 2


1
LIS 901B Summer 2005Lecture 2
  • Acquisitions Introduction
  • Acquisitions The Publishing World
  • Acquisitions Management and Principles

2
Why Acquisitions Not Taught in Library Schools
  • Every library has different policies, practices,
    and procedures
  • Not considered as worthy of a semesters worth of
    studying
  • May not be considered sufficiently professional
  • Some libraries staff their acquisitions
    departments with non-professionals

3
Primary Functions
  • Order
  • Claim
  • Receipt/Payment

4
Goals of Acquisitions
  • To acquire materials as rapidly as possible
  • To acquire materials as inexpensively as possible
  • To function like a smoothly-operating business
    (pay bills in 30 days, answer correspondence and
    return calls promptly, etc.)

5
Change in Acquisitions
  • Historical
  • In the past, acquisitions focused on locating
    material and recording its bibliographic
    information correctly for the vendor rather than
    the patron (Pitts)
  • Present
  • Timeliness of information regarding material
    library intends to acquire (ordered but not yet
    received), and material library has just acquired

6
Change in Acquisitions (cont.)
  • Present (cont.)
  • Transfer of some functions from Cataloging to
    Acquisitions
  • Present/Future
  • Incorporate management of electronic resources to
    include handling of license agreements and
    relaying of technical information

7
Prerequisites
  • Knowledge of publishing industry
  • Knowledge of budgeting
  • Knowledge of accounting techniques
  • Knowledge of personnel issues

8
Acquisitions Functions
  • Bibliographic searching
  • Order preparation
  • Order placement
  • File maintenance
  • Correspondence
  • Claims
  • Cancellations
  • Receipt
  • Billing

9
Acquisitions Basics
  • Pre-order searching and verification
  • Ordering different types of materials
  • Vendor selection
  • Ordering and receiving
  • Fund management and reporting
  • Record-keeping and statistics

10
Basic Records and Files
  • Vendor records/vendor file
  • Order requests/order file
  • Purchase orders/purchase order file
  • Financial records/fund accounting file
  • Correspondence/correspondence file
  • Serials/standing order check-in records
  • Volume holdings
  • Invoices

11
Librarians and Publishers
  • Publisher bashing
  • Law of supply and demand
  • Law of price elasticity
  • mass markets
  • vertical markets

12
What is a Publisher
  • Agent for the author
  • Adds value to information
  • Selects
  • Edits
  • Prepares for manufacture
  • Contracts for manufacture
  • Markets
  • Pays the author

13
Types of Publishers
  • Economically divided
  • Commercial
  • Non-profit
  • By medium
  • Book
  • Serial/Journal/Periodical
  • Audio-visual
  • Software
  • Web-based

14
Types of Publishers
  • Trade
  • Mass-market paperback
  • University presses
  • Mail order
  • Book club
  • Special Interest
  • Religious

15
Types of Publishers (cont.)
  • Professional associations
  • Societies
  • Reference
  • Textbooks
  • Governments
  • International agencies (U.N., NATO, etc.)
  • National/federal governments
  • States/provinces
  • Municipalities/counties

16
Types of Publishers (cont.)
  • Institutions
  • Universities
  • Research institutes
  • Independents
  • Alternative presses
  • Small presses
  • Fine presses
  • Art presses

17
Quasi-Publishers
  • Vanity presses (Subsidy publishers)
  • Individuals

18
Publishing Process
  • Publisher contacts author author contacts
    publisher
  • Publisher and author negotiate contract
  • Author produces manuscript
  • Publisher edits manuscript
  • Publisher prepares manuscript for publication

19
Publishing Process (cont.)
  • Publisher contracts for manufacture
  • Publisher markets and distributes
  • Publisher pays the author

20
Roles of the Publisher
  • Publishers are information intermediaries
  • gathering
  • selecting
  • enhancing
  • informing
  • Sounds a lot like libraries!

