Return On Library Technology Investment Ili 2008 C204 16 Oct
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Transcript of Return On Library Technology Investment Ili 2008 C204 16 Oct
Ken ChadDirector
Ken Chad Consulting [email protected]: +44 (0)7788 727 845www.kenchadconsulting.com
Internet Librarian International, London16th October 2008
Session C204
(determines whether you are going to do anything at all. Growth and trouble are the motivators)
targets demanding high end customersbetter performanceincremental year on yearsome innovations are breakthrough leapfrog-beyond-the-competitionestablished companies almost always win
not about better products to establishedcustomersnot as good as current products..but simpler, more convenient, less expensive, to less demandingcustomersentrant companies can win
with a UK bias
after 25 years the market has matured
Choosing a new ILS is a lot like choosing a rental car. . any ILS is going to get you
where you need to go Andrew K. Pace. 2004 ...
Dismantling Integrated Library Systems. By Andrew K. Pace Library Journal February 1, 2004.
(everyone almost- has changed in the last 2-3 years)
June 2005: Sirsi and Dynix merge and become SirsiDynix
November 05: Geac (now Infor) announces its acquisition by Golden Gate Capital, a private equity company.
November 2005 OCLC Pica acquires Fretwell Downing (OLIB etc)
February 2006: Talis is reconstructed : the owners (BLCMP Ltd and an Employee Benefit Trust) vote to transfer ownership to a new company called Talis Group
July 06: ExLibris acquired by Francisco Partners, a private equity company
December 06: Endeavor acquired from Elsevier by ExLibris and Francisco Partners
January 2007: SirsiDynix acquired by Vista Equity partners, a private equity company
June 07 Bowker (CIG) acquires MediaLabs (AquaBrowser)
July 07 OCLC acquires remaining shares in OCLC PICA
Feb 2008: Axiell buy DS
June 08: Civica management buyout with 3i equity
August 08: Leeds Equity buy Ex Libris
September 08 OCLC buy AMLIB
The discipline of private equity makes companies fitter, leaner and better able to compete. Ian Armitage, partner at HgCapital Quoted in Sunday Times on 18th February
Private equity buys an entire company improves the companyand owns it typically for three to seven years. I t then sells it or takes dividends by refinancing it . Stephen Schwarzman Blackstones. Quoted in Sunday Times on 18th
February
As a rule of thumb, unless a business can offer the prospect of significant turnover growth within five years, it is unlikely to be of interest to a private equity firm . An introduction to private equity. The British Private
Equity and Venture Capital Association
for example .in UK HEfour vendors have nearly 90% of the market
UK HE Market Share Axiel
ExLibris (inc Endeavor)
Infor (formerly Geac)
Innovative Interface
ISOxford
OCLC Pica (FretwellDowning)
Payne Automation
SirsiDynix
Softlink
Talis
VTLS
Unknown
ExLibris 23%Talis 23%
Innovative 18%
SirsiDynix 23%
in UK Public Librariesfour vendors have 90% of the market
UK Public Libraries Market Share
Bibliomondo
Civica
DS
Infor
In-house
Innovative
IS Oxford
RedSky
SirsiDynix
Talis
Axiell/DS 30%Talis 26%
SirsiDynix 23% Infor 10 %
renewing legacy productse.g. Alto, Symphony
introducing new productse.g. Encore, Primo, WorldCat Local, Arena
looking for ways to interoperate to increase their valuee.g. Keystone
(part of the 2008 JISC/SCONUL commissioned study)
Stephen Abram, Vice President of Innovation SirsiDynix
Dave Errington (CEO) and DirectorJustin Leavesley (CTO and Director)Talis
Neil Block, Vice President of Worldwide Sales. Gene Shimshock, Vice President Marketing. Innovative Interfaces
Oren Beit-Arie, Chief Strategy Officer ExLibris
factors outside the library domain-e.g. Web 2.0, Semantic (m2m, linked ) Web, Google, Facebooknew user behavioursglobal web-based standards. W3C. SOA, web services which enable interoperability & decoupling of productsneed for increased productivity and reduced cost of ownership
in response to those drivers they are changing their offerings
vertical search -Encore, Primo, AquaBrowsercompeting with Google et al in the library (vertical) market. Claim to provide better access and delivery of resources in a library/scholarly context
aggregation-a move to SaaS and Platformsusing Google/Amazon type techniques-Talis, OCLC
Uniform Resource Management one system for print & electronic resources
exploiting the value in context - intentional data clickstreams etc. esp.relevant in HE
a user s context is an increasingly important attribute. I t can enable more personalised services. Its value is not yet fully appreciated in libraries
we re seeing the seeds of a new revolution being sewn [sic] . As the goal of some companies becomes once more attuned to trimming costs... libraries and their users suffer. In some cases, cost savings are being generated for the company by consolidating products When this happens, it is short-term profit that is the objective rather than serving the long-term mission of libraries. These companies have become unresponsive to the collective goals of our profession and, like so much of our society these days, are no longer focused onthe we but the me . I t is a sad state of affairs and one thatwill not be tolerated
