Circulation analysis: measuring collection use
By Tom Storey
The WorldCat Collection
Analysis (WCA) service
can now evaluate a library’s
circulation activity to help identify
potential collection development opportunities. Installed November
12, 2007, the new enhancement
enables libraries to analyze their
circulation data to see how their
collections are being used.
Information about collection usage
can inform decisions about
weeding, movement to off-site storage,
budget allocation, digitization
and acquisitions.
“In conjunction with the other
analyses available via WCA, circulation
analysis gives libraries a robust
portrait of their collection and can
provide critical data to support their
collection management decisions,”
says Glenda Lammers, Global
Product Manager, Business Intelligence.“Early feedback has been overwhelmingly positive. I hope
libraries continue to find this to be
a valuable addition to the WCA
service.”
The data within circulation analysis
gives your library the ability to identify:
-
what items are circulating
-
what items are not circulating
-
how frequently items are
circulating
-
what percentage of your
collection in any subject, format,
publication date range, etc.,
is circulating
-
the average number of
checkouts per title circulated
-
total checkouts by
circulation date
Here’s how it works:
To create a circulation analysis in
WCA, you must first run a report via
your integrated library system (ILS)
to extract a minimal set of data elements.
The report should be saved
as either an XML or a tab-delimited
.txt file. The report should include all
items circulated within a given date
range and may contain up to five
years of data.
The following data elements
are required for each circulation
transaction:
-
OCLC institution symbol
-
OCLC accession number
-
Barcode
-
Checkout date
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Professional spreadsheets and graphs make it easy to share circulation analysis data
with colleagues and administrators. |
Then, upload that file to OCLC
using the WorldCat Services
Administrative Module. For step-by-step instructions on how to
upload your circulation report, see
the WorldCat Collection Analysis—Circulation Analysis documentation.
One of the first to try circulation analysis
in WCA is Assumption College, Worcester,
Massachusetts. Prior to the availability
of this functionality, library staff was compiling
and recombining data from their ILS—a time consuming task—to generate
reports.
Circulation analysis in WCA streamlines
the process and makes it possible to
view collection activity—both the current
calendar year and back to 2002—without
having to ask anyone to pull together a
report, says Dawn Thistle, Director of Library
Services. “It is very easy to use, yet it
allows me to drill down into the conspectus
divisions and categories so
that I can pinpoint exactly where the
greatest use is taking place, making
it much simpler to make connections
between the curriculum and the circulation
of library materials.”
Thistle loves the circulation ratio
data, which provide the percentage
of titles that have circulated in different
disciplines, as well as the
circulation frequency data, which give
her the ability to identify areas—even
individual titles—that receive a lot of
repeated use. “We will use the frequency
data to guide us as we
purchase additional copies of heavily
used titles,” she says.
She also is looking at circulation
analysis together with interlibrary
loan data, which WCA also provides. “Over the years we have tried to
collect our ILL circulation data and organize
it according to LC call number,
but that has been more of a challenge
than we have been able to accomplish
to date. WCA now makes that comparison
much simpler.”
With the addition of circulation analysis,
Thistle sees WorldCat Collection
analysis becoming a suite of assessment
tools that makes it much easier to
study a library’s collection from many different
angles—in whole or in pieces, and
often in a single afternoon!
“Collecting this data is no longer the
issue. Many of the difficulties and
barriers to doing collection assessment
have been removed, and we can finally
get around to doing the actual analysis.
“Circulation data is important because
it helps us justify our existence! It is
important to be able to demonstrate that
library materials are being USED, and
that the library is not simply a warehouse
of academic information, or, worse, a
budget black hole. If a college prides itself
on teaching students to be critical
thinkers and encouraging them to ask
questions and move beyond the textbook,
library circulation data can help
to show that this is happening.”
Next-gen cataloging | Managing the collective collection
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