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Where's the evidence? The role of usage statistics in collection management Angela Conyers Evidence Base, Research & Evaluation Birmingham City University
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Collecting usage statistics What are we doing it for? Who are we doing it for? What does it all mean?
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What are we doing it for? Usage statistics provide essential evidence: to show how e-resources are being used to look at trends over time to inform renewal/cancellation decisions to demonstrate value for money
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Who are we doing it for? Different audiences: Library directors Academic staff Subject librarians
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What does it all mean? What can the usage statistics tell us? What other evidence do we need?
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What do libraries want from usage data? Be sure it is right How well titles in a deal are being used: –High use, nil and low use Usage by subject area Analyse trends over time Ready access for reporting Evidence of value for money Benchmarking
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Collecting the evidence COUNTER codes of practice: Journals and databases E-books Dealing with publishers who are not COUNTER compliant
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Making it as easy as possible KPI templates JUSP – the Journal Usage Statistics Portal www.jusp.mimas.ac.uk
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National initiative for licensing online journals on behalf of the higher and further education and research communities in the UK SHEDL aims through collaboration and combined purchasing power to achieve a shared digital library in Scotland WHELF's mission is to promote library and information services co-operation and to encourage the exchange of ideas among University and Higher Education libraries in Wales
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138 UK higher education and research council libraries are in JUSP http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellf/3910635234/
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18 publishers American Association for the Advancement of Science American Institute of Physics Annual Reviews BioOne British Medical Journal Publishing Group Edinburgh University Press Elsevier Emerald Future Medicine Institute of Physics Nature Publishing Group Oxford University Press Project MUSE Royal Society of Chemistry SAGE Springer Taylor & Francis Wiley-Blackwell 3 intermediaries Ebsco EJS Publishing Technology (ingentaconnect) Swets
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Single point of access to usage data from multiple publishers No need to visit separate publisher sites to download usage statistics Usage comparison across publishers and years Establishing value for money JUSP Purpose and benefits http://www.flickr.com/photos/wallyg/418328695/
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COUNTER usage reports JR1 Journal Report 1: Number of Successful Full-Text Article Requests by Month and Journal JR1a Journal Report 1a: Number of Successful Full-Text Article Requests from an Archive by Month and Journal http://www.flickr.com/photos/bionicteaching / 2920562020/
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Standardized Usage Statistics Harvesting Initiative (SUSHI) M2M way of gathering statistics Replaces the user- mediated collection of usage reports 12 JUSP SUSHI clients available SUSHI server to gather data from JUSP http://www.flickr.com/photos/ragingwire/3395161474/
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JR1 and JR1a usage reports from publishers + Add JR1 usage from intermediaries/gateways where necessary - Minus JR1a archive usage to see usage of current deal Using the JR1 and JR1a reports
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Some other JUSP reports Titles with the highest use from one publisher or all publishers in JUSP Titles in various usage ranges, from nil and low to very high Search facility – title or ISSN or keyword Trends over time (2009- ) SCONUL return
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Adding value to JUSP JUSP enhancements Adding subscribed or core titles What titles are in the deal? Adding value to usage reports
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How many titles are in the deal? Project Muse JR1 for 2011 for a library with the Basic Research Collection– 59% of titles in the JR1 are not in the library’s deal and will show nil use. Titles in the Premium Collection in the JR1498 Titles in the Basic Research Collection206 Titles in the JR1 not available to the Library292
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JUSP enhancements Usage patterns of subscribed or core titles Identification of titles in the deal or collection within the JR1 report Adding more publishers
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Adding more value Costs FTE numbers Benchmarking
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SCONUL derived ratios Journal article download per FTE user E-book section request per FTE user Section requests per e-book Cost per e-journal title Cost per e-book Cost per e-book section request Cost per journal article download
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Where’s the evidence? What are we doing it for? Who are we doing it for? What does it all mean?
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Where’s the evidence? Thank you! angela.conyers@bcu.ac.uk www.jusp.mimas.ac.uk
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