A symphony out of tune: when companies go deaf . Carl Grant. Care Affiliates blog. 4 July 2007.www.care-affiliates.com/thoughts/archives/6
We feel that software companies have not designed Integrated Library Systems that meet the needs of academic libraries, and
we don t think those companies are likely to meet libraries needs in the future by making incremental changes to their products.Consequently, academic libraries are devoting significant time and resources to try to overcome the inadequacies of the expensive ILS products they have purchased. Frustrated with current systems, library users are abandoning the ILS and thereby giving up access to the high quality scholarly resources libraries make available
Duke University Openlib project
With support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Open Library Environment (OLE) Project will convene the academic library community in the design of an Open Library Management System built on Service Oriented Architecture. The project leaders are a multi-national group of libraries dedicated to thinking beyond the current model of an Integrated Library System and to designing a new system that is flexible, customizable and able to meet the changing andcomplex needs of modern, dynamic academic libraries. The end product will be a design document to inform open source library system development efforts, to guide future library system implementations, and to influence current Integrated Library System vendor products
is all this sustaining or disruptive?
undifferentiated products where price is a main criteriona market full of M&Afunctionally rich products (cf. MS Office)marginal competitors are taking market share
will we see (have we seen) disruption?
For more than 150 years, modern complex democracies have depended in large measure on an industrial information economy .In
the past decade and a half we have begun to see a radical change in the organisation of
information production. Enabled by technological change, we are beginning to see a series of economic, social and cultural
adaptations that make possible a radical transformation of how we make the
information environment .
Yochai Benkler a Professor of Law at Yale Law School
Messiness is a digital virtue, leading to new ideas, efficiency, and social knowledge; Authorities are less important than buddies.
Knowledge has been shackled to the physical. Now that the digitising of information is allowing us to go beyond the physical ..the shape of our knowledge is changing . [P 71 ]
. once texts are digitised they take on a fascinating new attribute that economists call non-rival . Unlike a printed book, a digitisedtext can be used by countless people at the same time without interference (no need to look over a shoulder) or destruction (an e-text doesn t wear out) of the shared resource. In these terms an e-book is technically speaking a limitless resource. My use of a Project Gutenberg text does not rival your use. The cost of producing and delivering each new copy is also effectively zero.
Are you missing the point? The Impact of Web 2.0. By Ken Chad. CILIP Library+ Information Gazette, 21st September 2007
cheap, utility-supplied computing will ultimately change society as profoundly as cheap electricity did
with less than 10 people [Flikr] had millions of users generating content, millions of users organising that content for them, tens of thousands of users distributing that across the internet
(isn t organising content what librarians are supposed to do?)
.. technology is unleashing a capacity for speaking that before was suppressed by economic
constraint. Now people can speak in lots of ways they never before could have, because the economic
opportunity was denied to them
Mother Jones Magazine (website)
Interview with Lawrence Lessig: Stanford Law School Professor, Creative Commons Chair June 29, 2007
http://www.motherjones.com/interview/2007/07/lawrence_lessig.html
We-Think changes how we access and organise information and so is bound to disrupt libraries and librarians
The library of the future will be a platform for participation and collaboration with users increasingly sharing information amongst themselves as well as drawing on the library s resources
Charles Leadbeater. We Think. The future is us Profile Books Ltd. 2008
when we change the way we communicate we change society
..real revolutions don t involve an orderly transition from A to point B. Rather they go from A through a long period of chaos .in that chaotic period old systems get broken before new ones become stable.
Here comes everybody By Clay Shirky. Allen Lane. 2008
everyone (can) become a publisherblogs, wikis, podcasts, videoencyclopaedias, (wiki) bookstagging, reviews, ratings
As user generated content continues to be commercialised, it seems the largest threat posed won t be to big corporations but to individual professionals to the journalists, editors researchers
librarians and other information workers who can be replaced by .people not on the payroll
Copyright law has not responded with common sense as it had to do in the past when technology changes challenged established law e.g. over the
issue of the trespass of airplanes over land
Artists can choose the kind of re-use their work enables. That is what Creative Commons is about
We live life against the law in a new age of prohibitions --this is dangerous.
