To the membership
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In 1978, OCLC signed its first international agreement when the Royal Library
of The Netherlands obtained 750,000 records from WorldCat for nine Dutch libraries.
Today, the library and OCLC continue their collaboration through Strata Preservation
N.V., a center to digitize and preserve European collections. Wim van Drimmelen,
Director General, Royal Library of The Netherlands, right, with Jay Jordan. |
In 2000, we shared with you our three-year strategic plan to extend the OCLC
cooperative and transform WorldCat into a globally networked information resource
through new services and a new technological platform. Three years later, I
am pleased to report significant progress.
Your OCLC cooperative has introduced new services and initiatives that hold
the promise of substantially improving the way libraries provide information
to people. In the past three years, we have developed and are now operating
these new services:
digital collection and preservation services, including a digital archive
a 24x7 virtual, cooperative reference service (QuestionPoint)
an integrated metadata/cataloging system (OCLC Connexion)
a public access computing portal for public libraries (WebJunction).
We are also well along in the transformation of WorldCat into a globally networked
resource of text, graphics, sound and motion.
In fiscal 2003, we loaded 52 million bibliographic records into our new Oracle
9i technological platform and Unicode-compliant database system. The new system
will support not only the MARC format, but also Dublin Core and the Functional
Requirements for Bibliographic Records model. We also implemented links between
WorldCat and the OCLC PICA GGC Catalogue in The Netherlands, thereby connecting
two knowledge hubs on different continents. This new link complements the link
between the PiCarta database, tailored for European libraries, and WorldCat
that was implemented in 2001.
A signal achievement was implementation of a new tool that: 1) links WorldCat
to photos, graphics and other objects in digitized special collections of libraries
and other cultural heritage institutions; and 2) automatically harvests metadata
from the collections, converts it to the MARC format, and loads it into WorldCat.
The tool is CONTENTdm, a software package that enables libraries to manage and
provide access to their digitized collections. More than 100 institutions are
now using this software to manage more than a million digital objects in their
collections.
The Open WorldCat pilot
Another objective in our strategy is to make library collections and quality
services more visible and accessible on the Internetweaving libraries
into the Web. In October 2003, we started the largest, and potentially one of
the most significant, test programs in the history of the cooperativethe
Open WorldCat pilot.
In partnership with the Google search service, which provides Web sites and
portals with access to billions of Web pages, we are making a subset of two
million abbreviated records from WorldCat available on Google, with links to
the Web-based catalogs and sites of 12,000 academic, public and school libraries
participating in OCLC. With the Open WorldCat pilot, an information seeker who
starts a search using Google could end up finding the items needed in a nearby
library.
The Open WorldCat pilot exemplifies the collective institutional energy that
the OCLC cooperative can bring to bear when it sets out to explore ways to improve
access to quality information. We launched the pilot after extensive consultation
with leaders in the library and information community. We will be listening
closely to libraries and their users during the test and will refine the service
based on their feedback. In June 2004, we will decide whether to proceed with
implementation of an ongoing service. In short, this is an experiment whose
results will affect the future of library service.
Membership
During the year, 476 new governing members, 470 new members and 1,910 new participants
joined the cooperative and began using one or more OCLC services. Total membership
in the cooperative at years end was 45,402 libraries in 84 countries.
These institutions used OCLC services to:
- catalog 54.7 million items on the OCLC system
- add 2.3 million bibliographic records to the WorldCat database
- arrange a record 9.3 million interlibrary loans
- perform 99.8 million end-user reference searches
- add 3,000 objects to the OCLC Digital Archive in its first year
- make more than 1 million objects available on 100 CONTENTdm sites for
potential loading into WorldCat through automatic harvesting of metadata.
Finances
Fiscal 2003 revenues from use of OCLC services were $191.8 million, up from
$178.2 million the previous year. While OCLC achieved a modest result of $3
million, it incurred a realized loss of $4 million from investment portfolio
transactions, thereby resulting in a net loss of $1 million for fiscal 2003.
OCLC provided libraries with $11.2 million in credits, primarily for cataloging
and resource sharing, to encourage the growth and quality of WorldCat. In fiscal
2003, we continued to invest in the future through major capital expenditures,
which totaled $28.2 million. Major projects included the WorldCat technological
platform; new user support systems; and replacement of current computer infrastructure
to support existing library services.
