The document summarizes CTU Library's e-book collection development strategies, including their demand-driven acquisition (DDA) program. Some key points:
- The library's materials budget allocates 3% to e-book DDA and 5% to firm e-book orders and standing orders.
- The library uses YBP as a vendor and has DDA profiles with EBL and Ebrary, focusing on price, content type, and short-term loans.
- EBL allows for more DDA eligibility and short-term loans than Ebrary. Ebrary has download limits but no authentication needed on campus.
- Subject areas like business, social sciences, and humanities see the
3. CTUs DDA Program
YBP vendor EBL and Ebrary suppliers
Approval and technical profiles with YBP
Profile with EBL
Profile with Ebrary
Parameters include price, content type, short
term loan, initial and subsequent record loads
Cost considerations discovery
records, cataloging records, annual service fee
4. CTUs DDA Program
Comparison of features for DDA program
EBL Ebrary
DDA Eligibility All titles on EBL platform eligible
for DDA.
Subset of titles on Ebrary
platform eligible for DDA.
Mediation Mediated and unmediated DDA
purchase options available.
Unmediated DDA purchase only.
Short Term Loans (STL) All titles on EBL platform eligible
for STL.
Subset of titles on Ebrary
platform eligible for STL.
Browse Browse up to 5 minutes, and
unlimited page views. Printing or
downloading triggers a
transaction.
Browse up to 10 minutes, limited
to 10 page views, excluding TOC
and index. Printing or copying
triggers a transaction.
Reader Technology Online reading in browser. Online reading in browser, or
Unity Reader.
Portable Devices Can download book or chapters
to devices that support Adobe
Digital Editions (ADE).
Download capabilities depends
on license selected.
Hosting Fees A one-time platform fee paid
incrementally with each e-book
purchased, annual maintenance
fee if platform fee is ever reached.
Annual $250 hosting fee
minimum.
Pro/Con Offline reading available/all
users must authenticate
Users dont have to authenticate
on campus/downloading limits
availability to other users, fewer
titles available
Table based on information from YBP communications and platform websites; features may have changed.
5. E-resources in the Library Catalog
1950
6968
79 233
152857
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
160000
180000
DDA selection pool All ebooks All databases/websites All eserials All other physical items (CARLI
Coll Stat 8 - July 2012)
Totalitem count by format May 2013
6. Type of DDA Usage by Patrons
1%
3%
6%
90%
DDA Usage from Discovery Pool 2012-2013
Items purchased Shortterm loans Browses Total discovery pool
7. Print Book Circulation Comparison
2009-2012 book circulation
14%
Books that didn't circulate
86%
CTU Library Book Circulation
9. DDA Subjects Used by Patrons
Purchases and Short Term Loans
B
2%
BF
1%
BL
6%
BM
4%
BR
7%
BS
53%
BT
6%
BV
7%
BX
9%
DS
2%
LC
1% R
1%
Z
1%
Percentageof DDA by Call Number 2012-2013
11. DDA Publishers Used by Patrons
Purchases and Short Term Loans
Ashgate
3% Baker
7%
Brill
6%
Cambridge University Press
2%
Continuum
59%
Edinburgh
University Press
1%
Editions Rodopi
1%
Indiana University Press
1%
JessicaKingsley Publishers
1%
Lexington Books
1%
Mohr
Siebeck
1%
NYU
Press
1%
Oxford
University Press
1%
Palgrave Macmillan
1%
Stanford University Press
1%
Taylor and Francis
7%
Templeton Press
1%
Wiley
3%
PublishersUsed by Patrons in DDA 2012-2013
12. Print Book and e-Book Comparison
$0.00
$20.00
$40.00
$60.00
$80.00
$100.00
$120.00
$140.00
Printbook - Firm Ebook DDA purchase Printbook - standing order
Average price per book 2012-2013
Average price per book
13. DDA Costs vs. Discovery Record
Availability
$0
$10,000
$20,000
$30,000
$40,000
$50,000
$60,000
$70,000
EBL DDA 2012-2013 Total DDA Discovery Records
AxisTitle
$4,009 vs. $71,879
Actual vs. Hypothetical EBL Expenditures 2012-2013
14. DDA Costs vs. Discovery Record
Availability
6%
94%
Potential vs. actual DDA expenditure
EBL DDA 2012-2013
Total DDA Discovery Records
19. Acquisitions and Cataloging Workflows
Ordering, invoicing and receiving
Cataloging record sets vs. individual items
Communication and notifications
De-duplication strategies Project Muse, and
other packages
20. E-book Strategies at CTU
Cost per item strongly considered over cost
per use for e-book packages
DDA program is key to our collection
development plan for e-resources, but not
print at this time
Will purchase e-books on title by title basis;
current courses online plus DDA subject usage
will be strong considerations
Editor's Notes
#3: 64% of budget on print materials, 36% on electronic materials.Budget broken out by Books, 40,000; Periodicals, 45,000; Electronic Databases, 28,000
#4: Initial inquiry with YBP in July 2011 first set of discovery records loaded into catalog in December 2011. First usage of DDA books in January 2012. Initial record load included ATLA indexed books - https://www.atla.com/products/titles/Pages/default.aspx. Continuum/T&T Clark had a specific collection of Biblical Studies and Theology ebook list available in Fall 2011 that was also in the initial pool the books still available, but not the list. Suppliers selected on basis of interface, pricing and licensing a secondary consideration. Existing print approval profile formed the basis of ebook DDA profile. Technical aspects included ability to customize with proxy information, though this could also be done at the local level, as well as suppress these records from shared catalog. EBL and Ebrary profiles were basically what were needed for purchasing, plus the reporting features for DDA from each supplier. Cost control on discovery records and workflow, not on book price $200 cap, and one short term loan before purchase.
#5: Most of our discovery records are from EBL less that 200 records total from Ebrary. Ebrary was added to our program in November 2012.Sample books Handbook of New Testament Exegesis, Ebsco; Jesus and his parables, EBL; Lay ecclesial ministry, Ebrary
#6: E-resources in the catalog are selective these are curated compared to subscription packages and link resolver service.
#7: This usage is for EBL, which was our first DDA supplier, and still provides the majority of records. Only one STL fromEbrary, and no purchases.
#8: Print circulation pretty consistent over the years. The lower usage of DDA books could be accounted for by the narrower subject and publisher selection offered by the ebook providers.
#9: What is the typical DDA ebook that is used like, in terms of subject, publisher, etc?
#10: In our general circulating collection, the largest subject area is BX (31%), followed by BS(11%), BR(9%), BV(9%), then BT(6%).
#12: Commercial and university presses dominate, while independent and denominational are barely, or not represented.
#17: 64% of budget on print materials, 36% on electronic materials.CTUs collection development policy - http://www.ctu.edu/library/collection-development-policyMicroworkshops
#20: Most of workflow is by email, manual ftp, and automated batchloads. Basic cataloging philosophy it just has to be not wrong;-) Just starting to use MARCEdit. De-duplication is a struggle; trying to address with bulk import rules, but this cant address the which record was there first problem.
#21: CTUs collection development policy - http://www.ctu.edu/library/collection-development-policyMicroworkshops to promote with faculty faculty are thrilled with JSTOR and Project Muse. Faculty use the ebooks from DDA without even realizing it. Tutorials on website to help students get started; but we have information overload problem. CTU is on ATS list for online courses.