Something went wrong
Please try again
Customer-based Collection Development

Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
Format:
Paperback
-
Publication Date:
23 July 2014

- DESCRIPTION
- DETAILS
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
This essential guide to customer-based/patron-driven collection development will allow librarians to navigate the rapid changes in what users expect of libraries.
The traditional "top down" approach to collection development definitely has its drawbacks: even after spending a good deal of time, energy, and resources, librarians are sometimes frustrated to find that their library's collection is not being used as they anticipated. But there's another strategy that's gaining momentum. This book gathers together the best practitioners in the emerging field of customer-based collection development to find out what library users need and want and provide strategies to allow librarians to manage collections accordingly.
Drawing on the experiences of professionals from a variety of academic and public libraries, Customer-based Collection Development:
- Offers strategies for planning and implementing a customer-based collection program
- Summarizes its potential impact on a library’s budget
- Discusses cataloguing implications, and other day-to-day operational issues
- Presents guidelines for evaluating and marketing.
Customer-based Collection Development is one way for libraries to navigate the rapid changes in what users expect of libraries, and this new anthology is an important guide to this approach.

LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / Collection Development, Acquisitions and collection development, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / Digital & Online Resources, IT, Internet and electronic resources in libraries

1. E-Books and Patron Driven Acquisitions in Academic Libraries - Cristina Caminita 2. A Hard DDA’s Night: Managing a Consortial Demand Driven Acquisitions Program for E-books - Sarah Hartman-Caverly, Amy McColl, Norm Medeiros and Mike Persick
3. Selectors’ Perceptions of e-Book Patron-Driven Acquisitions - Judith M. Nixon, Suzanne M. Ward, and Robert S. Freeman 4. Flying in Late: A Pilot PDA on a Microscopic Budget - Jamie L. Conklin and Erik Sean Estep 5. A Case Study for PDA on a Shoe-String Budget: An Evolving Vision for Collection Development through Three Pilot Projects - Naomi Ikeda Chow and Ryan James 6. Technical Services Aspects of Demand-Driven Ebook Acquisitions - Kay Downey 7. Brigham Young University’s Patron-Driven Acquisitions: Does It Stand the Test of Time? - Jared L. Howland, Rebecca Schroeder, and Tom Wright 8. Patron Driven Digital Collection Development in Archives - Maura Valentino 9. PDA in a Multi-Library Setting: Challenges, Implementation, and Outcomes - Jeanne Harrell, Carmelita Pickett, Simona Tabacaru, Jeannette Ho, Ana Ugaz and Nancy Burford 10. Seven Reasons to be Skeptical about Patron Driven Acquisitions: A Summary - John Buschman 11. Patron-Driven vs. Librarian-Selected: Three Years of Comparative E-book Usage - Dracine Hodges