Larry Lessig: How creativity is being strangled by the law. http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/187
creativity is being strangled by the law
copyright is important to librarians.
Lynne's focus is particularly on copyright and the implications of new technologies in the digital environment
we invite teachers, students, and researchers to join us in creating open educational resources and collaborative learning communities
libraries have historically done well in adapting to the needs of the user
however, there are now many competitors and the absence of a user based approach and user intelligence beginning to tell
threat from a combination of search engines, social network sites and publishers
How users behave (and what libraries should do) . David Nicholas. CIBER, UCL Centre for
Publishing, School of Library, Archive and Information Studies University College London.(Presented at Sustaining the Digital Library Symposium. Edinburgh University 2007)
(i.e. not the university s .)
when we change the way we communicate we change society
..when a profession has been created as a result of some scarcity, as with librariansor television programmers, the professionals are often the last ones to see it when that scarcity goes away. I t is easier to understand that you facecompetition than obsolescence
Here comes everybody. By Clay Shirky. Allen Lane. 2008
when we change the way we communicate we change society
..in some cases the change that threatens the profession benefits society.
Here comes everybody. By Clay Shirky. Allen Lane. 2008
Tech is a tool. Your library will not be cool if you outfit every librarian with a Palm pilot if they don't know how to use them, don't care or don't get what it means for service. Too many times we throw money at a problem for a technology solution and then get bound up in the fine details and overthinking. That planning should have been done first! We are in a position to ease up and explore relatively low cost technologies and adopt those 2.0 attitudes. To me, that's letting go of that micro-management control some librarians use and letting librarians dream, innovate and plan without red tape, endless meetings and barriers disguised as "baby steps."
Michael Stephens - Future of Librarians Interview http://www.degreetutor.com/library/librarians-online/michael-stephens
What are the greatest challenges?
Institutional inertia comes to mind. a lack of focus on trends and the future. An attitude of "we've always done it that way." Those things don't fly today. I think the greatest challenge does come from within. I worry that those libraries that move so slowin adapting to shifts in society and culture will never be as great as they can be. . Telling our story is important. proving the worth of the building, the online presence and the people who make it all happen is important t .Watch what's happening in business. Look at the power of the blogosphere. The libraries that embrace the ideas and attitudes will overcome thechallenges of budget, limitations of space and mindset.
Michael Stephens - Future of Librarians Interview http://www.degreetutor.com/library/librarians-online/michael-stephens
In this mode of exploratory development; it is better to have a year's worth of experience, regardless of the success of this experience, than to spend thatyear producing a comprehensive plan of action. Most of today's library managers learned how to manage during the transition from paper to automated libraries. This transition involved sustaining technologies where planning mattered. The lessonsit taught will not apply in the transition to the disruptive technologies of the electronic library
Lewis, David W. The Innovator's Dilemma: Disruptive Change and AcademicLibraries. Library Administration & Management 18(2):68-74 Spring 2004
The information environment really has changed and become far more competitive for librariesdigital makes a profound differenceuser behaviour and expectations have changed and continue to changeto succeed in this disruptive environment requires new attitudes and new skills
Avoid a (costly) LMS procurement processSweat the assets to get more value from the existing LMS investment
Make the LMS interoperate more effectively with other systemsLook at ways to save costs and improve services by adding features around the core LMS
Explore consortia working and shared servicesKeep a watch on Open Source LMS developments but don t invest yetLiberate library metadata for re-use
Use clickstream and context data to improve services such as search
Implement vertical search
Libraries therefore need to invest with caution but not complacency. Whilst it is clear that the library function has continuing and growing value based upon a basic human motivation (Google after all is a company with a self declared library. mission) it is not clear what role conventionallibraries will play. Librarians themselves have to face a major challenge and tread a careful line between securing a good return on investment and more imaginative leaps to ensure accessibility and relevance to their user community
Library Management Systems. Investing wisely in a period of disruptive change. Briefing paper by Ken Chad. JISC SCONUL. April 2008
where should we focus to get the best return?
Strategic sweet spot
Adapted from: 'Can you say what your strategy is'. By David J Collis and Michael G Rukstad. Harvard Business Review. April 2008
'Smooth curve #1.' By theothermattm. http://www.flickr.com/photos/theothermattm/2748026862/
Ken ChadDirector
Ken Chad Consulting [email protected]: +44 (0)7788 727 845www.kenchadconsulting.com
Internet Librarian International, London16th October 2008
Session C204