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FUN AND PROFIT FOR LIBRARIES

FUN AND PROFIT FOR LIBRARIES. Bob Holley Rural Libraries Conference April 30, 2009. Introduction and Background. Welcome and introduction Demographics of the audience Interest in buying, selling, or both Are you worried about theft? Are there other experts in the audience?

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FUN AND PROFIT FOR LIBRARIES

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  1. FUN AND PROFIT FOR LIBRARIES Bob Holley Rural Libraries Conference April 30, 2009

  2. Introduction and Background • Welcome and introduction • Demographics of the audience • Interest in buying, selling, or both • Are you worried about theft? • Are there other experts in the audience? • This PowerPoint will be posted on the Rural Libraries Conference Web site

  3. How I Became Interested in this Topic • Valuing donations to libraries • High availability of obscure materials • Perceived decline in prices since 2000

  4. Research Funded by LCATS in 2003 • Compared buy and sell adds in AB Bookman’s Weekly (1982 and 1992) with current OP market • 95% availability in all four samples • Decline in prices in inflation-adjusted dollars (-45%) • Mostly books in humanities, history, and social sciences • Same early results in project on science books

  5. Broader Implications • Possible decline in publisher sales • Library users will buy their own books if cheap enough • Less wait • Can mark up • Can buy from home • Don’t need to return

  6. Experiences as an OP Book Dealer • I sold around 2000 titles last year • Prices from $.75 to $160 • I have found rare books at library, garage, and rummage sales • Library books sales have been an excellent source of stock so that giving this talk is against my self interest

  7. Resources for Buying and Selling • The metasearch engines http://used.addall.com/ http://bookfinder.com • The individual dealers

  8. Advantages of OP Market for Buying • 95% availability = almost no distinction between in-print and out-of-print • Retrospective buying for new collecting areas • Repurchasing missing books • Lower prices in general • Many 20th century popular books at $5.00 or less including shipping

  9. Advantages of OP Market for Buying (continued) • Lower prices for libraries that can wait • Purchase as substitute for ILL • Past use as indication of future use • Item available for long-term use • “”Buy not borrow” pilot at Wayne State University • Possible to outsource these purchases

  10. Disadvantages of the OP Market for Buying • Only Alibris consolidates orders for libraries and accepts purchase orders • Strand, Powell’s Books, and Better World Books sell from stock • Other sources list books from multiple vendors • Each purchase is a separate transaction • Each purchase is shipped individually

  11. Disadvantages of the OP Market for Buying (continued) • Most often need a credit card or PayPal account—no purchase orders • Issues with condition, non-delivery, and returns

  12. Selling--Book Sales • Public relations and getting people into the library • Types • Continuous • Frequent on a regular schedule • Once or twice a year

  13. Book Sales--Pricing • Trade paperbacks often equal in value to hard covers • Media depends upon condition • Library can check potentially valuable items

  14. Book Sales-Dealers • Ask yourself why you are bothered by your best customers • If you are, some strategies are: • Higher prices at the beginning of the sale • Preview for members of the Friends group • Not allowing mobile scanners

  15. Selling on the Internet for Libraries--Advantages • Book sales undervalue many books • Increased revenue

  16. Selling on the Internet for Libraries--Disadvantages • Time involved in the process • May be practical only for libraries with “free” volunteers • Can be complicated • Required constant attention though sellers can go “on vacation” • Removes the books from the community • Loses the publicity value of book sales • Local policies may prohibit such sales • Storage space

  17. Using an Intermediary • Two major firms sell materials and give libraries a percentage of the sales • Some restrictions of what they will accept • “Green” disposal of materials • Library can identify “valuable” materials and sell remainder at the book sale

  18. The Two Major Sellers • Both actively seek library partners • Better World Books • Pays shipping • Lower percentage of sales • B-logistics • Does not pay shipping • Higher percentage of sales • Must have ISBN

  19. Where to Sell on the Internet • Ebay—limited selling period, listing fees, payment complexities • Sites with easy of entry for relatively few sales • Half.com—more popular materials, lower prices • Amazon.com—higher fees for casual sellers

  20. Where to Sell on the Internet (continued) • Sites designed for professional sellers and libraries with larger inventories • Abebooks • Alibris

  21. How to Sell Successfully on the Internet • Good service in all areas to achieve a high feedback rating • Accurate description of condition • Prompt shipping with excellent packaging • Dealing with occasional problems • Statement of non-profit status probably makes little difference

  22. What to Sell—General Considerations • Search possible candidates on the metasearch sites • Higher priced items however the libraries defines this • You might also put them aside for the local book dealer or to send to the intermediaries • Items with a sales record • Library discards can be sold but are less popular

  23. What to Sell—Subject and Format (My Opinions) • Mass market paperbacks—no except perhaps those in pristine condition • Hard cover fiction—no except if rare or currently in high demand • Coffee table books—beautiful but impossible to sell if available as remainders

  24. What to Sell—Subject and Format (continued) • Children’s books—no in general with some difficult to identify exceptions • Trade paperbacks—many sell well especially those used in college courses • Textbooks—no in not current; sell extremely well if still in use • Religious books--yes

  25. What to Sell—Subject and Format (continued) • University press books—yes if used in courses; otherwise slow movers • Media—depends on format, condition, popularity, and scarcity • Rare books—Amazon, Alibris, or perhaps Ebay

  26. Final Selling Considerations • How to arrange inventory for easy retrieval • By format • By title, author, or date of listing • Determining when to remove an item from sale

  27. Theft and the OP Market • Shelf books and media now have enough value to be stolen and sold • Library discards are common in the op market though sell for less • Anonymity of sales • Thief can buy a “discard” stamp

  28. Theft--Identification • Almost all DVD’s • Mobile scanning services • Search ILS from home • General knowledge of the trade

  29. Thefts from the Collection • Many libraries have valuable books on the open shelves • Steal the books from the library • False check outs • Interlibrary loan • Pay replacement cost • Ownership does not transfer

  30. Thefts from the Collection • Employee theft • Less security including after hours and unsecured exits • Weed the book to be bought later • Collections expert examine books

  31. Thefts of Gift Books • More valuable on the market • Usually will not be missed • Removed when received or during pick up • Security cameras to inhibit theft or catch thief

  32. Questions It’s your turn to ask any questions.

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