-------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: Serials Budget Allocation Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2001 17:18:21 -0500 From: Ian Woodward <iwoodward@mail.colgate.edu> Theoretically, your marginal expenditure (not the average expenditure) per patron satisfied should be equal accross disciplines. Were it not, you could reallocate your budget, shifting funds from disciplines where the last dollar of expenditure per patron satisfied is comparatively high to those where it is comparatively low, and thereby satisfy more patrons with the same expenditure. Only a rough approximation of such a decision rule can be put into practice. The following steps might be followed: 1. You should compile in a spreadsheet a mean annual use figure for each title in your serials collection -- ideally a sum of staff-reshelvings, reserve use, and (if permitted in your establishment) check-outs. Several years of careful monitoring of your collection will be necessary to produce valid figures. The raw figure will be erroneous because patrons reshelve things and staff are often lax in the execution of their functions. However, this applies to all titles in the collection, so the internal use figure of any title when compared with the mean for your collection should yield more-or-less valid information. 2. A compilation of several years worth of the prices of all titles to which you subscribe averaged over a time period period of your choosing. You may wish to make use of the current price, or the mean of a period of years (the most recent three or five or seven years, or whatever suits you) for subsequent calculations. 3. From the foregoing data points, you should be able to construct a price per recorded use index for each title to which you subscribe, and then rank order your titles according to price per recorded use (from lowest to highest). From this rank ordering, you ought to exclude certain titles, e.g. a. "Purchases on probation": as it takes a certain size of run for patron to have something to use and a certain amount of time for patrons to discover a title in your collection, you ought to exclude anything you have added to the collection "recently" (say, in the last seven years) from your rank orderings, and take the expenditure on these titles as "given". b. Titles for which document delivery is unavailable and inter-library loan is not available from within a circle of libraries which you have antecedently defined in consultation with your inter-library loan staff. Some titles that fall into this category may be such duds that you will wish to cancel anyway and reallocate to other purposes, but that ought be left a separate decision. 4. Having rank-ordered your subscriptions according to price per use, select an arbitrary price-per-use figure and resolve to cancel every title whose performance has fallen below that standard. Allocate sums freed to new subscriptions in disciplines whose most poorly performing title carries a price-per-use lower than the arbitrary standard you have selected. You will likely have a wish list of unfulfilled requests and may solicit ideas from the departments in question or by consulting reviews and core lists and comparing their recommendations to your holdings. The trouble with the foregoing procedure is that it assumes one format with a common means for assessing internal use -- i.e. it is designed for use assessments and purchasing decistions for a print collection. Incorporating use statistics on electronic editions of your print collection (if any such statistics be available) into your general use statistics presents the formidable problem of identifying a fudge factor to be used in equating internal use of print with whatever datapoints on electronic use you are able to get hold of. A second problem that you would surely confront in America is complaint from one or another faculty member registered at such time as he has discovered that you have cancelled his pet title and reallocated the fund to purchase titles in comparative literature or social psychology or economics. The degree of deference you will be compelled to show to faculty presumably varies from one institution to another. I cannot say I have ever heard of an academic institution in this country were the librarians felt themselves to have thorough discretion over their serials budget. Antecedent to implementing the above, one would also have to have a satisfying definition of "discipline", perhaps derived from the academic departmental boundaries in one's institution. At my own workplace, implementing such a system is an idea that requires an eschatological imagination... Best of luck, IW -------- Original Message -------- Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2001 08:36:16 +0800 From: Hj Awg Mohd Yussop POKIDDP Hj Awg Musa <yussop@lib.ubd.edu.bn> Subject: Serials Budget Allocation I am the Head of Technical Division responsible for books and serials purchase and only recently joined the discussion groups. We have used allocation formulas for books but not for serials. I know this issue has been raised previously and would be grateful if you could provide me some allocation formulas for serials that has been used. Thanks in advance for your help. Hj. Awg. Mohd. Yussop POKIDDP Hj. Awg. Musa Head of Technical Services For Chief Librarian Universiti Brunei Darussalam Library Tel No: 673 2 249002 ext 256 Fax No: 673 2 249504