Fr. 132.00

Patron-Driven Acquisitions - History and Best Practices

English · Hardback

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Description

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About 40 percent of the books academic libraries purchase in traditional ways never circulate and another 40 percent circulate fewer than three times. By contrast, patron-driven acquisition allows a library to borrow or buy books only when a patron needs them. In a typical workflow, the library imports bibliographic records into its catalogue at no cost. When a patron finds a patron-driven record in the course of research, a short-term loan can allow him to borrow the book, and the transaction charge to the library will be a small percentage of the list price. Typically, a library will automatically buy a book on a third or fourth use. The contributions in this volume, written by experts, describe the genesis and brief history of patron-driven acquisitions, its current status, and its promise.

About the author










David A. Swords, New Hampshire/USA, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for eBook Library, a major innovator in technology forpatron-driven acquisitions

Report

"Overall, Patron-driven Acquisitions can be confidently recommended to all academic libraries both those currently planning to move in a patron-driven direction, and those unsure of whether such an approach makes sense or perhaps even of what all the fuss is about. Its authors effectively cover all of the most pressing and relevant questions about PDA theory and practice, and offer highly useful tools to readers interesting in assessing the practice's viability and likely consequences."
Rick Anderson in: Library Review 6/2012

Product details

Assisted by Davi A Swords (Editor), David A Swords (Editor), David A. Swords (Editor)
Publisher De Gruyter
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 25.10.2011
 
EAN 9783110253016
ISBN 978-3-11-025301-6
No. of pages 205
Dimensions 160 mm x 18 mm x 234 mm
Weight 446 g
Series Current Topics in Library and Information Practice
Current Topics in Library and Information Practice
ISSN
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Book trade, library system

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