Reconfiguring Academic Collections: the role of shared print repositories

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MLAC Advisory Board 23 February 2011 Reconfiguring Academic Collections: the role of shared print repositories Constance Malpas Program Officer, OCLC Research

Roadmap The Big Shift - why shared print, why now? Emerging infrastructure - shared repositories Shared print service provision - opportunities, challenges Minnesota in perspective - maximizing MLAC value

What once made us great no longer matters Declining return on assets Brand loyalty on the decline A workforce that s lost its passion Fewer leaders, with a precarious hold on the top Digital infrastructure is driving change Sound familiar?

A Big Shift in attention, resources

Shared Print: what s the problem? Shift in scholarly attention from print to electronic means low-use retrospective print collections are perceived to deliver less library value Competing demands for library space: teaching, learning, collaborative research vs. warehouse of books Among academic libraries, a shrinking pool of institutions with mandate, capacity to support print preservation As transaction costs for managing legacy print collections decrease, libraries will seek to externalize print operations to shared repositories

Boundary work Shared print is a prime example: a core operation that is moving outside institutional boundaries University of California Orbis Cascade WEST CIC Hathi Print CAVAL, UKRR, JURA etc.

Shared Print: OCLC Research Active portfolio of work since FY2007: North American library storage capacity (2007) ~70M volumes in storage; further capital investment unlikely Policy requirements shared print repositories (2009) critical need: disclosure of print preservation commitments Leveraging infrastructure: MARC21 583 Action Note (2009) copy-level retention, condition statements are required Cloud-sourcing research collections (2010) mass digitization of monographs accelerates shift to shared print

Built Capacity in Volume Equivalents (2007) Growth of US library storage infrastructure 140,000,000 Aggregate off-site capacity has increased exponentially 120,000,000 100,000,000 80,000,000 + 70 million volumes 68 highdensity facilities 60,000,000 40,000,000 this trend is unlikely to continue 20,000,000 0 2 high-density facilities 1982 1986 1987 1992 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Date of Original Construction Derived from L. Payne (OCLC, 2007)

No room, no room in MLAC (and elsewhere) Total contributions from UMTC From other contributors Derived from MLAC Statistical Overview, 2010.

Projected growth of HathiTrust Digital Library June 2010 - June 2020 40,000,000 35,000,000 30,000,000 25,000,000 20,000,000 15,000,000 10,000,000 5,000,000 0 Growth in volumes Linear (Series1) Harvard University Library in constant 2008 volumes * Growth in titles Linear (Series2) * Library of Congress in constant 2008 volumes OCLC Research. June 2010

Aggregate preservation resource: a black box? Of 68 storage facilities identified in Payne (OCLC, 2007): 2 are visible in WorldCat today: UC NRLF & UC SRLF Proxies: CRL, LC? Among 9 ASERL storage collections profiled in 2004: 80% of monographic titles held in a single storage facility 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Titles in shared print collections less widely held? Less widely held SRLF (ZAS) NRLF (ZAP) CRL More widely held AZ State (AZS) UC Irvine (CUI) Rutgers (NJR) <25 libraries 25-99 libraries 100-499 libraries >499 libraries

Shared Print value proposition(s) 1) Ensures long-term survivability of last copies and lowuse print journals and books Extension of traditional repository function; limited motivation to subsidize 2) Enables reduction in redundant inventory for moderately and widely-held titles, facilitating redirection of library resources toward more distinctive service portfolio Strategic reserve provides a hedge against disruption in the marketplace, rapid fluctuations in scholarly value & function of print; provides tangible value to participant

Premise of Cloud Library project Emergence of large scale shared print and digital repositories creates an opportunity for strategic externalization of traditional repository function Reduce total costs of preserving scholarly record Enable reallocation of institutional resources Support renovation of library service portfolio Create new business relationships among libraries A bridge strategy to guarantee access and preservation of long tail, low use collections during ongoing p- to e- transition

Shared infrastructure: books & bits Academic off-site storage 0101010101010 25 years +70M vols. 1010101010101 0101010101010 1010101010101 0101010101010 HathiTrust 15 months +5M vols. Will this intersection create new operational efficiencies? For which libraries? Under what conditions? How soon and with what impact?