21
Quote
  • There are of course at present two main kinds of
    knowledge intermediary the library and the
    publisher.
  • Colin Day, Director
  • University of Michigan Press

22
Gathering Information
  • Reactively
  • Responding to author submissions
  • Proactively
  • Recruiting author submissions
  • The Acquisitions Editor

23
Selecting Information
  • Choice of information to publisher
  • Sends quality signals to reader
  • Effects publisher reputation
  • Effects bottom line

24
Enhancing Information
  • Editing (revisions and resubmissions)
  • Copyediting
  • Design
  • For reading
  • For navigation
  • For marketability

25
Informing
  • Readers and libraries
  • Marketing
  • Publicity
  • Notifying vendors
  • Reviews

26
Publishers Costs
  • First copy costs
  • Acquisition
  • Editing
  • Copyediting
  • Design
  • Marketing
  • Incremental costs
  • Costs to manufacture the item
  • Order processing
  • Shipping and handling

27
Breaking Even
  • First copy costs 25,000
  • Incremental costs 10 per copy
  • Print run 1 Cost 25,010 per copy
  • Print run 10 Cost 2,510 per copy
  • Print run 100 Cost 260 per copy
  • Print run 500 Cost 60 per copy
  • Print run 1000 Cost 35 per copy

28
Assuming 500 copies
  • For a typical university press publication
  • 30 vendor and bookstore discount
  • Need 86 per copy retail price to break even
  • Average university press subsidy from home
    institution 400,000 per year

29
Most publishers operate at a loss
  • Even for profit publishers often operate at a
    very low margin of profitability

30
The Profitable Publishers
  • Trade publishers
  • K-12 textbook publishers
  • Scholarly-scientific journal publishers
  • Large newspaper chains
  • Large media conglomerates

31
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32
Book Publishing Statistics, 2001
  • Total
  • 24 billion up 4.3 from 2000
  • Adult trade publications
  • 4.8 billion up 2.9
  • Juvenile trade publications
  • 1.7 billion up 15.6
  • Mass market paperback
  • 1.4 billion down 7.3

33
Book Publishing Statistics, 2001
  • Religious books
  • 1.2 billion up 3.3
  • Professional books (business, law, medicine,
    sci/tech, etc.)
  • 4.7 billion up 6.8
  • University presses
  • 412 million up 5.1

34
Book Publishing Statistics, 2001
  • K-12 education
  • 3.4 billion up 3
  • Higher education
  • 3.1 billion up 8.3
  • Reference books
  • 789 million up 2.9
  • Mail order and book clubs
  • 1.7 billion down 1

35
U.S. Consumer Expenditures on All Books (foreign
and domestic)
  • Expected to increase to 38.1 billion by the year
    2004
  • (Up from 22.6 billion in 1994)

36
The Problem
  • Consolidation of information production and
    distribution among a few powerful providers
  • The effects of consolidation on access and content

37
Consolidation
  • Media companies controlling most of the U.S.
    book, magazine, movie, and television industries
  • 1981 46
  • 1986 29
  • 1989 25
  • 1997 7

38
The Big 7
  • Rupert Murdochs News Corporation
  • Viacom
  • Time/Warner
  • Newhouse
  • General Electric
  • Westinghouse
  • Disney

39
Runners up
  • Newspaper monopolies
  • Gannett
  • Knight-Ridder
  • Foreign behemoths
  • Bertelsmann (worlds 2nd largest media empire)
  • Elsevier
  • Kluwer

40
Conglomerate Profits
  • Historical average publisher profit margin 4
  • Expected publishing profit margin of media
    conglomerates 12-15
  • To survive as a subsidiary of a multi-national
    corporation, the publishing unit must concentrate
    on publishing high volume materials and eschew
    low volume publications

41
Lowest Common Denominator
  • Big publishing firms have trimmed their
    mid-list books
  • Mid-list
  • Offerings by non-celebrity authors
  • Serious fiction, history, criticism, and other
    genres
  • Published in modest printings
  • Bring in modest profits

42
Independent Publishers
  • Ca. 53,500 in U.S.
  • Ca. 2/3 of book sale dollars
  • ca. 16 billion of 24 billion in U.S.book sales
  • Ca. 4/5 of titles in BIP
  • ca. 1.1 million of 1.4 million titles

43
Independent Publishers
  • Keep books in print longer
  • most less than 15 years old sell every title they
    ever publishes
  • Ca. 1/3 have had at least one title sell over 1
    million copies

