We have been doing something very similar for the past few years. We have had Ebsco create a custom report that combines all the data points from the OAR with the Access and Registration report. Last year we had them also add in some
of the data elements from the License details (namely the perpetual access field). This allows us weed out a lot of titles through simple sorting in Excel and we are then left with a very manageable list of titles that are candidates to convert to online
or combo, etc. Some do require follow-up, but what used to take us weeks to do title by title in Ebsconet we can now do in a matter of hours.
As an aside, I have been asking Ebsco to make this kind of report available as a standard report, but with little luck. Perhaps if they get enough requests for these kinds of custom reports they will set it up as something you can simply
request out of Ebsconet.
Best,
Doug
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Doug Way
Head of Collections and Scholarly Communications
Grand Valley State University Libraries
1 Campus Dr.
Allendale, MI 49401
616.331.2863
From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu]
On Behalf Of Georgie Donovan
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2012 4:53 PM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Annual Renewal Process - What's the Best Method?
Two years ago, I asked our Ebsco customer service rep to do a custom report for me that showed exactly what you’re talking about: I wanted a list of journals that we were
getting in print through them, and data on each one (via an Excel file) from the “other available formats” field in EbscoNet. It’s a little different than the OAR that you’ve looked at. Our rep at the time and I talked back-and-forth about what I wanted:
I wanted things de-duped, for example – and I didn’t want to see membership titles that came free with something else. But after some negotiation, we came up with a relatively good starter list.
We still had to do some research on the titles we wanted to switch to online only. Once in a while, EbscoNet would say something was available online only, and we would try
to switch to that subscription model, only to find it was not IP supported access, or had a limited number of simultaneous users, or was available for other countries but not the U.S. Still though, it gave us a starting point.
If you had a good student or diligent staff person and a small enough number of print subscriptions, you might be able to do this work by hand. But the starter data set from
Ebsco helped give us a jump-start.
Best,
Georgie
----
Georgie Donovan, assoc professor
Coordinator, Bibliographic Services, University Library
Chair, SACSCOC Compliance Certification
Appalachian State University
828.262.7571 |
donovangl@appstate.edu
From: BLACK, STEVE [mailto:BLACKS@MAIL.STROSE.EDU]
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2012 3:47 PM
Subject: Re: Annual Renewal Process - What's the Best Method?
Personally, I find the most challenging part of deciding whether to go online-only is publishers’ amazing variety of pricing models. A few still price their journals in ways that practically force us to stay
with print, and to my amazement there are still some that offer no online option. At the other extreme are some that charge for print but offer free online. Then there’s the whole issue of backfile access, which is also all over the map. It’s really tedious
and time-consuming to look at all that information and make decisions tuned to local needs. So I feel your pain.
Re: errors in the data, as Paula Sullenger noted, “Ebsco has always been quite open that they rely on customers to tell them about these errors and is appreciative when we do update the info.” All serials data
sources have errors, and all rely on the serials community for corrections. Not long ago I looked at the accuracy of records for ceased periodicals, and found error rates of about 10% for OCLC, 33% for Ulrichsweb, and 43% for EBSCO’s Serials Directory (“Failure
Rates and Publication Status,” Serials Review 36, 202-213.) These errors included no record at all, which is a bit unfair to EBSCO because my sample was mostly popular magazines. Since EBSCO records are created when libraries order titles through them, many
little literary magazines and other non-academic titles aren’t in their database. If you exclude the “no record” errors, OCLC was the most accurate, followed by EBSCO, with Urlich’s marginally worse on failing to close records for ceased titles. I didn’t look
at Swets, Harrasowitz, or any other vendors, so can’t say how EBSCO compares to other subscription agencies’ data. Anyway, bottom line is that serials data will always include some errors.
Steve Black
Serials & Reference Librarian
Neil Hellman Library
The College of Saint Rose
432 Western Ave.
Albany, NY 12203
(518) 458-5494
From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum
[mailto:SERIALST@list.uvm.edu]
On Behalf Of Zinik, Davette
Sent: Monday, June 04, 2012 4:58 PM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: [SERIALST] Annual Renewal Process - What's the Best Method?
For many years I have been ordering the
Online Availability Report (OAR) through EBSCO to help our collection development librarians make renewal decisions for the following year. They use this report to decide what journal titles to renew, cancel, and switch from print to online. This report
is supposed to tell us what we currently have on order through EBSCO and is divided into 3 sections: 1) our print titles, 2) our print + online titles, 3) our online only titles.
Year after year I have seen “bad data” in this report. For example, many titles that we have already cancelled appear on this report. Also, titles that we switched to online sometimes appear
in the “print” section. In addition, I cannot customize this report when I order it. As a result, dozens of columns that are not needed get downloaded into the spreadsheet. I have reported these issues to EBSCO.
Cleaning up this report for our selectors is very laborious and time consuming. I would like to ask the serials community the following:
·
If EBSCO is your vendor, do your selectors use the OAR or a different report/tool for their annual renewal decisions?
·
If EBSCO is not your vendor, who is, and how does that vendor help with this process?
·
Does the method you use indicate whether or not a print journal has an online alternative?
·
Are you aware of any good tools or methods that aid selectors in deciding what journal subscriptions to renew, cancel, or switch to online?
Thank you,
Davette Zinik
Auraria Library
Acquisitions & Serials Manager
1100 Lawrence Street
Denver, Colorado 80204
303-556-2625 (tel)
303-556-2623 (fax)
Serving the University of Colorado Denver; Metropolitan State College of Denver; Community College of Denver.
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