Re: Binding Schedule Methodogy -- Sharon Wieczorek Stephen Clark 28 Nov 2001 18:59 UTC
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: Binding Schedule Methodogy -- Regina Beach Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 13:46:56 -0500 From: Sharon Wieczorek <swieczor@MERCYHURST.EDU> Organization: Mercyhurst College We are a small academic library with about 800 subs which uses student workers. I am the only person in the serials department. We send binding out 13 times a year and usually try to send about 60 titles per shipment. These numbers are used to calculate how much money to keep encumbered at any one time for budget purposes. What titles go for binding depends on what needs to be bound and what part of the term the school is in. I usually bind the frequently used titles when the students are on break. Otherwise I start with A and work to Z. I also have a list of retrospective titles that I use to fill in with when I don't have 60 current titles ready for binding. I now use an Innovative Interface Incorporated Serials module which I programed with the periodicity/binding history for each title. The binding program module can tell me what is ready for binding and I can print "pull" binding slips when needed for student workers to pull. I can even put into the system when the issues are out "to bind" and when they return but I can not automatically send the binding through the system because the binding company that I use does not work with I.I.I. Before this automated system was installed, I had a chart/word document that listed the periodicity and binding unit of each binding title. I used this list to check the current display for issues ready to be bound. I would make the decision then whether to pull the title at that time or wait. It was cumbersome and time consuming and not able to be transferred to student workers. The software database that we use from the binding company will print a specific binding slip for each title and when done will print a list in any order that I need. This database has a history of all the volumes/issues that have been sent for binding since we started doing business with this company. Before we got this database, we hand typed a list which included the title, volume, month/year, color of book and type that we wanted. Then from this list we then hand typed a pre formed binding slip for each title to be sent. This was extremely time consuming but transferable to student workers. Just some information from my corner of the world. Hope it helps. Sharon Wieczorek Serials Supervisor Mercyhurst College Hammermill Library 501 East 38th St. Erie, PA 16546 > -------- Original Message -------- > Subject: Binding Schedule Methodogy > Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2001 08:51:58 -0600 > From: Regina Beach <regina_l_beach@hotmail.com> > > Folks, > > I saw some very useful posts in the archives how often and when you send > periodicals to the bindery. However, do any of you have a formalized > methodology for which journal goes to the bindery and when? > > Say, you decided to send 10 shipments per year. So that these shipments > would be equitable and predictable, have any of you developed a > spreadsheet > with how many times a year each journal goes to the bindery and it which > shipment? Do any of you divide your journal collection into increments > of > the alphabet? Perhaps A-C would go in one shipment, then D-F, etc.? > > I'm new to my job, have worked with serials quite a bit, but have never > supervised the bindery part of the operation before. I am getting the > feeling that I'm expected to produce a "plan" of some sort. > > Thanks, > > Regina Beach > Head, Technical Services > Jernigan Library > Texas A & M--Kingsville >