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Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

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Krystyna Ross, eBOUND Canada's CEO, outlines two initiatives to get Canadian-published digital content accessible in Canadian public and academic libraries. Learn the background of the projects and where the succeeded and failed, and how we're moving forward with new library sales projects for Canadian publishers.

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Page 1: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Canadian Ebooks

in Canadian

Libraries

Page 2: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Background

In 2012 eBOUND Canada identified a need to

work with Canadian libraries to increase both

their holdings and user access of Canadian

titles. Two projects were initiated with focus on:

• Public Libraries

• Academic Libraries

Page 3: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Pilot Timeline

• two years of talks

• joint publisher-library task force

• RFI in June 2012

• RFP in March 2013

• vendor selection in June 2013

• negotiations through November 2013

Page 4: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

• diminish the role of the vendor

• seamless access via ILS / discovery layer

• control content + terms

• relationship with libraries

• increase discoverability

• a made-in-Canada solution

Page 5: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries
Page 6: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Moving Ahead

• build collections of Canadian ebooks

• frontlist, backlist, regional

• offer a limited time sale

• partner with vendor/s to facilitate sale

• build library-publisher relations

Page 7: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

The Vendor Challenge

• For libraries, introducing a new vendor

means introducing a new lending platform

• Only 1 Vendor, OverDrive, currently works

with all CULC libraries

Page 8: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

The Vendor Challenge

Some new players coming on board:

• 3M

• Bibliocommons

• One-Click

• De Marque

• Axis 360

How do we ensure Canadian titles are represented?

Page 9: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

Academic

Library Project

• ACUP / eBOUND Partnership

• eBOUND brokered a meeting with

University Library Consortia to meet

with ACUP

Page 10: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

OCUL Deal

• Objectives

– Libraries wanted comprehensive collections

– An agreement that would be sustainable for

both sides

• Key Terms

– Collections grouped into Backlist, Frontlist &

Current collections with different discounts for

each collection

– Publishers set DRM per title from range of 4

options, reviewed annually

Page 11: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

OCUL Outcome

• After 18 months of negotiations arrived

at a deal with OCUL

• Initial deal worth over $1.75 million to

date for participating publishers

• Libraries gained perpetual licences to

over 4,000 Canadian scholarly titles

• Negotiated DRM & Usage Rights

acceptable to both presses and

libraries

Page 12: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

OCUL Year 3

• Now working with OCUL to expand the

Canadian titles in their collections

beyond ACUP presses

• Currently working with OCUL to

determine criteria for building

collections

• Targeting September 2014 to complete

this aquisition

Page 13: Canadian Ebooks in Canadian Libraries

CRKN

• Negotiated use of Scholar’s Portal Platform

• Pitched the ACUP collection to other university

library consortia in December 2013

• Consortia opted to work through CRKN

• After 3 months, many meetings and

presentations, CRKN has decided it wants a

different deal, with broader reach

• Discussions are ongoing