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Models for Increasing Access

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Title: Models for Increasing Access


1
Models for Increasing Access
  • Leo Walford

2
Remember 1997?
  • As a librarian, you
  • Bought print journals via subscription agents
  • Were beginning to think about electronic
    journals
  • Worried about pricing
  • As a Publisher, you
  • Sold individual print subscriptions via agents
    to libraries
  • Thought about pricing
  • Worried about electronic journals

3
Since then
  • What have publishers been doing to improve access
    and availability?

4
Models for Increasing Access
  • Big Deals
  • Licensing
  • Donation Schemes
  • Pay per view
  • New pricing/access models
  • Open Access

5
1. Big Deals
  • Libraries want to
  • facilitate the widest access to the most
    appropriate resources for their user community
  • Business Models for Journal Content, Rightscom
    for JISC, April 2005

6
Big Deals
  • Publishers want to
  • Build reputation and brand
  • Build or at least maintain - revenue
  • Build or at least maintain - profits

7
Big Deals what are they?
  • A library (or group of libraries) pays a sum to
    gain electronic access to all (or a substantial
    chunk) of a publishers list of titles.
  • Pricing usually is based on the amount that the
    customer is currently paying for the titles it
    subscribes to, plus an extra amount to cover the
    additional titles
  • The package is usually fixed titles, or the
    amount paid cannot be changed (ie no
    cancellations)
  • Pricing is usually fixed any changes in price
    for subsequent years form part of the agreement
  • Deals often (but not always) three years
  • Some deals are opt-in

8
Big Deals Pros and Cons for Libraries
  • Pros
  • Much greater access to content
  • Predictability of costs
  • Cons
  • Lack of flexibility
  • Some titles may not be used and cant be
    cancelled
  • (Perceptions of) licence terms
  • Budget tied-up
  • VAT

9
Big Deals Pros and Cons for Publishers
  • Pros
  • Much greater exposure for content
  • Much greater usage
  • Tie-in of revenue
  • Cons
  • Limited growth potential
  • Requires sales team
  • Much greater administration
  • Higher demand on customer service teams

10
Big Deals The Effects
11
Big Deals The Effects
12
Big Deals The Effects
13
2. Licensing to Aggregators
  • Bundles of content
  • May be publisher-specific, discipline-specific or
    both
  • Protagonists Ebsco, ProQuest, Ovid, etc.,
  • Aggregators generally licence in content from
    publishers and pay them a royalty based on volume
    of content and/or usage

14
Aggregators Pros and Cons for Libraries
  • Pros
  • Big bundles of content at (relatively) low
    prices
  • One negotiation
  • Students like them
  • Cons
  • Content may disappear from the package
  • Limited (if any) rights to permanent access
  • Embargo periods mean content not the most
    current

15
Aggregators Pros and Cons for Publishers
  • Pros
  • Exposure
  • New Markets
  • Revenue
  • Cons
  • Brand dilution
  • Subscription cancellations

16
3. Donation Schemes
  • Developed by publishers often in conjunction with
    other bodies, to improve access in (largely) the
    developing world
  • Benefit users who would otherwise not be able to
    access the journals
  • Provide good publicity for publishers, at
    marginal (direct) cost or loss of revenue

17
Donation Schemes
  • HINARI, AGORA, OARE in conjunction with WHO
  • INASP International Network for the
    Availability of Scientific Publications
  • Journal Donation Project (Soros Foundation)

18
Donation Schemes
  • Example HINARI
  • Offers over 3,800 journals
  • 2,500 institutions in 117 countries
  • Institutions in countries with lt1,000 gdp pay
    nothing
  • Institutions in countries with 1-3,000 gdp pay
    1,000 for access to everything

19
Donation Schemes
  • Romania "If you think you are excited about
    this, I can tell you that everyone here,
    academics, students and staff are absolutely
    thrilled.
  • Gambia It has been a very popular initiative
    here. Intellectual isolation is considered one of
    the factors (that mean that) African Research
    centres cannot develop world class researchers.
    This can go some way to changing that.

20
4. Pay per view
  • User only pays for what they use
  • Publishers charge a fee per article
  • Fee may be different for different publishers,
    different content, different markets or different
    conditions
  • Some variants on this, e.g. pay for fixed time
    period

21
Pay per view
  • Appears to provide an additional revenue stream
    for publishers
  • Libraries generally unhappy about blanket use of
    PPV because it is unpredictable
  • Libraries concerned that PPV isnt used for
    material that is already owned by the library

22
5. New Pricing/Access Models
  • Libraries, funders and (maybe) publishers are on
    the look-out for new models which will
  • Bridge real or imagined information gaps
  • Provide greater value for money
  • Provide flexibility
  • Provide more accountability
  • Be simpler
  • In short, cheaper and better

23
New Pricing/Access Models
  • National licence
  • PPV converting to subscription
  • Core peripheral PPV
  • Value-based pricing
  • Open Access

24
New Pricing/Access Models
  • National licence
  • A single national payment to publishers for
    limited access to all their content
  • Has worked in certain clearly-defined
    circumstances, e.g. JISC purchase of OUP
    backfiles
  • Works as a mechanism for standardising opt-in
    consortial deals
  • Hard to see it working on a larger scale

25
New Pricing/Access Models
  • PPV converting to subscription
  • Once a certain level of PPV expenditure on a
    title is reached, it automatically becomes a
    subscription title
  • Although simple in principle, this is difficult
    to model, and is unattractive to publishers and
    librarians
  • Not currently used?

26
New Pricing/Access Models
  • Core peripheral
  • Discipline-specific package of journals, with an
    add-on chunk of free PPV from non-subscribed
    titles
  • Pricing can be varied according to how much
    access is allowed (ie PPV can kick in early if
    the library pays a smaller up-front subscription
    payment)
  • Vulnerable to disagreement on selection of
    core titles, movements of titles between
    publishers
  • Administratively difficult
  • Not used?

27
New Pricing/Access Models
  • Value-based pricing
  • Being launched in 2008 by American Chemical
    Society
  • Appears not to apply to consortial customers
  • These new subscription models de-couple the
    prices of the print and electronic versions of
    each journal and utilize value-based metrics such
    as number of articles published, ISI impact
    factor, and total downloads to establish prices
    for each ACS Journal.

28
6. Open Access
  • Publishers already offer a lot of open access
    material
  • Free Access periods
  • Hybrid Journals offering Open Choice options
    (several thousand titles)
  • Full Author-Pays OA journals (a few)
  • Freely available content on publishers platforms
  • e.g. HighWire has 1.7M open access articles

29
Conclusions
  • The big deal is here to stay (at least for a
    while) it offers too many benefits for libraries
    and publishers to be discarded lightly
  • Aggregated databases have an important role to
    play
  • Donation schemes have made great strides, but
    there is more to be done
  • PPV is a useful adjunct, but is unlikely to
    displace anything
  • While new pricing models will emerge, it is
    unlikely there will be any major shift in the
    ways libraries pay for journal content
  • Theres lots of OA content out there much of it
    compatible with publisher existing business
    models

30
Back to 2007
  • Compared with ten years ago, this is a golden age
    for content availability
  • What more can be done?

31
Thank you
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