Price increases for 2005 Koveleskie, Judith 24 Nov 2004 15:46 UTC
I second the motion. When we renew each year we have no idea what the new prices will be. We usually estimate an overall increase of around 10% that comes pretty close. However, I do have some titles that individually are ridiculous. Unfortunately, they are usually the ones that the faculty would most want us to keep and the publishers know this so I'm not sure how much we can "pressure" them. I am also wondering if more publishers are going to establish different rates for individuals and institutions. My biggest increases this year resulted from this change to two tier pricing. Of course, lots of journals have been doing this for awhile so when you compare like journals the new price is comparable - it just seemed like a big jump in one year. Judith A. Koveleskie Periodicals Librarian Seton Hill University Reeves Memorial Library Greensburg, PA 15601 724-838-7828 -----Original Message----- From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU]On Behalf Of Christopher Allen Waldrop Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2004 10:22 AM To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Price increases for 2005 (Sandy Srivastava) Sandy, I'm sorry to come to this discussion late, but I wanted to add something else to the discussion of price increases. We use several different vendors for most of our subscriptions. Some time ago we asked our vendors whether we could be notified and be given the option of cancelling our subscriptions if the price increased more than 20%. One of our vendors agreed to this; another said they would be unable to do this. In the case of "non-cancellable" titles this means we sometimes have to accept surprise price increases, at least for a year. It also means, though, that we're going to be less likely to place new orders for non-cancellable titles with the vendor that can't notify us of price increases before we have a chance to cancel. What I'm getting at is that vendors have a lot more clout with publishers than individual libraries. Although neither the vendor nor the publisher wants to keep prices low, the reason we pay service charges is so vendors will act as representatives on our behalf to the publishers, not the other way around. It would make a big difference if vendors would either pressure publishers to release subscription rates earlier in the year or give libraries an "escape clause" to get out of subscriptions that go up too much. As an added note, there are a lot of different reasons why subscriptions increase in price, but the biggest increases I've seen are the result of journals moving from one publisher to another. When a journal goes from a university press to, say, Blackwell Publishing, it's almost certain the price will at least double. --On Tuesday, November 16, 2004 4:39 PM -0500 Bob Persing <persing@POBOX.UPENN.EDU> wrote: > Hi Serialsters: > > I just need to ask -- has anybody else noticed that some subscription > prices have skyrocketed to over 100% or higher on their invoices? > I just wanted to confirm that everyone else has seen these as well > i.e. Harvard Law Review, Marriage and Family Review, Personnel > Psychology and I have a growing list I could put up here. > > I am used to price increases of 7-10 % but this is just crazy --? > Is anybody else experiencing higher than usual increases on > subscriptions? > Are the publishers having a free for all now? > > Sandy Srivastava > > Sandhya D. Srivastava > Assistant Professor > Serials Librarian > Hofstra University > Axinn Library > 123 Hofstra University > Hempstead, New York 11550 > Telephone: (516) 463 - 5959 > Fax: (516) 463 - 6438 > Email: librsds@hofstra.edu <mailto:librsds@hofstra.edu> Christopher Allen Waldrop Serials Coordinator Order Services Department Vanderbilt University Library Ph: 615-343-3831 Fax: 615-343-8834