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RE: Request for information on book purchasing
Roel raises a good question about e-books. An interesting
development is the engagement with e-books of the big serials
agents, Swets and EBSCO. In contrast to publishers, aggregators
and book sellers, both are talking in terms of supplying
electronic content, whatever its provenance or traditional form.
The English regional university purchasing consortia are
considering going out to tender for the supply of books over the
next 6 months. E-books, and the business models, will be central
to this tender. Given the size of the aggregate spend by these 5
consortia, we hope to have an beneficial effect on these business
models.
With best wishes
David Ball
University Librarian (Associate Head of Academic Services)
The Sir Michael Cobham Library
Bournemouth University
Fern Barrow, Poole, Dorset, BH12 5BB
Tel: +44 (0)1202 965044 Fax: +44 (0)1202 965475
Mobile: +44 (0)7971 027751
e-mail: dball@bournemouth.ac.uk
www.bournemouth.ac.uk/library
http://www.dcda.org.uk/
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu On Behalf Of Tilly R (UB)
Sent: 20 August 2008 23:33
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: RE: Request for information on book purchasing
Dear Joe,
I have been following your opinions for some time and find them
very interesting especially on the book ordering issue.
First of all in answer to your request on monographic orders we
at the university library do not distinguish in the ordering of
monographs. We have two main book suppliers domestic and foreign.
In my view we have a contract with the bookseller and he has to
supply as offered. We don't think its sound business to be
preselecting the orders (you might be tempted to take the best
bits out), in some cases grey literature is the exception.
We at the university have a policy of supporting the local
bookseller so they can provide the best service for our
university students and staff.
What I'm more interested in and that's a fundamental question how
are we (librarians) going to order e-books from: Bookseller,
Wholesaler, or straight from the Publisher. I'm asking this with
the Big Deal (journals) in mind, with its advantages and
disadvantages. And the fact that most publishers are presenting
impractical pricing models main issues in the discussions are:
packages, simultaneous users and site (access) definitions.
If you have any views or opinions on this I would appreciate
these.
Regards,
Roel Tilly
University of Maastricht
Mail Address:
PO Box 616, 6200 MD Maastricht
Visiting Address:
Grote Looierstraat 17, 6211 JH Maastricht
T (043) 388 5091 | F (043) 3884888
-----Original Message-----
[mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Joseph J. Esposito
Sent: maandag 18 augustus 2008 23:52
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: Request for information on book purchasing
Perhaps members of this list can assist me in answering some
questions about the purchase of books by academic libraries.
By "books" I mean something specific: printed books published by
university presses. No ebooks, no digital aggregations, nothing
from publishers outside the university press world.
The question is, How are libraries purchasing these books? One
press director told me that all the purchases go through library
wholesalers (e.g., Baker & Taylow). I understand that some
libraries are purchasing such books from Amazon, but I have not
yet had a librarian confirm this.
Do you have any figures on this? Of all the U. press books you
purchase, what percentage comes from wholesalers, what percentage
directly from the publishers, how many from Amazon or other
(principally) retail vendors, etc.? A related question is, Do
you get significantly different figures if you count by units
(that is, copies of books) instead of dollars (the cost)?
Thank you for your help with this.
Joe Esposito