Fiscal 2003 was a difficult time for much of the worlds economy in general,
and for libraries in particular. Mindful of our chartered objective of reducing
the rate rise of library costs, we at OCLC have worked very hard to control
costs and to hold the line on prices. The OCLC Board of Trustees accepted managements
recommendation to hold the line on U.S. prices for OCLC services in fiscal 2004,
excluding pass-through prices set by third parties. While modest price increases
will have to occur in fiscal 2005, we will continue to work hard to control
our costs. In fiscal 2003, we froze salaries of upper management, reduced merit
increases for other staff, and reduced the size of our workforce by about 5
percent to bring expenses in line with revenues. These actions were painful
but necessary, and we took them in common with many of the institutions that
we serve. Fortunately, as our audited financial statements demonstrate, OCLC
has the financial strength to keep moving forward during this difficult economic
period. Equally important, the OCLC cooperative can offer practical solutions
that can help libraries increase their productivity and do more with less.
International activity
The OCLC cooperative now extends to more than 9,000 libraries outside the U.S.
in 83 countries.
Approximately 850 libraries participate in OCLC Canada, which now has offices
in Chambly, Quebec; Winnipeg, Manitoba; Ottawa, Ontario; and Calgary, Alberta.
In June, OCLC participated in the joint conference of the American Library Association
and the Canadian Library Association in Toronto, where our programs were well-attended
and our presence, in the midst of the SARS crisis, was very much appreciated.
In fiscal 2003, we have been busy in Latin America and the Caribbean, where
700 libraries now participate. In Chile, 368 public libraries under the Directorate
of Libraries, Archives and Museums became OCLC members. At this writing, we
had just loaded the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexicos CLASE
and PERIÓDICA databases on the OCLC FirstSearch service.
In Asia Pacific, about 3,300 libraries participate in OCLC. This year, over
490 libraries started participating in OCLC. The University of Hong Kong batchloaded
its entire collection into WorldCat, which included nearly 75,000 original cataloging
records.
OCLC PICA
OCLC PICA, which serves 4,300 institutions in Europe and Africa, continued to
integrate operations in its offices in Leiden, The Netherlands; Birmingham,
England; and Paris, France. Highlights of OCLC PICAs activities in fiscal
2003 include:
- Retrospective conversion projects for the Royal Library of The Netherlands
(400,000 records) and Cambridge University Library (1.3 million records)
- The British Library digitization project for its Penny Illustrated
collection at OCLCs preservation service center in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania,
using Olive software
- Implementation of the OCLC PICA Central Library System for cataloging
and interlibrary loan in 400 libraries of all 110 French universities
- Extension of the OCLC PICA local library and central cataloging system
to additional German libraries, including the Berlin State Museums and the historical
Secret State Archive of Prussia.
CAPCON
On June 17, 2003, the membership of CAPCON approved an agreement that enabled
this nonprofit OCLC regional service provider to become the OCLC CAPCON Service
Center, which will continue to offer critical services to more than 300 libraries
in the Washington, D.C. area. This new relationship will also allow OCLC to
learn more about the special library communities and develop services to meet
their needs as well as the needs of similar institutions worldwide.
Research
2003 marks the 25th anniversary of OCLC Research, which was established in 1978
by OCLCs founder and first president, Frederick G. Kilgour. This annual
report looks at the past, present and future of this important resource for
member libraries and the wider information community.
WebJunction
In May, we launched WebJunction, a public access computing portal for some 12,000
public libraries that OCLC built with grant funding from the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation. The site provides online tutorials, training modules, webcasting,
message boards and other tools to help libraries enhance public access computing
services to users. We designed WebJunction to comply with standards that will
facilitate the extension of this shared knowledge community to other parts of
the world, albeit in different languages and formats.
Dewey Decimal Classification
We published the 22nd edition of the Dewey Decimal Classification on the Web,
and at years end, were preparing to release the print version. First published
in 1876, the DDC is now used by more than 200,000 libraries in 135 countries.
E-learning
OCLC formed the Task Force on E-learning to develop strategies that will enhance
the ability of libraries to serve the academic community in the e-learning environment.
The task force was composed of 13 librarians, administrators, faculty and instructional
technologists who assessed the current state of e-learning on college campuses.
