Re: Tiers and journals Shankle, Jean 08 Sep 2006 18:50 UTC
I called my rep at EBSCO this morning. They handle the tier pricing for us. When they get notification from a publisher about tier pricing, they contact their customers. My rep said she has noticed it is occuring more. If the library's profiles have it set for a certain amount, then they go with that. She said the tiers vary according to the publishers. Jean ############################ Miss Jean Shankle Periodical Librarian jshankle@pcci.edu Pensacola Christian College Library Box 18000 Pensacola, FL 32523 -----Original Message----- From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU] On Behalf Of Beth Burleigh Sent: Friday, September 08, 2006 10:05 AM To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Tiers and journals We use the subscription service Ebsco for about 95% of our magazines and journals. Does anyone know if Ebsco handles the tiering process for you? Should I ask if we qualify and check to see if the pricing is greatly different from what we currently are paying now? Shouldn't Ebsco also offer this service to us and give us the best deal. Thanks, Beth Burleigh Beth Burleigh Acquisitions Specialist, Periodicals and Electronic Resources Pennsylavania College of Technology Madigan Library Dif#69 One College Ave. Williamsport, PA 17701-5799 Phone: (570) 320-2400 ext. 7454 Fax: (570) 327-4503 e-mail bburleig@pct.edu >>> KENNEDY_JC@MERCER.EDU 9/8/2006 8:26 AM >>> I also have found it worthwhile to challenge a publisher about one's "Tier" placement. You have to be persistent. They do make mistakes (confusing one campus with another) and the price difference can be staggering. Joanna Kennedy Helen Aiello wrote: > In some cases tier pricing is based on your institution's Carnegie > Classification Description < > http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/classifications/index.asp?key=785 > > or, in cases where there are usage stats for an online > product/journal, by the amount of usage an institution makes of the > online resource being priced, e.g AIP titles or Project Muse. > > Who applies it? Depending on the size of your institution and/or the > programs offered by your institution (the website above spells it out > in detail) either you apply it or the pricing agent/publisher. If > your institution does not fall into a neat Tier, then you may have to > have a discussion with the agent/publisher applying the pricing. > Since Wesleyan University is one of those institutions that falls > between Tiers, I am always having to make a case for appropriate Tier > pricing. > > Who manages it? Depends on how much you trust your vendor to be able > to manage that information for your account. Two of the larger vendors > with whom I work can keep this info as part of our records in their > data files. Otherwise, its in your hands to assure the correct pricing > has been assigned for what you think is your Tier. > > I am assuming that the above information relates to the Tier pricing > you are encountering. But who knows: maybe some publisher thought up > another method that I have not yet come across. > Gotta love the creative economic models for serial pricing. Certainly > keeps us on our toes to stay informed! > > ************************************** > Helen M. Aiello, Serials/E-Resources Librarian Wesleyan University, > Middletown, CT (A tier 2 or 3, depending on the > good graces of the pricing agency) > 860-685-3828 > > > > > > > At 02:52 PM 9/7/2006, you wrote: >> Hello all, >> >> Can anyone point me to a document that will define the process by which >> journals are designated with a tier (i.e. tier one, tier two etc.)? Or, >> could anyone please enlighten me about this ranking? I am having a hard >> time finding any sort of concrete definition or explanation. Is this a >> standard? If so, who applies it and manages it? >> >> Thanks for any insight, >> >> Jane >> >> Jane Binksma >> Acquisitions Librarian >> Collections Team >> Ryerson University Library >> 350 Victoria Street >> Toronto, ON >> M5B 2K3 >> 416-979-5000 ex. 4855 >