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Agents, Publishers, & Added Value:

Agents, Publishers, & Added Value:. How Librarians View the Performance of Subscription Agents & Journal Publishers. Why We Surveyed. At a national American library conference publishers challenged the worth of subscription agents Librarians challenged back. Swamp Fox Gang: Who We Are.

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Agents, Publishers, & Added Value:

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  1. Agents, Publishers, & Added Value: How Librarians View the Performance of Subscription Agents & Journal Publishers

  2. Why We Surveyed • At a national American library conference publishers challenged the worth of subscription agents • Librarians challenged back

  3. Swamp Fox Gang: Who We Are • Rick Anderson- Assoc. Dir. for Scholarly Resources & Collections, University of Utah • Jill Emery-Head of Acquisitions, University of Texas @ Austin • Gary Ives-Electronic Resource Acquisitions Librarian, Texas A&M University • Dana Walker-Head of Acquisitions, University of Georgia Libraries

  4. Structure of the Survey • Librarian Demographic Information (6) • Publisher and Subscription Agent (2) • Satisfaction with Publishers (9) • Satisfaction with Subscription Agents (9) • Rating of Publishers and Subscription Agents (9) • Open ended “Final Comments”

  5. Areas of Service Satisfaction • Customer service • Management of subscription list • Accuracy of renewal and invoicing • Timeliness of renewal and invoicing • Providing administrative metadata • Providing technological services • Accurate price calculation under contract • Correct initial access activation • Resolution of access problems

  6. Administration of Survey • Administered thru SurveyMonkey • Survey approved by the Institutional Review Board – Human Subjects in Research, Texas A&M University. • Potential participants were invited by: • Direct email to individuals at ARL libraries • General calls for participation to relevant discussion lists • “Test” version of survey provided.

  7. Analysis • Total of 179 responses • Filtered for librarians working at university libraries who serve as liaisons to both publishers and subscription agents • 77 filtered responses used in this analysis

  8. Breakdown of Package Deals Percent of respondents with package deals: • Blackwell: 67% • Elsevier: 90% • Sage: 49% • Springer: 77% • T & F: 44% • Wiley: 83%

  9. Unsurprising Results • Overall subscription agents were rated as providing better service • Specifically, subscription agents did better on title list management & renewals • Subscription agents also did much better on technological services such as EDI invoicing • Publishers not in control of needed administrative metadata (order numbers, fund codes) • Publishers good at resolution of access problems

  10. Surprising Results • Narrow margins between publishers & subscription agents on overall service • Margins narrow between Sage, Wiley & subscription agents on renewal processing • Publishers significantly slower on renewals • Subscription agents ranked high on accuracy of pricing/invoicing under special license conditions • Subscription agents ranked fairly high in resolution of access problems

  11. Comments from Respondents “The annual renewal for packages has been an ongoing nightmare. Clearly publishers cannot handle this task efficiently and should move to a non-reconciliation model or let our subscription agents handle this. The number of hours spent on reconciliation is unbelievable!” “Publishers need to understand what libraries need for maintenance AND they should be committed to working with subscription vendors who provide these necessary services for us. I am up to my eyeballs in problems because of the publishers' lack of management of these packages!” “Every year, it takes many e-mails to straighten out our list of active and cancelled titles. We use an agent for their titles, but when it comes to getting the title list correct, we end up communicating with [publisher name] directly, since going through our agent for that matter would add more delay. Using the agent is convenient for invoicing in our case, since almost 1,000 titles are paid on different subject budgets. Our invoices are loaded electronically (EDI invoicing).”

  12. More Comments “Our agents have been ahead of the curve all along and continue to lead the way.” “In general we experience far more problems with our subscription agent than with our publishers. However, our subscription agent is very proficient at dealing with access issues...it's just that some of the access issues were the direct result of our subscription agent not paying a publisher even though that package was on our invoice and renewal.” “You needed to have either a three point or a five point rating scale. Choosing between Good or Poor just wasn't granular enough. How about Satisfactory?”

  13. Reactions from the Charleston Conference • Surprisingly vocal discontent with subscription agents • Grudging acknowledgment that publishers do a better job than expected • Still see room for improvement from both parties

  14. Concluding Thought#1 Services have never been better! • In terms of Big Deals, things won’t get much worse for agents • However, if agents improve their handling of Big Deals, things could gradually get worse for publishers Services have never been better!

  15. Concluding Thought #2 We are confident in our title list management! Subscription-list findings should be a wake-up call for publishers We are confident in our title list management!

  16. Concluding Thought #3 Interesting. • Findings on back-office effectiveness should also be a wake-up call for publishers • There may be a role in the marketplace for an agency specialising in subscription management for publishers I don’t like that idea Rick!

  17. Concluding Thought #4 Or, perhaps publishers could start outsourcing those tasks to subscription agents themselves We can discuss it. We can discuss it.

  18. Survey results can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/3x9g5uQuestions? Rick Anderson, University of Utah rick.anderson@utah.edu Jill Emery, University of Texas at Austin j.emery@austin.utexas.edu

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