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Subject: Results from The Survey of Library & Museum Digitization Projects
Date: Tue, 07 Dec 2010 09:46:38 -0500
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Primary Research Group has published The Survey of Library & Museum
Digitization Projects, ISBN 157440-158-0.The nearly 200 page report
looks closely at how academic, public and special libraries and museums
are digitizing special and other collections.The study is based on
detailed data on costs, equipment use, staffing, cataloging, marketing,
licensing revenue and other facets of digitization projects from nearly
100 libraries and museums in the United States, the UK, continental
Europe, Canada, and Australia.The study covers and presents data
separately for digitizers of photographs, film and video, music and
audio, text and re-digitization of existing digital mediums.
*Just a few of the study’s many findings are that: *
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* Digitizers whose primary medium was music and audio spent 56.25%
of their total digitization staff time on cataloging and metadata
related issues.
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* Digitization budgets come largely through non-budgetary
allocations. The library or museum annual budget accounted for
only a little over 35% of the overall digitization budget.
* Prospects for digitization funding in the United States were much
better than prospects outside of the USA; about 28.6% of US survey
participants considered the outlook pretty good or excellent while
only 5.88% of those from other countries shared this optimism.
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* The mean annual number of staff hours expended per institution on
digitization projects was 2,272 with a range of 0 to 24,000 (or
about 12-13 full time employees spending all of their time on
digitization projects).
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* Only 3.45% of institutions sampled have outsourced rights,
permissions or copyright management to any third party.
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* Overall survey participants say that over the past three years
they have outsourced close to 27% of their overall digitization work.
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* Close to 54% of the organizations sampled have some form of
digital asset management software and an additional 8.3% share a
system with another department or division of their institution.
* 14.61% used the servers of some kind of third party service; this
was most popular in the USA, where one sixth of respondents used a
third party server service for digital content storage.
* 16.05% of organizations surveyed license or rent any aspect of
their digital collection to any party.
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* Data is also broken out by budget size, region, type of
institution, and other factors.
For further information view our website at www.PrimaryResearch.com
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