44
Gray Literature
  • Material that usually is available through
    specialized channels and may not enter normal
    channels or systems of publication, distribution,
    bibliographic control, or acquisition by
    booksellers or subscription agents
  • Scholarly communication among a small group of
    specialists
  • No or minimal cost, print or electronic
  • Announced in specialized sources and distributed
    once

45
Gray Literature
  • Websites and e-mail Distribution channels
  • Collected by research libraries
  • Examples meeting minutes, preprints, market
    surveys, committee reports, proceedings,
    corporate documents, newsletters, discussion
    papers, house journals, working papers,
    standards, trade literature

46
Organization of Acquisitions
  • Typically reflects the organization philosophy of
    the parent institution
  • e.g. large research institution with centralized
    vs. decentralized planning and budgeting
  • consortium of public libraries with centralized
    vs. decentralized planning and budgeting
  • Acquisitions staff
  • Professional
  • Support staff

47
Organization of Acquisitions (cont.)
  • Fast Cat Units
  • Monographs vs. serials
  • Priorities
  • Timely placement of orders and payment of
    invoices
  • Timely processing of cancellations, especially
    for subscriptions
  • Claiming missed issues

48
Organization of Acquisitions (cont.)
  • Priorities (cont.)
  • Maintaining proper records for orders and
    payments that are consistent with generally
    accepted accounting principles
  • Processing received material in a timely manner
  • Proper order record maintenance to ensure
    timeliness of information to user
  • Establishing and maintaining publisher and vendor
    relationships

49
Acquisitions and the Large Library
  • Business unit within a non-profit
  • Subject to procurement system of larger
    institution
  • Subject to fiscal year requirements
  • Subject to internal and external auditing of its
    procedures and financial records
  • Little direct interaction with library or patrons
  • Activities done in back room

50
Acquisitions and the Small Library
  • Combined with many other duties of librarians
  • Actual process may be done at a level outside the
    library
  • The business is even less well understood by
    librarians than in large libraries
  • Business concepts and requirements usually not
    communicated to librarians

51
Scope of Acquisitions The Business
  • Get library materials into the hands of patrons
    Keep all customers happy
  • Purchasing according to procurement law,
    regulation, requirements
  • Keep and maintain financial records
  • Do not overspend budget
  • Specify, negotiate, contract with, and evaluate
    vendors

52
Relationship of Acquisitions to
  • The library as a whole
  • Collection Development
  • Cataloging/Bibliographic Control
  • Serials
  • Those outside the library
  • Business office
  • Vendors

53
Acquisitions Collection Development
  • ACQUISITIONS
  • Selects vendors, processes orders
  • Generates reports
  • cancellation, receipt, expenditure, encumbrance
    balances
  • Evaluates vendors, services
  • COLLECTION DEV.
  • Generates orders
  • Updates per report
  • Evaluates collection, services to patrons

54
Acquisitions and Cataloging
  • ACQUISITIONS
  • May be combined with cataloging in one unit
  • May be completely separate
  • Use many of the same bibliographic tools for
    verification
  • CATALOGING
  • Older function in libraries
  • Not usually combined in large libraries
  • Bibliographic tools used for cataloging
  • Have same Asst. Director for TS

55
Acquisitions and Serials
  • Many functions so similar that units may be
    combined
  • Order, fund accounting, vendor issues,
    procurement issues, reconciliation and claiming
  • Some functions so dissimilar that different units
    are established
  • Vendors, title verification, number of titles,
    budget allocation and sources
  • Organization sometimes determined not by function
    but by history of the library or workload and
    staffing patterns

56
Serials and Monographs
  • Serials
  • One title
  • Intended to be published at regular intervals
  • Any kind of binding
  • Magazines, journals, newsletters, annuals,
    periodicals
  • Monographs (mono one, graph writing)
  • One title
  • One publication date
  • Any kind of binding
  • What lay people call a BOOK

57
Acquisitions and Other Library Units
  • Gifts Exchanges
  • What dont we have to buy and what can we give
    away
  • Preservation
  • Repair and reformatting Can item be replaced?
    How much will that cost?
  • Circulation
  • Can item be replaced?
  • Reference
  • Is this the same book? (Cataloging also)
  • Administration
  • Whats the budget and balance?

