A new OCLC pilot gives libraries a simple, cost-effective way to contribute
holdings to WorldCat for eSerials. The goal? Improve operational efficiency,
facilitate discovery and drive use of these valuable eCollections.
By Tom Storey
In partnership with 22 OCLC libraries and
four commercial vendors (TDNet, EBSCO, Serials
Solutions and Ex Libris), OCLC is piloting a new service
that will make it easy for libraries to add eHoldings to
WorldCat without increasing their cataloging workload.
Through the eSerials holdings pilot, OCLC
automatically sets and updates holdings each month for
eSerials on behalf of pilot libraries that send, or authorize
pilot partners to send, holdings information to OCLC.
Pilot libraries also register their OpenURL resolvers with
OCLC, which allows end users to easily access full-text
online content. An optional MARC record update service
synchronizes the library OPAC with WorldCat.
Between June and October 2005, OCLC set more
than 270,000 holdings for eSerials for pilot libraries. The
pilot will run through early 2006.
Among the benefits seen by pilot libraries so far:
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Resource sharing staff are able to fulfill more requests
for materials from their electronic collections, which are
now visible from within WorldCat Resource Sharing.
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End users can see which journals are available
electronically from a library, and be directed to the
appropriate online resource through the library’s local
OpenURL resolver.
“It is essential to have our e-holdings in WorldCat,”
says Janet Chisman, Washington State University, one of
the pilot libraries. The six campus libraries at Washington
State provide faculty and staff with access to more than
20,000 eJournals. “We are committed to moving from
print to electronic for much of our serial collection and if
we are going to continue resource sharing via ILL, we
need this holdings information available. This is a very
easy way to do that.”
Adds Michael Boock, Oregon State University, “For
WorldCat to remain a viable source in the electronic era,
it must be a reliable source of holdings information,
regardless of format. As a user of WorldCat for ILLs, we
hope that more libraries will participate at the conclusion
of this trial so that we can better identify eHoldings
sources. We also want WorldCat to represent our
eHoldings in order to potentially use OCLC’s collection
analysis tool.”
Moving forward, OCLC will explore similar pilots
with different electronic formats, such as eBooks
and eAudiobooks, theses and dissertations—even
music files.
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