(posted to multiple email discussion lists)
The ALCTS CCS Electronic Resources Interest Group invites you to attend its panel discussion "Pay-Per-View Options: Is Transactional Access Right For My Institution?" on Saturday, July 11, 2009, from 10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m,
In a world where funding is decreasing and demand is increasing, libraries and librarians are looking for ways to provide access to content without submitting their bottom line to costly and sometimes little-used online journal subscriptions.
The panel discussion will center on the experiences of libraries and publishers as they implement and manage transactional access models at their institutions. The panelists will discuss why transactional access was right for their institution, the driving forces behind their decisions, the implementation process, technical implementation and management of the access, and the outcomes of their endeavors. Following the presentations will be a "question and answer" period, as well as an open forum for audience members to share their experience(s) with fellow session participants.
The panel includes:
Pay Per View – Where We Were, Where We Are and Where Are We Going Next?
Between 2002 and 2003, the
Developing a Pay-Per-View Model in a Financially Challenging Budget Year
Nicole Mitchell and Elizabeth Lorbeer
Lister Hill Library of the
Anticipated reductions at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, for fiscal year 2009/2010 will result in a content budget of roughly half what it was four years ago. The library went from having packages with almost every commercial and society publisher to just a few packages in 2009. Over 4,500 titles were cancelled for 2009, with only 52 journals being reinstated by user request. In exploring a solution for next fiscal year, the library began to investigate investing twenty percent of its journal budget to subsidized pay-per-view by setting up deposit accounts with the publishers, with a goal to significantly lower user fees for article access.
Fast Food Nation/Google Generation/Financial Down Turn…Meet the Library
Ryan Weir and
Transactional Access: A Publisher's Take
Mark Rothenbuhler
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
The final presentation will offer the perspective of a major publisher about its experience offering streamlined article access via prepaid tokens. Mark Rothenbuhler from Wiley will discuss the realities and potential benefits of transactional access to journal articles to libraries and publishers, and offer suggestions as to what libraries should be thinking about.
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Jennifer W. Baxmeyer (formerly Jennifer Lang), Chair
ALCTS CCS Electronic Resources Interest Group
PLEASE UPDATE YOUR ADDRESS BOOK WITH MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS: bax@princeton.edu
Electronic Resources Cataloging Coordinator
Room 2-7-G, Firestone Library
609.258.5476 phone
609.258.0441 fax
and
Amira Aaron, Chair-Elect
ALCTS CCS Electronic Resources Interest Group
PLEASE UPDATE YOUR ADDRESS BOOK WITH MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS: libconsultaa@gmail.com
Academic Library Consultant
781.248.1806 phone