58
Organizational Patterns of Acquisitions
  • By activity
  • searching, verifying bib. info., inputting
    orders, fund accounting, vendor relations, report
    generating, technical support
  • By type of material acquired
  • language//other country/other currency, format,
    rare books, serials
  • By means of acquiring material
  • standing order, approval plans, serials, etc.

59
Basic Acquisitions Functions/Activities/Procedures
  • Receiving order requests
  • Searching order requests
  • Verifying order requests
  • Selecting vendors/routing orders
  • Preparing and dispatching orders
  • Encumbering funds
  • Receiving materials, expending funds

60
Basic Acquisitions Functions/Activities/Procedures
  • Handling damaged and incorrectly shipped
    materials
  • Claiming unreceived materials
  • Canceling materials
  • Database management
  • Monitoring and reporting activities
  • Special acquisitions problems
  • Paperbacks

61
Basic Acquisitions Functions/Activities/Procedures
  • Government publications
  • Small presses
  • Microforms
  • AV materials
  • Electronic formats
  • Out-of-print materials
  • Back issues
  • Foreign materials

62
Verification Sources
  • Bibliographic Utilities
  • Forthcoming Books
  • Books in Print (BIP)
  • Paperback Books in Print
  • Ulrichs International Periodicals Directory
  • Whitakers Books in Print (WBIP British)
  • ISBN

63
Order Information
  • Title
  • Author
  • Edition, series
  • Publisher
  • Date
  • Price
  • Binding (Format)
  • ISBN

64
How materials are acquired
  • Approval plan
  • Firm order
  • Standing order
  • Subscription
  • Membership
  • Gift
  • Exchange

65
Approval Plans
  • Acquire books automatically by profile
  • Contract between vendor and library
  • May return unwanted selections
  • Primarily found in academic and research
    libraries
  • Comprehensive collecting
  • Shelf-ready books

66
Approval Plan Advantages
  • Quick receipt after publication
  • Reduce number of firm orders
  • Broad or narrow scope
  • Purchase made with book in hand
  • Attractive discounts
  • Defines what to collect
  • Electronic invoicing

67
Approval Plan Disadvantages
  • No reviews available
  • With forms/slips, may not have enough information
  • Cost of returns
  • Missed titles when monetary limit reached
  • Not necessarily best books on subject
  • Not all titles fit into neat categories
  • May have to rely on one vendor for all new books

68
Blanket (or Standing) Order Plans
  • Not subject driven
  • Excludes or limits returns
  • Minimal profiling May limit by
  • total funding assigned
  • language
  • intended audience
  • type of material (e.g. no textbooks)

69
Blanket (or Standing) Order Plans (cont.)
  • All titles from specified publisher
  • Know what to expect
  • No selection forms to process
  • Attractive discounts
  • Coverage clearly understood

70
Out-of-print market
  • Book scouts
  • Neighborhood bookstores
  • Specialized dealers
  • General out-of-print dealers
  • Mixed in-print/out-of-print dealers
  • Web-only business
  • Academic library vendors
  • Rare book dealers

71
Encumbrance Between Order Payment
  • Order price put aside (list or retail price in
    Purchase Order (PO)
  • Search and verification finds cancellations
    discounted price
  • Encumbrance adjusted accordingly
  • Adjustment change in amount ( or -)
  • Difference between initial encumbrance and
    adjusted encumbrance returns to available
    amount( running balance)
  • Encumbered funds not available and NOT SPENT

72
Encumbrance (cont.)
  • Payment Expenditure
  • Invoice Bill
  • Invoice Real price (can be different from
    estimates)
  • Payment process is institutionally based and can
    be complex
  • Payment removes funds from encumbrance category
    and puts then in expended category
  • Adjustment ( or -) of difference to available
    amount running fund account balance

73
General Mission of Acquisitions
  • Acquire materials as rapidly as possible, as
    inexpensively as possible, while functioning like
    a smoothly-operating business that serves its
    customers, pays its bills, and deals honestly and
    fairly with its vendors
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