% of Titles in Local Collection A global change in the library environment 60% 50% 40% Academic print book collection already substantially duplicated in mass digitized book corpus June 2010 Median duplication: 31% 30% 20% 10% June 2009 Median duplication: 19% 0% 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 OCLC Research. June 2010 Rank in 2008 ARL Investment Index

A mirror of the academic print collection Distribution of Titles in HathiTrust Digital Library by Subject and Copyright Status (June 2010) Communicable Diseases & Misc. Health Facilities, Nursing Physical Education & Recreation Medicine By Body System Preclinical Sciences Chemistry Computer Science Psychology Medicine By Discipline Performing Arts Anthropology Mathematics Health Professions & Public Health Agriculture Biological Sciences Medicine Geography & Earth Sciences Physical Sciences Law Education Music Sociology Library Science, Reference Political Science Government Documents Engineering & Technology Art & Architecture Philosophy & Religion Business & Economics Unknown Classification History & Auxiliary Sciences Language, Linguistics & Literature Foreshadows a shift in humanities scholarship? Public Domain In Copyright 0 100,000 200,000 300,000 400,000 500,000 600,000 700,000 800,000 900,000 1,000,000 N = 3.64M titles Titles / Editions C. Malpas Cloud-sourcing Research Collections (OCLC, 2010)

An opportunity and a challenge >50% of titles are widely held An opportunity to rationalize holdings, but library print supply chain will be needed for some time OCLC Research. June 2010 >80% of titles are in copyright

Unique Titles Mass-digitized books in print repositories 3,500,000 3,000,000 ~75% of mass digitized corpus is backed up in one or more shared print repositories ~3.5M titles ~2.5M 2,500,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 500,000 0 Sep-09 Oct-09 Nov-09 Dec-09 Jan-10 Feb-10 Mar-10 Apr-10 May-10 Jun-10 Mass digitized books in Hathi digital repository Mass digitized books in shared print repositories

Prediction Within the next 5-10 years, focus of shared print archiving and service provision will shift to monographic collections large scale service hubs will provide low-cost print management on a subscription basis; reducing local expenditure on print operations, releasing space for new uses and facilitating a redirection of library resources; enabling rationalization of aggregate print collection and renovation of library service portfolio Mass digitization of retrospective print collections will drive this transition

Shared print service provision... WHAT WILL IT TAKE?

% of HathiTrust titles duplicated in print repository Shared Print provision: capacity varies OCLC Research. Analysis based on HathiTrust and WorldCat snapshot data. Data current as of February 2011.

Shared print marketplace: who has the edge? C. Malpas Cloud-sourcing Research Collections (OCLC, 2010)

Or, reconfigure resource to maximize value C. Malpas Cloud-sourcing Research Collections (OCLC, 2010)

UMTC as Shared Print Supplier? UMTC could provide just-in-case print fulfillment for almost 30% of titles in the HathiTrust Digital Library 32% 27% OCLC Research. Analysis based on HathiTrust and WorldCat snapshot data. Data current as of February 2011.

Sizing up a Supplier: the 76% solution 738,556 MSU Mankato (MNM) holdings in WorldCat; 1.2M volumes Represents at least 1.9 miles of library shelving @ MSU [not held by UTMC] ~213K duplicated in HathiTrust Digital Library OCLC Research. Analysis based on HathiTrust and WorldCat snapshot data. Data current as of February 2011.

Management Perspective: How Much is Enough? Shared Print service must deliver Space recovery equal to one floor at outset Volume reduction equal to X years of print acquisitions Cost not to exceed current storage options Minimize (visible) disruption in operations If management of mass-digitized monographs could be externalized to large scale providers today: average space recovery of 20,000 ASF per ARL library cost avoidance of ~$1M for new storage module cost avoidance of $1M per year for on-site management

Staff Perspective: What s Good Enough Shared Print service provision must equal or exceed Turnaround/delivery from local storage (<2 days) Local loan period Local access/availability guarantee, ability to recall etc Discoverability of local resource Local retention mandated when title held by <10 libraries No one mentioned... Home delivery option direct to patron Acceptable loss rate repository viability Penalties for late return impact on other clients

Implications: Shared Print A small number of repositories may suffice for global shared print provision of low-use monographs Generic service offer is needed to achieve economies of scale, build network; uniform T&C Fuller disclosure of storage collections is needed to judge capacity of current infrastructure, identify potential hubs Service hubs will need to shape inventory to market needs; more widely duplicated, moderately used titles If extant providers aren t motivated to change service model, a new organization may be needed

