One point I would like to make. This should be just like claiming a paper
sub. You pay an agent a handling fee to manage your subscriptions. Is it not
their responsiblity to make sure your online subscriptions are active?
Also, same problems different format
Liz Breier/Jewish General Hospital, Montreal PQ
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 12:10
PM
Subject: Re: [SERIALST] E-journals
Renewals and Activation
It depends on the platform. Some it is quicker and easier to go
direct to the publisher/platform. Others it not productive at all to mess with
the publisher/platform so I use our agent. And yet others it is best to go
after both. Experience will tell you which approach to take. For Ingenta I
tend to go straight to the agent because they often just don't respond to me
with good information. Atypon is another I don't bother with. In any case, I
suspect most agents want to at least be CC'd so they know there maybe
problems.
Michael Lampley
TCU
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 9:58 AM, Pennington, Buddy D.
<penningtonb@umkc.edu>
wrote:
We
generally use our agent. If the agent can't get it fixed quickly then
we will go directly to the publisher but that is the exception.
Buddy
Pennington
Electronic Resources & Serials Librarian
University of
Missouri - Kansas City
800 East 51st Street
Kansas City, MO
64110
Phone: 816-235-1548
Fax: 816-333-5584
Email: penningtonb@umkc.edu
UMKC
University Libraries: Discovery. Knowledge.
Empowerment.
-----Original Message-----
From: SERIALST:
Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of
Jennifer Sauer
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 9:56 AM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject:
Re: [SERIALST] E-journals Renewals and Activation
Buddy,
When you
state "claiming" do you mean through your agent, or do you go
through
each title and "fix" the access, e.g. contacting the provider to
resolve
- or do you use the agent's claim process as you do with print?
Thank
you,
Jennifer Sauer
Electronic Resources/Serials & Copyright
Librarian
Fort Hays State University
Forsyth Library
600
Park
Hays, KS 67601
Voice:
(785)628-5262
Fax:(785)628-5415
From:
"Pennington, Buddy D." <penningtonb@UMKC.EDU>
To:
SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Date:
02/22/2010 09:52 AM
Subject:
Re: [SERIALST] E-journals Renewals and Activation
Sent
by: "SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum" <SERIALST@list.uvm.edu>
This
is a fairly common problem for us as well. Several online
renewals
lapse, just like we would have occasional lapses with print
subscriptions.
The problem for us is that users and staff notice
immediately if we have
lost access to an online title. In the print
world, claims would often pile
up to let us know a print subscription had
lapsed but we rarely heard from
staff about it.
I am also
interested in how other libraries handle new online
subscriptions.
It is my experience that we will place orders for several
new
ejournals in the fall and then when we check access in January, many
of
them have not been turned on for us. I seem to spend a
significant amount
of time in January claiming online access to our new
subscriptions.
Buddy Pennington
Electronic Resources & Serials
Librarian
University of Missouri - Kansas City
800 East 51st
Street
Kansas City, MO 64110
Phone: 816-235-1548
Fax:
816-333-5584
Email: penningtonb@umkc.edu
UMKC
University Libraries: Discovery. Knowledge.
Empowerment.
-----Original Message-----
From: SERIALST:
Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [
mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu] On Behalf Of
Patricia Thompson
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 9:43 AM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject:
Re: [SERIALST] E-journals Renewals and Activation
"What is supposed
to happen next?"
In my experience, it varies with each publisher. My
subscription
agent does not make sure I have access-- it's up to me. They
will
assist with fixing it if I discover that it doesn't work, but I
have
to check it. And I don't have time to check everything, so I am
sure
that some of them fall through the cracks. I am always
discovering
problems when I am checking for something else!
I sign
up for new issue alerts and toc's for some titles on most of
the
platforms, and sometimes I find out that way about something
not
working.
But I am interested in how others handle this
too.
Pat Thompson
Patricia R. Thompson
Assistant University
Librarian for Resource Management Services
duPont Library
University
of the South
Sewanee, TN 37383
931-598-1657
pthompso@sewanee.edu
At
09:13 AM 2/22/2010, you wrote:
>Harrisburg Area Community College has
just begun subscribing to
>e-journals (online only) via our
subscription agent. This year we
>renewed a title, but lost access to
the e-journal (platform is
>Ingenta, not a publisher's platform). It
took some time to establish
>that we had renewed and to regain
access.
>
>I wonder how others handle these situations. When you
renew with
>your subscription agent what is supposed to happen next?
Do you
>check with the publisher to make sure the renewal passed to
the
>platform provider?
>
>I would be interested in
reading any in-house processes used to
>verify access and whom/how you
contact to reestablish
access.
>
>Judith
>
>
>
>
>Judith
M. Nagata
>Serials/Electronic Resources Librarian
>Harrisburg
Area Community College
>Library Central Services
>One HACC
Dr.
>Harrisburg, PA 17110
>
>Ph: 717-780-2535
>Fax:
717-780-2462