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Fostering Collaborative Selection and Acquisitions: A Key to Cost-Effective and Quality Resources

Fostering Collaborative Selection and Acquisitions: A Key to Cost-Effective and Quality Resources. ELVIRA B. LAPUZ eblapuz@gmail.com. Library relations in the form of:. Companionship Collaboration Association Cooperation Alliances Fraternization -- Anglada, 2007.

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Fostering Collaborative Selection and Acquisitions: A Key to Cost-Effective and Quality Resources

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  1. Fostering Collaborative Selection and Acquisitions: A Key to Cost-Effective andQuality Resources ELVIRA B. LAPUZ eblapuz@gmail.com

  2. Library relations in the form of: • Companionship • Collaboration • Association • Cooperation • Alliances • Fraternization -- Anglada, 2007

  3. Collaborations and Partnerships • “When you cannot go at it alone and succeed, collaboration becomes a prerequisite to effectiveness”; it is natural for institutions to “come together to assemble sufficient collective confidence, knowledge, financial resources or political power to enable them to be effective”(Austin, 2000, Harvard Business School)

  4. The advent of user collaborative technology provides new ways to address readers/reference services. The same spirited, innovative thinking that catapulted Web 2.0 services to the forefront in many academic libraries can also reinvigorate how libraries and information centers develop partnerships. – Arlante, 2008

  5. Resource Sharing • Most likely outcome of consortia efforts • Activities engaged in jointly by a group of libraries for the purposes of improving services and/or cutting costs • Maybe established by informal or formal agreement or by contract • May operate locally, nationally or internationally

  6. Collaborative activities to include: • Cooperative collection development • Coordinated acquisitions • Joint acquisitions • Shared collection information -- Evans and Saponaro, 2005

  7. Cooperative collection development • Two or more libraries agreeing that each shall have certain areas of “primary collecting responsibility” • Exchange of materials with one another free of charge • i.e., Farmington Plan • Scandia Models

  8. Coordinated Acquisitions • Two or more libraries agreeing to buy certain materials and/or share the cost/s and one or more members gets to keep to keep and maintain the material • i.e, LACAP/CRL model

  9. Joint acquisitions • Member libraries place a joint order for a product or service, and each member receives the product/service • i.e, agreements for e-databases subscriptions

  10. Shared collection information • Members use information in a shared database about collection holdings to influence their selection and acquisitions decisions • Has some form of document delivery for Inter-Library Loans • i.e, linked OPACs

  11. Gains and benefits of cooperation and collaboration • Increased and improved access  • Makes it possible to stretch limited resources • Greater staff specialization • May reduce the number of places a customer will need to go for services • Improved working relationships among cooperating libraries

  12. It’s all about building NETWORKS

  13. Local Library Networks • DOST-ESEP Library Network • Inter-Institutional Consortium (IIC) or South Manila Consortium • Mendiola Consortium • Intramuros Library Consortium • Health Research and Development Information Network (HERDIN) • Association of Research and Academic Library Information Network (ARALIN) • Ortigas Center Library Consortium Inc. • Philippine Association of Academic and Research Libraries Network (PAARLNET)

  14. PAARL Book Acquisition Consortium • Select library vendor (YBP) • Quote titles at list or publisher’s price • Cater to libraries regardless of size • Each member library with separate account and given 5-10% discount • Door to door delivery • NO shipping and handling charges

  15. Why collaborate? • In the world of academic and research libraries, collaboration and partnerships should pave the way for the sharing, efficient collecting and managing cooperatively of resources and for the more effective means of achieving of long-term preservation goals

  16. Source: http://www.scls.info/danecollections/images/imagemap.jpg

  17. Exercise: Creating a Partnership Plan Instructions: Working in a designated small group: • Choose a recorder to capture ideas on chart or paper. • Group members are potential partners and by answering the questions, you will develop a long-term partnership plan • Choose a group member to summarize highlights for class.

  18. Questions! • What is the seed idea—the initial vision—for the partnership? (Goals and Objectives) • What’s in it for the library? • What’s in it for the partner? • Which staff members need to be included? • What is needed in terms of staff time and cost? Whose jobs will the partnership affect? • Who needs to be informed about this partnership (Administration, users, benefactors, etc.

  19. The development of organizations and groups of organizations depends on their ability to work togetherand to establish a framework in which individual goals are attained thanks to external achievementsor situations. Libraries are no exception to this!-- Anglada, 2007

  20. ELVIRA B. LAPUZ University of the Philippines eblapuz@gmail.com

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