Title: William Hayes, PhD
1Self-Service Document Delivery
William Hayes, PhD October
7th, 2006
2Agenda
- Importance
- History
- Options
- Strategy
- Parts List
- Roll Out
- Feedback
3 Importance of Doc Delivery
- No one can subscribe to everything
- Regulatory, BusDev, Drug Safety, and Research all
depend on external information - Frequent urgent requests
- Can obviously stimulate RD, enhance progress
4Old Old Way
5Old Way
A computer-assisted request system was born!
Patrons could request articles from their desk
by typing the citation information into a form!
Articles arrived interoffice mail within just a
few days! And this was okay, until and
instant gratification
- Electronic Journal Access
6Current Expectations
- Links to articles shall be available in every
database - All articles shall be instantly available as
color PDFs - Did I mention instantly?
- And please, not another username and password
- And while youre at it, make them free
7Document Delivery Options
How to implement?
Self-service
Assisted
Individuals place and receive orders directly
with vendor
All orders go through the library
- Pros
- No middleman speeds delivery
- No middleman reduces headcount
- Preferred MO of some users
- Cons
- Customers must troubleshoot with customer service
directly - Cant tell if all orders are delivered
- Pros
- Staff can help find reference
- Delivery issues easily monitored by staff
- Duplicate orders can be caught
- Staff can use variety of doc del vendors
- Cons
- Headcount devoted to shuttling emails
- Process orders for content we already have
8(No Transcript)
9Self-Service Options
Through single interface
Using native interfaces
- Pros
- Easier to set up and maintain
- Cons
- Users must switch from preferred search tool to
ordering database
- Pros
- Users order directly from preferred search tools
- PubMed
- SciFinder
- Web of Knowledge
- Ovid
- Beilstein?
- Cons
- Accounting
- Complex set-up
- People who order articles dont always read them
10System set-up and considerations
- Link resolver
- Technical ability of sales staff
- Tied to one product?
- Hosted or in-house
- Available sources and targets
- Sources e.g. literature databases
- Targets e.g. publishers (article link)
- Document Delivery Vendor
- Reliability
- Comprehensive article access
- Accounting flexibility
- Document quality
- Delivery options (paper, TIFF, PDF)
11Ex Libris - SFX selected as our Link Resolver
- Very flexible system and rather powerful
- Good training, migration capability
- Comparatively superior database and application
framework (though primitive and poorly designed) - Mostly documented (though buggy)
12Infotrieve selected as our Document Delivery
Vendor
- OpenURL enabled
- Global document delivery staff (Germany office,
San Diego, far east) - covers the global work day - Flexible accounting and individual ordering
system - Capability of providing any literature (based on
previous experience) - Fairly stable company (though our solution is
fairly portable) - 100 digital delivery of requested articles
- Low marks on document quality compared to
publisher PDFs (but not compared to other
document delivery vendors)
13Example PubMed
14The Get It! BIIB button
15SFX Link Resolver checks holdings
HELP links to intranet
16OR link directly to Infotrieve
HELP links to intranet
branding
Our wording to address FAQs
Cost Center
17with order information pre-populated
18Recognizing users
- No new passwords!
- Use IP-authenticated accounts
- Pre-provisioned user accounts from internal
company address book - New employees fill out short profile form during
first use
19Phased Rollout
Implementing new order system involved many
changes for the end user Before After
request form find article in PubMed
PDFs/paper PDF format only (recent!) No
vendor access direct interaction
Phase I Library used new system to
place all orders Phase II 10-20 end users try
new system Phase III full rollout
20Full Rollout
- Help located throughout ordering process in
easy-to-find places - URL with global overview
- Help comes in many formats
- text only
- pictures and text
- Movies (screencasts!)
- Training sessions
- FAQs drive improvements
21Intranet Help Site
22Delivery Statistics
23Biogen Idec Delivery Methods
Orders in thousands
24Document Delivery Emails Attachments or Links?
- Attachments are easier
- Article size limits (most companies set
limitations on email size) - Cannot determine if actually delivered (spam
filters, buried in email deluge ) - Links
- Possible to determine if accessed by customer, if
not after ? days, send reminder - No size limitations
- Have to manually download
- Link expires after 2 weeks
25Feedback
- BIG improvement for PubMed users
- Initially confusing for non-PubMed users
- Patrons hate TIFFs
- not in color
- poor resolution
- some desktop machines not set to open them
- Recently upgraded to image PDFs
- Mostly higher quality B/W image PDFs
- Occasional publisher PDFs
26Discussion
27Acknowledgements
Infotrieve Pat Alderson Dick Weaver Craig
Faulkner Kenji Fujita Stephanie Azores Ian
Palmer Todd Everett Kevin Glacken
Biogen Idec Library Staff June Ivey Barbara
Leone Karlyne Hutchings Pam Gollis Phoebe Roberts
(co-proj mgr) Biogen Idec Research
Informatics Jeff Warhaft (co-proj mgr) Steve
French Mirko Geffken Colin Young Mohammed Maati