On October 10, the New York Collection Development Discussion Group
met at the American Folk Art Museum, courtesy of James Mitchell, the Museum librarian.
Heidi Hess, Head of the Reference Collection,The Pierpont Morgan Library
has kindly submitted the minutes. Thanks to all the partecipants:
it was a great meeting.
New York Collection Development Discussion Group
October 10, 2003
American Folk Art Museum
The meeting began with a welcome from James Mitchell, Librarian of the American Folk Art Museum. He introduced AnnaMaria Poma-Swank, who discussed the agenda for the meeting, and introduced our featured speaker, William P. Kane, regional sales manager for Alibris Library Services. Mr. Kane is a former bibliographic instruction, systems, and collection development librarian, with an MLS from the University of Pittsburgh, and over a dozen years of experience in academic libraries before joining the vendor side of the business.
Mr. Kane began by stating that Amazon could have been more popular with libraries if they'd chosen to be, and that Alibris understands that libraries purchase books differently than individuals do. He believes that acquisitions librarians can work easily with the Alibris database, and that Alibris has paid attention to libraries' need to use purchase orders, and to record a selector's name, for example. The Alibris database can be searched by subject, by LC classification number, and by call number range, in addition to author, title and keyword.
Three years ago Alibris had 5 million books from 800 dealers, today they have 30 million books, and over 4,000 booksellers in their database. There are some coffee table books, of course, but Mr. Kane states that millions of titles are unique in the database. When multiple copies exist they are listed separately to show condition. Supply and demand means that prices and margins go down; however, particularly for astute dealers, sales are up. Twenty percent of Amazon's sales are now for used books.
Question: what is the relationship between book dealers, and Alibris, Abebooks, etc.
Alibris has their own warehouse in Sparks, Nevada, which contains their own inventory of 1 million books, which they price and describe. Book dealers must have a minimum inventory of 1,500 titles listed on Alibris; listing is free. Abebooks charges dealers a per title fee for listing; when a book is sold on Alibris they buy the book from the dealer at a discount, and make money by adding a fee. Alibris does all invoicing, and will try to send books together, on one invoice. All returns are made to Alibris, regardless of whether the book was originally theirs, or from a dealer.
Regarding retrospective collection development: it is cheaper to buy one book at a time, but a consolidator like Alibris will take a list of wants in an Excel spreadsheet, match it against their database, and create a report of what's available.
A museum librarian in the audience is trying to persuade his book store manager to list excess collection catalogues on Alibris, since listing is free. Cover price is discounted 20 percent. Advanced Book Exchange (Abebooks) just eliminated their library service, so library orders are now directed to the individual dealer, and libraries must determine correct payment type, foreign currency, etc.
Alibris' fill rate is 90%; 10% of orders are cancelled because a book is no longer available. Alibris serves all types of libraries, not just academic, for example, like Blackwell's. They are working with Yale on several special retrospective collection development projects.
Alibris has ca. 6,000 library customers, most of which use Alibris for only a small percentage of monograph orders. Ten percent of the $2 billion world-wide library book buying budget is estimated to go towards used books.
Question: are European publications available? The money dried up for Alibris Europe some time ago, but they do have UK, Spanish Portuguese and some German titles in the database. Mr. Kane prefers the distinction "available/not available" to "in print/out of print."
The Alibris database contains 600,000 titles from Ingram. Yankee Book Peddler and Blackwell's are partners; it would be advantageous to have the database mirrored in their "Collection manager"-type products. The Alibris database has a file of 40 million MARC records, bought from the British Library and LC at 10 cents apiece, to back up its search functions. If Alibris does not list a title, it will offer to re-submit the search in WorldCat. All Alibris titles are not necessarily listed in search engines such as Bookfinder or Add All.
Alibris employs 60 people in their warehouse. They process 50 books/hour, by pre-populating most fields with data from the database; they are mainly adding condition information and price. The company was originally financed by $29 million in venture capital; Marty Manley, CEO, bought Dick Weatherford's company, Interloc. The company will probably not go public, but may be purchased.
Other services of interest to libraries: when purchasing books from foreign dealers, price is still in dollars, and the mark-up does not increase. Shipping for more than 10 books is free, regardless of point of origin. Alibris will accept purchase orders without a pre-approval process.
New and forthcoming titles are a headache to list because of claims, but Mr. Kane does hope to list more new titles as they are published. They will work with their partners on this.
For a copy of Mr. Kane's handout (in MS Powerpoint) please e-mail Heidi Hass [log in to unmask]
Topic: Consortial Subscriptions to expensive databases.
General consensus: budgets are smaller than they were, and that it's very time-consuming to organize a consortium oneself. Suggested alternatives include:
NYLINK <http://nylink.suny.edu> (it's not necessary to be an OCLC member library)
Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design <http://www.aicad.org/>
Westchester Academic Library Directors Consortium (WALDO) <http://waldolib.org>
Topic: FirstSearch: elimination of Wilson databases from per search option.
WilsonSelect will be the only Wilson database available from FirstSearch on a transaction (per search) and subscription basis after December 17, 2003. It includes Art Index, but only to 1994 (not 1984). Art Index will only be available from Wilson directly; Art Abstracts will only be available from Wilson or via FirstSearch subscription.
Strategies for coping include: create a relationship with a larger nearby institution. Join a group such as METRO to enable your users to use other libraries. Point your users to institutions such as NYPL, or research libraries that admit credentialed users. Columbia librarians report that all users are now charged for each page printed, so that new reader cards for outside users are required. Outside readers also have a limit of a set number of days. Cooperative acquisition program for electronic resources discussed again; a meeting with, or report from, the New York Electronic Resources Discussion Group was thought desirable. (That group will meet Nov. 14 at the Frick Art Reference Library; contact Suz Massen for information [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> ) In a related collaborative effort, the American Folk Art Museum, the Whitney and ICP are discussing some sort of shared arrangement with their Voyager databases, perhaps getting Endeavor to host them.
The meeting concluded, and participants enjoyed a reception courtesy of the museum and James Mitchell.
Submitted by Heidi Hass
Nov. 14, 2003
Next meeting tentative schedule will be posted in January 2004.
Happy holidays to all.
Annamaria Poma-Swank, Ph.D.
Associate Museum Librarian
The Cloisters Library & Archives
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fort Tryon Park
New York, NY 10040-1171
(212) 396-5367
fax: (212) 795-3640
[log in to unmask]
Associate Visiting Professor, SILS, Prqtt Institute, NY, NY
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