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JUSP: The University of Portsmouth Experience Sarah Weston Data Manager University Library.

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Presentation on theme: "JUSP: The University of Portsmouth Experience Sarah Weston Data Manager University Library."— Presentation transcript:

1 JUSP: The University of Portsmouth Experience Sarah Weston Data Manager University Library

2 Background At Portsmouth we do not currently have an ERM system or usage statistics packages Usage data is stored locally and retrieved from multiple administration accounts. Currently collecting data from 60+ different sources in relationship to electronic journals alone Primary objective of our internal benchmarking was to evaluate our ‘Big Deals’, determine value for money and provide a sound evidence base to assist decision making

3 Benchmarking activities Initial venture into ‘Big Deal’ benchmarking was around 18- 24 months ago – adopted a teamwork approach Keen to explore the extent to which we felt our deals were providing us with value for money and to look at the implications if we were to consider cancellations At that time we did not have the benefit of JUSP and so our early activity was a little ad hoc and not necessarily the most time efficient in terms of process

4 Initial process Decided to focus on three medium sized deals and adopted a two strand approach Activity AActivity B  Obtain full title lists across multiple years and track changes  Obtain lists of PRE X subs  Obtain title counts for deals  Obtain costs data  Access usage from publisher platforms  Amalgamate any usage from aggregator/host platforms  Remove any archive data  Match usage with deal titles Having determined the number of titles in the deal on a year by year basis, how much they cost and how much they were used ((JR1-JR1a) + Aggregator + Host) it was possible to do some cost per use calculations

5 Key issues For a three year period this was time consuming and involved lots of steps Obtaining accurate title lists (current and old) was not always easy Records of PRE X subs did not always match No one place to access information and data formats often differed Needed to remove all of the ‘weird and wonderful’

6 Internal Coding Colour coding was adopted to distinguish PRE X subs from titles within the deal Titles were also tracked to show at what points they entered the deal as this was important in terms of calculations

7 What could JUSP do for us? We like JUSP and it is doing more for us on a month by month basis! Our needs: On-going time series of data Usage amalgamated from all sources Ability to easily identify PRE X subs and titles within the deal over time Ability to extract title usage relating to open access, trials etc. Need to include some elements of print (on our own here!)

8 A few of our favourite things! Having already started to add our subscribed titles the ‘titles versus deals’ report enables us to identify titles within our deal which is our baseline for analysis and separate the PRE X titles to accurately benchmark our costs

9 A few of our favourite things! Downloading a copy of the CSV file for this report you can see that some additional information has been added in terms of aggregator usage

10 Titles included in deals across multiple years The titles within deals over time report gives at a glance information of how deal content has changed to facilitate accurate reporting

11 Publisher usage by title and year The most valuable report for our benchmarking, eliminating a significant number of steps and providing an accurate time series upon which to import our own data

12 Titles and usage range This report is likely to be important, one of our internal benchmarks has been three figure usage. The ability to see at a glance the breakdown of package usage will be helpful

13 Impact The portal manipulates our usage data and significantly reduces the number of steps prior to our own analysis Our benchmarking had focused on smaller deals, however, this will make our larger reports much easier to manage and time efficient to produce We have not always known exactly what we have wanted and some of the more experimental reports have been particularly welcomed

14 Where do we go from here? The portal provides us with an accurate record of titles and usage in a deal over time Allows us to produce accurate reports into which we can now import cost data and subsequently calculate costs per download either within deal or at title level From this we are able to apply some our own internal criteria for benchmarking and look at titles within a certain cost per download banding, three figure usage, Pre X subs or status of the title as determined by faculty/departments

15 Summary The portal provides us with a valuable ‘one stop shop’ It has assisted us with our internal processes Continues to evolve and responds to user needs


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