Example 1: MLAC as collection of record One of 26K volumes MSU Moorhead has deposited in MLAC a relatively scarce edition, 13 holdings in WorldCat 17 editions published between 1910 and 1960, a popular classic

Example 1: MLAC as collection of record Available in full-view from HathiTrust Satisfactory surrogate for at least some use cases May reduce demand for MLAC copy, improving chances of survival Retain in MLAC as state-wide preservation asset

Example 2. MLAC as surrogate print source One of the 800K titles UMTC has on deposit in MLAC this edition held by more than 2000 WorldCat libraries, including 33 in MN low network demand; 42 WCRS requests since 2007, none in Minnesota

Example 2. MLAC as surrogate print source In copyright, search-only version available from HathiTrust end of the value chain? not quite...

Example 2. MLAC as surrogate print source searching in this text can tell me if the book is really the one I want restores a level of browsing access can moderate just MLAC can offer partner libraries the opportunity to winnow checking demand from local holdings safely, for thousands of low-use titles MLAC, keeping delivering real value to library network operational costs down

Shared print in perspective... LOCAL CONTEXT

Academic libraries in Minnesota: a common trajectory, different timelines 80% Oberlin Non-ARL academic Community College ARL 70% 60% 50% 40% The next few years are critical Jan 12 * Apr 12 Mar 13 * * * May 13 30% 20% 10% Where is the regional infrastructure to support this change? 0% OCLC Research. Analysis based on HathiTrust and WorldCat snapshot data. Data current as of February 2011.

Diversity of educational mandates Less reliant on traditional library infrastructure OCLC Research. Derived from NCES Academic Libraries Survey, 2008.

Circulation per FTE student is on a decline Declining ROA? OCLC Research. Derived from NCES Academic Libraries Surveys, 1992-2000.

A long term, system-wide trend US Academic Library Expenditures vs. Total Spending on Post-Secondary Education $400,000,000 $350,000,000 $300,000,000 $250,000,000 $200,000,000 $150,000,000 $100,000,000 $50,000,000 $0 $6.8 billion in 2008 3.00% 2.50% 2.00% 1.50% 1.00% 0.50% 0.00% Aggregate US Spending on Post-Secondary Education US Library Operating Exp. as % of Ed. Spending OCLC Research. Derived from data reported in NCES Digest of Education Statistics: 2008.

No. of Institutions No. of Institutions Shift in provision of higher education 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 2000-2001 2001-2002 Distribution of Post-Secondary Educational Institutions in the United States by Source of Funding (derived from NCES data) Distribution of Post-Secondary Educational Institutions in the United States by Source of Funding 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 2002-2003 0 Distribution of Post-Secondary Educational Institutions in the United States by Source of Funding (derived from NCES data) 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 OCLC Research. Derived from data reported in NCES Digest of Education Statistics: 2008. 2006-2007 2007-2008 For Profit Public For P Public Privat Private Not-for-Profit

Increasing privatization of higher education Academic Libraries in Minnesota by Control & Funding Public Private 100 90 80 70 48% 48% 56% 57% 60 50 40 30 20 10 52% 52% 44% 43% 0 2000 2004 2006 2008 OCLC Research. Derived from NCES Academic Libraries Surveys, 2000, 2004, 2006 and 2008.

Higher Education funding cuts in 43 States

Minnesota: the big freeze $370M cut in higher education spending for FY12-FY14 Impact on MINITEX? MLAC ~3% of MINITEX budget http://www.house.leg.state.mn.us/fiscal/files/11hf130.pdf 8 February 2011

Moving forward: maximizing MLAC value Leverage MINITEX brand as resource-sharing partner to build confidence in MLAC as regional source of surrogate supply FY10 saw decline in request activity; might centralization of (some) supply help reduce overhead? Life-cycle costs of managing print in MLAC less than a third of costs on campus is total value of MLAC collection being realized? MLAC serves diverse clientele of HE, public and private libraries, some of which may opt to outsource print management services will an existing partners help model a new set of behaviors?

A closing thought If we don t demonstrate a little backbone developing shared print solutions the future of legacy print may look something like this A swift end of life or a scandalous spectacle?

Thanks for your attention. Comments, Questions? Constance Malpas malpasc@oclc.org