Barbara,

My institution, like some others who’ve already responded, now has several years of experience with PPV dating back to 2010-2011. We cancelled most of our so-called Big Deal packages with Wiley, Elsevier, and Sage over a two year period and began working directly with these three vendors to provide institutional PPV. Wiley and Elsevier support the model we want, which is token-based where you pre-purchase a group of tokens as a sort of deposit account. This is no doubt the same as what some others have referred to. Sage, unfortunately, does not seem to have the transactional infrastructure capabilities to offer this in spite of our repeated pleas for them to move in this direction.

I’ve mentioned our experience several times in various for a but will try to summarize here.
The bottom line is that PPV has allowed us to greatly expand access to more resources for a much more reasonable cost than we could possibly obtain through the subscription model alone. It allows us much more collection flexibility as well, so that we can (and have) switched between subscriptions and PPV as usage warrants, for non-essential (non-core) titles.

Lots of articles have been written about PPV by others in the professional literature, and I’ve given several presentations in various places about our experience, including at ALA and The Charleston Conference. A writeup of a presentation I co-presented at last year’s Charleston Conference will be available in the proceedings when they are published soon, for example. I’m hoping to have a more formal publication on this topic available soon, written in collaboration with two other colleagues.

Steve

Assistant Professor of Library Science
Electronic Resources and Serials
Wheaton College (IL)
+1 (630) 752-5852

From: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum on behalf of Barbara Pope
Reply-To: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum
Date: Tuesday, August 25, 2015 at 6:30 PM
To: "SERIALST@LISTSERV.NASIG.ORG"
Subject: [SERIALST] pay per view for articles?

Hi, everyone.

I was wondering if anyone out there has utilized pay per view for access to articles from very expensive journals.  I read a book recently that said it is possible to set up such a service and have it accessible in an open url resolver just like any other online journal source.  One resource I consulted suggested that it be a staff mediated type resource where someone has to verify that the article in question is not accessible in another resource the library owns.  Anyway, does anyone out there do this?  If so, do you put funds on account with a publisher or vendor or do you just pay for it when it comes up?  Also, is it better to use publishers directly or go through a resource like Copyright Clearance Center?  I don't want any contacts from vendors or publishers.  I am just thinking about this.  Thank you.

Sincerely,

Barbara M. Pope, MALS
Periodicals/Reference Librarian
Axe Library
Pittsburg State University
1701 S. Broadway
Pittsburg KS 66762
620-235-4884
bpope@pittstate.edu


To unsubscribe from the SERIALST list, click the following link:
http://listserv.nasig.org/scripts/wa-NASIG.exe?SUBED1=SERIALST&A=1



To unsubscribe from the SERIALST list, click the following link:
http://listserv.nasig.org/scripts/wa-NASIG.exe?SUBED1=SERIALST&A=1