Upload
kramsey
View
1.281
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
The current financial situation has forced many libraries to pay unprecedented attention to how they are organized to achieve their missions. One common thread emerging in the responses is cooperation: those needing to cut costs sharply are finding that they cannot do so incrementally but must instead transform their activities in ways that spread cost and diffuse risk among many partners. The talk will cover some of the opportunities available for transformative institutional collaboration among libraries, including collaborative, open source software development as well as the challenges facing those attempting to collaborate. It will pay particular attention to the question of how to collaborate strategically: that is, how to ensure that collaboration retains or increases a library’s ability to pursue mission, enhance agility, increase sovereignty, and improve sustainability.
Citation preview
Doing More with Less: The Crisis, Cooperation, and the
LibraryChristopher J. Mackie
NELINET Annual Conference
Devens, MA, 1 June 2009
Keep in mind…
• The views presented here are my own, not necessarily those of my colleagues or of The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation• The conclusions reached here reflect my own
knowledge and educated guesses based on information gleaned from the public press and
conversations with your peers and colleagues: others might reach different conclusions on the same data
• All of the projects and approaches described here succeed or fail based on the wisdom and effort of their
participants: “Your Mileage May Vary”
6/1/2009 Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET 2
Mellon’s RIT Program
• 50+ OSS/CSS Projects since 2000• Scholarly Tools:
– Sophie, VUE, Zotero, Decapod• Museum, Performing Arts Projects:
– FluidEngage, ProjectAudience, CollectionSpace• Administrative Cyberinfrastructure:
– Kuali Financials, Kuali Coeus, Kuali Student, etc., etc. • Scholarly Cyberinfrastructure:
– Bamboo, Open Annotation, OLE, OpenCast, Sakai, SEASR• Middleware for Cyberinfrastructure:
– Fluid, ESB, uPortal
1 June 2009 3Mackie, CI and the LAC
RIT “Original Synergy”
(6/2009)
6/1/2009 4Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET
6/1/2009 55
RIT Software Usage
10‐30m users/daily; 300m+ users peak
Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET
Community Source Software
• Collaboration among institutions to design, build, govern(, and operate) software addressing
shared needs/concerns• Cost amortization; risk reduction; stability
enhancement• Examples: Sakai, uPortal, Kuali, OpenCast, SEASR,
Bamboo, others—and OLE (more about OLE later)
• Healthy, competitive vendor market ensures access by institutions lacking IT resources
– IBM, Sun, Oracle– rSmart, Unicon
6/1/2009 Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET 6
Sustainability
• Metrics:– Great: improves ROI, productivity, reduces risk, etc., for org and
constituents
– Good: improves ROI, reduces risk, etc., for scope of project– Bad: Inflates direct or hidden costs, increases risk, destabilizes other
sustaining activities
• Examples:– Great: Consortial
provision of ILS dramatically reduces TCO‐per‐
institution by leveraging open source vendor markets
– Good: Consortial
provision of ILS smoothes economic spikes, allows
institutions to assure more consistent services despite budget
volatility
– Bad: Consortial
provision of ILS mimics “vendor lock‐in”
model,
creating same hidden costs as individual provision, plus costs of
collaboration
6/1/2009 7Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET
Project OLE (Open Library Env’t)• Objective: Next‐generation ILS & global CoP
for a Web 2+ world
• Eliminate traditional/digital library dichotomy; integral electronic
resources, collaboration, consortial
support
• “Enterprise”
tech: extend library more deeply into teaching &
research missions
• Weaving academic libraries together into a single, seamless Web of
knowledge
• 120+ institutions participated in worldwide design effort, including
many RUs, LACs, state, & national libraries
– Consortia well‐represented, including VALE, others• Build to begin 12/2009; first deliverables expected 12/2010
– Seeking build‐partners now, including consortial
partners
– No in‐house tech capacity required, to participate or deploy1 June 2009 Mackie, CI and the LAC 8
OLE and CriticalMASS• Mission
– Good: serves existing needs of libraries for ILS
– Great: Supports next‐gen
OPACs, finding aids to full extent of their capabilities
– Great: “Enterprise”
approach allows library to reach deeper into teaching/research
missions
• Agility– Good: Open standards, open source means improved ability to respond
– Great: CoP
provides intel, best‐practices to perceive, prioritize, respond
• Sovereignty– Good: Healthy vendor ecosystem means fair value for money
– Great: IP ownership vested in Mission‐aligned entity
– Great: “You can fire the vendor without firing the software”
• Sustainability– Good/Great: Costs, risks amortized over all participants
– Good: Wider choice of business models means closer fit to needs
– Great: CSS should allow easier, smoother adaptation to economic changes
6/1/2009 Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET 9
For More Information…
• Project OLE: http://www.oleproject.org/• Other Community Source Projects
– www.kuali.org
(admin and financial services)– www.sakaiproject.org
(learning mgt & research collaboration)– www.ja‐sig.org/uportal
(portal software)– www.opencastproject.org
(campus audio/videocasting)– www.seasr.org
(rich‐media scholarly analysis)– www.projectbamboo.org
(Arts & Hum scholarly support)– http://www.openannotation.org/
(scholarly annotation)• Me
– c j m @ m e l l o n . o r g– http://rit.mellon.org– Christopher J. Mackie
Associate Program Officer, Research in IT
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
6/1/2009 Doing More with Less..., Mackie ‐
NELINET 10