performance measurement in a changing environment
DESCRIPTION
Performance measurement in a changing environment. The SCONUL e-measures project 2010. The SCONUL e-measures project . Pat Barclay, University of Westminster Angela Conyers, Evidence Base, Birmingham City University Claire Creaser, LISU, Loughborough University - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Performance measurement in a changing environment
The SCONUL e-measures project 2010
The SCONUL e-measures project
Pat Barclay, University of Westminster
Angela Conyers, Evidence Base, Birmingham City University
Claire Creaser, LISU, Loughborough University
Sonya White, LISU, Loughborough University
Plan
E-measures pilot project
New e-measures questions
Issues to consider
The first year
What difference did it make?
e-measures pilot project
Aims
To review current e-measures questions and definitions
To draw together feedback on current e-measures To look at approach taken by other national library
associations To make recommendations for amendments
and/or additions to existing e-measures questions
Pilot members
20 libraries took part
Set of possible questions developed
Asked to submit quarterly returns and comment: How easy were the data to obtain? How reliable were they? How well did they align with institutional
requirements?
New e-measures questionsFour key areas of change:
1. Inclusion of e-journals and e-books held within databases in the count of serial and e-book titles
2. Addition of free titles or titles purchased in previous years
3. Addition of database searches as a usage measure
4. Separation of costs of different types of e-resource
Some issues to consider
How will the new e-measures statistics be used?
Longer term trends
Can SCONUL provide more help?
The first year How did it go?
Experimental – little advance warning
BUT
Number of respondents to new or revised questions was high (generally around 140 out of total 148 respondents)
Suggests questions fit better with existing library practice?
e-books in databases: EEBO or not EEBO? Some disagreed:
“I have included EEBO or EECO in the count because that is the instruction but we have not added bib records to the library catalogue so I feel it distorts our EBook count”
Others felt it reflected trend: “As e-books become more prevalent and in demand we now allocate 20% of our book budget towards their purchase”.
Perhaps the time was right to make the change?
Serials – double counting?Is it possible to identify unique titles?
“There is a considerable amount of duplication between content of backfiles and current subscriptions, and between titles available on a number of different platforms. It is impossible to deduplicate these titles with any accuracy, and the total in C16 is therefore not the total of unique titles.”
Does it matter?
Databases -
Journals
E-book
Other
Why the distinction?
Usage measures Journals – full text article requests- COUNTER
JR1
E-books – section requests COUNTER BR2“Only 4 of 22 e-book resources licensed currently provide BR2 reports. Data for most of others obtained by BR1 x 5.4.”
Databases – searches COUNTER DB1“No data available for 14 databases. In addition, 24 databases did not provide search data.”
Costs
Separating out spend on print, print and electronic and electronic only“Some figures are rounded up. Not possible to disentangle spend on the various definitions of serials/journal databases: that on e-journals is by far the largest part so total figure is entered in H4”
or“Note the reduction in print journals as a collection decision for 2009/10, with a view to reducing costs”
What difference has it made? Quite a lot! Available resources now all included in the
reporting Better fit to what users see ... and to what is reported internally
Spending can be sliced to match Improved PIs
Usage better match to resources and to costs
E-journals
'04-05 '05-06 '06-07 '07-08 '08-09 '09-100.0
500,000.0
1,000,000.0
1,500,000.0
2,000,000.0
2,500,000.0
3,000,000.0
3,500,000.0
4,000,000.0
Plus titles not purchased
With titles in databases
Original defintion
eBooks
'04-05 '05-06 '06-07 '07-08 '08-09 '09-100.0
2,000,000.0
4,000,000.0
6,000,000.0
8,000,000.0
10,000,000.0
12,000,000.0
14,000,000.0
16,000,000.0
18,000,000.0
Plus titles not purchased
With titles in databases
Original defintion
DatabasesFull text
15%
eBook4%
Other47%
Not purchased34%
SpendingBooks19%
Binding1%
ILL1%
Print journals12%
Joint format journals14%e-journals not in d/b
26%
Full text d/b9%
Other d/b1%
eBook d/b12%
eBooks not in d/b3%
Other digital1%
Other1%
SpendingBooks19%
Binding1%
ILL1%
Print journals12%
Joint format journals14%e-journals not in d/b
26%
Full text d/b9%
Other d/b1%
eBook d/b12%
eBooks not in d/b3%
Other digital1%
Other1%
SpendingBooks19%
Binding1%
ILL1%
Print journals12%
Joint format journals14%e-journals not in d/b
26%
Full text d/b9%
Other d/b1%
eBook d/b12%
eBooks not in d/b3%
Other digital1%
Other1%
SpendingBooks19%
Binding1%
ILL1%
Print journals12%
Joint format journals14%e-journals not in d/b
26%
Full text d/b9%
Other d/b1%
eBook d/b12%
eBooks not in d/b3%
Other digital1%
Other1%
Costs per use
'04-05 '05-06 '06-07 '07-08 '08-09 '09-10£0.00
£0.20
£0.40
£0.60
£0.80
£1.00
£1.20
Including journal database cost
Cost per article down-load
Including eBook database cost
Cost per eBook access
Use per title
'04-05 '05-06 '06-07 '07-08 '08-09 '09-100
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
Including journal database titles
Downloads per journal title
Including eBook database titles
Uses per eBook title
What next Needs time to bed in Some tweaks to definitions for 2010-11 Continue to monitor trends
In reported data And in library practice!
Acknowledgements & contact details Thanks go to:
Sonya White, LISU Loughborough University Members of the SCONUL Working Group on
Performance Improvement The 20 E-measures pilot libraries
Contact details: Pat Barclay, University of Westminster
[email protected] Angela Conyers, Birmingham City University
[email protected] Claire Creaser, Loughborough University