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What are the main difficulties of handling ejournals and ebooks compared to print journals?

Besides the difficulty of managing ejournals and ebooks compared to print versions. Why is eresource management, keeping a accurate knowledge base etc is so hard?

aarontay

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Answer by dsalo

Assuming one doesn't have a vendor ERM product, one must maintain or handle:

  1. A-Z lists
  2. Holdings in the OPAC (and whole records for newly-acquired journals)
  3. Link resolver knowledgebase (which I'm told is tricky to troubleshoot)
  4. Proxy server (with all the IP address fiddling that entails)
  5. Usage stats (even when they say they're COUNTER compliant, they're often not... and not all of them even try for compliance)
  6. Invoicing, bills, etc.
  7. Troubleshooting, when something in the above rickety stack goes wrong. As it does.

That's a lot. And I probably missed some things!

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Answer by eclecticlibrarian

The main thing I find, aside from dsalo's list, is that you are working with virtual items rather than physical, which means your workflow must change to include more documentation of where you are in the process.

If you subscribe to a print journal and it doesn't arrive when you expect it to, your ILS usually notifies you that it's late, and then you can do something about it. Not so with an ejournal. Usually it's your ILL or public services departments that notify you when you don't have access, unless you dedicate staff to checking every title on a regular basis.

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Answer by smatheson

One other thing that is different than handling physical items is that the various packages and aggregators present a moving target of titles and coverages. This is a part of daslo's #3 above.

If you receive and checkin a journal issue, it stays on the shelf (or checked out) until you bind it or weed it. If you add holdings for "The Journal of Irreproducible Results" from a package or aggregator, then next year the package changes, that journal disappears.

This is why large or serials-intensive libraries often use a third party service to track these changes and populate their knowledgebases and/or catalog holdings. Examples are Serials Solutions, Ex Libris SFX Knowledge Base, Worldcat knowledge base. These services allow librarians to say "We have package X" and lets the service keep track of what's actually in that package.

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