How do you know if you’re investing in the right resources? Our organisations are currently facing some difficult financial challenges, so all budgets are under review. One area that library and information people will be looking at carefully is online premium or subscription content. This important paid-for content provides your end-users with information and intelligence that free resources don’t cover.
However, assessing its value requires more than just counting downloads. We have the statistics, but we also need to look at its impact and how it is used to see the full picture. I’ve put together some thoughts about how we can improve the ROI of paid content.
First, sketch out your content strategy. Strategic planning of any kind is not difficult but it requires an investment in time and staffing resources. However, it’s a worthwhile exercise because it enables your service to become more efficient. You need to know what the organisation is looking to achieve and how the information service can be a part of that.
Think about the scope of your external content strategy. What is the reason you are collecting information about your resources? Is it budgetary? Is it part of the disaster recovery / business continuity plan? To improve your current awareness? To help the company make better-educated decisions? Is it for competitor analysis or to build business development?
Once you have fleshed out your goals and your team is happy with the result, it’s time to put your plan into action and achieve your objectives.
Subscribing to several premium external content sources is costly. In some industries, there are a limited number from which to choose and each publisher offers a different emphasis. Choosing which ones are needed is no simple task, and it may come down to basic budget considerations. Ask yourself - and your users:
Estimating the return on investment for each premium content source can be challenging, but it’s important to understand the value that each subscription brings to your readers. The right content aggregation tool can help you track the usage of every subscription and source accurately.
Once you have a clearer vision of the subscription material available to your users, you might find gaps in your information provision. You might find areas of duplication, or one department which is over-provided for; drowning in information isn’t a good strategy. The goal is to select one or two relevant sources that cover exactly what you need.
During your investigations, you might have discovered that your organisation is looking to build up an area of new speciality. It’s much easier to plan for and anticipate needs when you know what your organisation is planning. Building a road map of requirements will help you prioritise which sources should be picked and what they will add to your organisation’s shared knowledge.
You also need to find out what information will be relevant in this new area. It should be directed by the end-user’s needs. Are they looking for detailed insight, or a “broad brush” overview? An encyclopaedic text, or specialist articles? News, government sources or commentary? Do you need to investigate foreign sources?
Negotiations take time, and rushing through the process won’t serve anyone well; unfavourable terms, overpaying for services, poor customer relations, etc. To successfully negotiate a contract, you have to tackle it step by step, going through the easier relationship-building aspects first, and then working your way through the more difficult issues.
Allow yourself to take some time in your calendar to review all your premium subscriptions and to renegotiate the terms according to the usage your company has. Remember that certain times of year are more favourable times to negotiate, for example, salespeople might be able to grant discounts before the end of their fiscal year.
Most vendors and large publishers provide room for negotiation, and if you have prepared well, there is the opportunity for some mutually beneficial renewals. For example, multi-year deals mean security for the vendor, and you can save time and money over the next few years. If they are an innovative solution provider, ask if you can beta-test something - you’re at the cutting edge, and they get valuable feedback.
Whatever your library management strengths and weaknesses, get comfortable with negotiating skills. Ask for internal assistance, if necessary. You might have access to a procurement team, or have an ally in the finance or marketing team. There are also courses to learn more about negotiating - get signed up and it might pay dividends.
Your content has to reach the right audience. Creating an efficient content distribution strategy isn’t easy. Content overload coupled with a bad distribution process is usually the recipe for a disaster that can paralyse an entire system. Identifying bottlenecks in the process can help you find solutions.
Look at every current awareness newsletter, forwarded email, chance encounter, intranet page, research request, induction, or departmental meeting as an opportunity to advertise your content delivery services. You can connect in many ways:
Whatever you are doing, get noticed! People are used to seeing slick and well-presented material online so don’t let your readers down.There are many easy-to-use multimedia apps available, so you can create and enhance professional communications and reports. With the right systems in place, Vable can report that information people see the immediate benefit, with one information and research team telling us,
We can respond faster and deliver more, highly curated, relevant updates, customised to people’s needs [and a] professional, fresh design has elevated the team’s output.
Having a clear content strategy will enable a flying start. There are many ways to get your content in front of the right audience so choose wisely and the right content management or current awareness aggregation platform will solve many issues at once. Enjoy reporting an increased or higher return on your information and content investment.
Automate your processes ● Curate your resources ● Deliver actionable content