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Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation Neil Beagrie Keepit Training Course Southampton Feb 2010

Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

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This presentation describes Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS) a model, method and survey for assessing the institutional costs for managing and looking after research data. It was given as part of module 2 of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag 'KeepIt course' in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/

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Page 1: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation

Neil Beagrie

Keepit Training Course

Southampton Feb 2010

Page 2: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Agenda Costs – Keeping Research Data Safe 1

Policy – Digital Preservation Policies Study

Benefits – Keeping Research Data Safe 2

Conclusions

Introduction to Group Exercise

Page 3: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Keeping Research Data Safe1JISC Research Data Digital Preservation Costs Study(co-authors Brian Lavoie, Julia Chruszcz,+institutions)

Page 4: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Overview

• KRDS1 Aim – investigate costs, develop model and recommendations

• Method – detailed analysis of 4 models: LIFE1/2 & NASA CET in combination with OAIS and UK Research TRAC;

• Plus literature review;12 interviews; 4 detailed case studies.

Page 5: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

What was Produced?• A cost framework consisting of:

– activity model in 3 parts: pre-archive, archive, support services

– Key cost variables divided into economic adjustments and service adjustments

– Resources template for Transparent Costing (TRAC)

• 4 detailed case studies (ADS, Cambridge, KCL, Southampton)

• Data from other services.

Page 6: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Putting it all together

• Activity model helps identify cost allocations across preservation process

• Service adjustments helps identify and adjust costs to specific requirements

• Economic adjustments help spread these costs appropriately over time

• Resource framework: pulls all of it together into a TRAC-friendly costing model

Page 7: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

FindingsInstitutional Repository (e-publications):

Staff Equipment (capital depreciated over 3 years)

Annual recurrent costs

1 FTE £1,300 pa

Federated Institutional Repository (data): Annual recurrent costs

Staff Equipment (capital depreciated over 3 years)

Cambridge 4 FTE £58,764 pa

KCL 2.5 FTE £27,546 pa

Page 8: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Findings

• Timing. costs c. 333 euros for the creation of a batch of 1000 records. Once 10 years have passed since creation it may cost 10,000 euros to ‘repair’ a batch of 1000 records with badly created metadata (Digitale Bewaring Project)

• Efficiency Curve effects – start-up to operational

• Economy of scale effects – Accession rates of 10 or 60 collections - 600% increase in accessions will only increase costs by 325% (ULCC)

• “First mover innovation” – costs of being first to solve a problem and how to finance this.

Page 9: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Findings

• National subject repositories costs (UKDA)

Acquisition and Ingest

Archival Storage and Preservation

Access

c. 42% c. 23% c. 35%

Page 10: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Findings

• ADS projection of long-term preservation costs

• Preservation interventions (file format migrations)• Long-term storage costs• Assumptions of archive growth (economies of scale)• Assumptions on “first mover innovation”

Page 11: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Findings

• Staff costs most significant factor (c 70%)

• Unit costs – examples in Case studies for Archaeology, Chemistry, Humanities

• However costs depend on the adjustments (key cost variables)

• Like restaurant meals – final bill and unit costs depend on the choices and volume

Page 12: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

What was New?• FEC and TRAC friendly– not in or partial in other models but

– Requirement for HEIs– Absence of FEC (a) distorts business cases e.g. for automation (b)

cannot accurately compare in-house or out-source costs

• Included pre-archive phases – not solely archive centric

• Not an implementation- customisable - application neutral – can cost for in-house archive, full or partial shared service(s), national/subject data centre archive charges

• Tailored for research data: different collection levels, products from data, etc

• Whole of Service costing/Seeing “Big Picture”

Page 13: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Questions?

Page 14: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

The JISC Digital Preservation Policies Study

(co-authors Najla Rettberg and Peter Williams)

Page 15: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Overview

• The Challenge – too few digital preservation policies in institutions

• Study Aim – to support institutions wishing to create digital preservation policies and enhance their impact

• For UK HE/FE but of much wider relevance and interest

Page 16: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

The Model Policy

• Eight generic clauses• Mapped principle strategic themes in HEIs• Exemplars, useful references, quotes

• Separate section for Guidance and Implementation

• Annotated bibliography

Page 17: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Conclusions• A major business driver in all institutions

has been harnessing digital content and electronic services for access

• Long-term access and future benefit will be heavily dependent on relevant digital preservation policies being put in place...

• ....and underpinned by implementation procedures.

Page 18: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Questions?

Page 19: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Keeping Research Data Safe2JISC Research Data Digital Preservation Costs Study(co-authors Brian Lavoie, Matthew Woollard,+ partner institutions)

Page 20: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Aims

• Review and re-format KRDS1 Activity Model (KRDS2 models now available)

• Identify/Survey Sources of Cost Information (KRDS2 survey now available)

• New in Depth Cost Studies (Oxford, ADS, ULCC, UKDA)

• Analysis and Framework of Benefits

• Benefits studies (UKDA, Soton, Oxford)

Page 21: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Benefits Framework

KRDS2 Benefits Taxonomy

Dimension 1(Type of Outcome)

Direct Indirect (costs avoided)

Dimension 2 (When)

Near-Term Benefits Long-term Benefits

Dimension 3 (Who)

Private Public

Page 22: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Benefits Framework

• Some benefits can be costed (direct or counter-factual)

• Some benefits can be measured in other ways

• Some benefits only have qualitative metrics

Page 23: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Concluding Thoughts...• Cost framework helpful for planning and analysis (both

internally and cross-project)– “Off-the-shelf” but flexible cost framework facilitates

implementation across very different disciplines• “What does it cost?” = “It depends”

– Evidenced by service adjustments– Choices shape preservation strategy, which determines

overall cost• Cost Framework not just for internal budgeting purposes

– Outsourcing: need to map requirements to costs • More work needed on “non-centralised” research data• More work needed on identifying and expressing benefits

Page 24: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Concluding Thoughts...

• Costs and benefits umbilically linked

• Cost/Benefit Analysis behind business cases and has links to policy

• KRDS1/Policies/KRDS2 provide a set of tools and guidance

• Other Tools out there – how does this fit in?

Page 25: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

ConclusionsLIFE1 LIFE2 LIFE3

KRDS1 KRDS2

........................NASA CET........................

...........................OAIS..................................

.........................UK TRAC.............................

Page 26: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Further Information“Keeping Research Data Safe” (KRDS1)Final

report and Executive Summary at http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/keepingresearchdatasafe.aspx

“Digital Preservation Policies Study” Final Report and Appendices at

http://www.jisc.ac.uk/publications/publications/jiscpolicyfinalreport.aspx

Keeping Research Data Safe2 (KRDS2) webpage at www.beagrie.com/jisc.php

Page 27: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Questions?

Page 28: Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil Beagrie

Group Exercise• Agree a spokesperson and “recorder”

• Using KRDS2 Benefits Taxonomy:– Q1 Identify which benefits can be costed?– Q2 Select 3 Key benefits (include costed and

uncosted)– Q3 Identify the information you might need for

measuring them

• Report back at 12.10 !