They issued a white paper on e-learning strategies for libraries based on the
survey and the discussions in October. This document will help frame discussions
as to what roles libraries and the OCLC cooperative might play in e-learning,
a concept that today includes not only distance learning, but also more traditional
courses that have incorporated electronic elements into the traditional teaching
and learning process.
netLibrary
netLibrary continued to make progress since its acquisition by OCLC in January
2002. At this writing, its collection of eBooks contained more than 60,000 titles,
representing copyrighted titles from 385 publishers, with 64 percent of the
titles published in the last three years. About 8,670 libraries are using netLibrary
eBook content and tools, including 320 institutions in 33 countries outside
the U.S.
QuestionPoint
In June 2002, we launched QuestionPoint, a virtual reference desk collaborative
service developed with the Library of Congress and 260 pilot-test libraries.
About 1,000 libraries in 19 countries are using the service. The service has
logged more than 94,000 interactions between reference librarians and patrons,
including some 25,000 chat sessions. The Global Knowledge Base now contains
over 3,600 question-and-answer records.
Virtual International Authorities File
On August 6, 2003, Die Deutsche Bibliothek (DDB), the Library of Congress (LC)
and OCLC signed a memorandum of understanding that will lead to the development
of a Virtual International Authorities File (VIAF). OCLC will use its matching
algorithm software to process bibliographic and personal name authority records
from the retrospective files of LC and DDB to generate the initial authorities
file. The VIAF will be updated regularly with metadata harvested automatically
from the participating national authority files using OAI protocols. This is
a landmark in international library cooperation.
Digital Collection and Preservation Services
In the recent past, OCLC has invested about $10 million to launch new digital
collection and preservation services, and we continue to make progress in this
area. In its first year of operation, the OCLC Digital Archive received some
3,000 objects for long-term access and preservation. Current Digital Archive
participants include the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), and the State
Libraries of Ohio, Michigan, Connecticut, New Mexico and Arkansas. The Library
of Congress, the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Columbia University and
the University of Chicago are now participating in trial-use of the Archive.
We continue to provide consulting and education services to help libraries plan,
fund and implement their digitization and preservation projects and programs.
Clearly, with new advances such as the previously noted WorldCat link to CONTENTdm,
momentum is building in this critical area of the digital library.
Workplace
We continued to invest in training and education to improve our workforce performance.
I am pleased to report that the OCLC Center for Leadership Development, which
operates in partnership with the Fisher College of Business at The Ohio State
University, has received an award of excellence from the American Society for
Training and Development for exemplary practices in workplace learning
and performance.
The Presidents Inclusion Council, which was formed last year to advise
the president on inclusion issues, extended its program to develop breadth and
balance in our workforce in order to become a more effective organization. On
March 18, OCLC hosted the 2003 Ohio Dinners for Spectrum as part of the American
Library Associations Spectrum Initiative, which provides scholarships
to library and information science schools for African American, Latino/Hispanic,
Asian/Pacific Islanders and Native American/Alaskan Native students. Emma Bradford
Perry, OCLC Members Council delegate and Dean of Libraries, Southern University,
was the keynote speaker at this event.
The staffs of OCLC and our regional service providers worked very hard to control
costs and improve services for the OCLC community. I would like to thank them
for staying the course during a particularly demanding year.
Governance
The OCLC Members Council, under the leadership of its 2002/2003 president,
Kristin Senecal, Assistant Director, Technical Services, Dickinson College,
continued to provide valued advice and counsel to OCLC. This past year, the
Council urged OCLC to work more closely with UNESCO and IFLA on international
library programs, including extension of WebJunction and the IFLA/OCLC Institute
Fellows Program. The Council also worked with the Board of Trustees and OCLC
staff to develop Five-Year
Information Format Trends, which was shared with the membership for
strategic planning purposes.
Board Chair William J. Crowe, Spencer Librarian, Kenneth Spencer Research Library,
University of Kansas, continued to provide insightful leadership. He and fellow
Board members provide a disciplined approach to building the long-term future
of the organization. The Board worked closely with Members Council on a Joint
Committee on Membership, which is exploring ways to recognize changing forms
of contribution to the cooperative and their potential effects on how delegate
representation is allocated on the Council.
At this writing, the Board had just held its annual planning retreat with OCLC
senior management. Since we have accomplished many of the goals set forth in
the 2000 plan, we are now looking ahead and revising our strategy and tactics
for the next three years. We will be sharing that strategy with you in the year
ahead.
As we pursue new goals, however, our vision remains the sameto be the
leading worldwide library cooperative, helping libraries serve people by providing
economical access to knowledge through innovation and collaboration.

November 15, 2003
Extending the OCLC cooperative
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