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NHS Scotland Knowledge Services ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014

Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

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Page 1: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

NHS Scotland Knowledge Services

ebook Summit

Wednesday 24th September 2014

Page 2: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

UK book sales market 2013The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m

in 2013.Digital sales accounted for only 15% of this but the

annual trend is rising.Digital formats (encompassing both ebooks and online

subscriptions) accounted for 20% of the total invoiced value of sales of academic/professional books in 2013.

The Science, Technical & Medical (STM) sector saw a 1% increase in digital sales.

Between 2009 and 2013, the value of digital sales increased from 6% to 17% in STM.Source: The PA Statistics Yearbook 2013

Page 3: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

STM book sales 2009-2013 (£m)

2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

PrintDigitalTotal

Page 4: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

In summaryDigital is increasing, print is not.All sectors show an upward trend in digital

sales, including ebooks, but there is evidence of a slowing down of the increase.

ebooks are here to stay.

Page 5: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

ebook lending in public librariesBetween 70 and 80% of public libraries in the UK

offer ebooks…but availability of titles is an issue.OverDrive is the most popular digital supplier

(aggregator) serving about half of the public libraries in the UK. It offers a central catalogue of around one million books, audio books and videos.

Source: http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/384034/ebooks-the-final-chapter-for-libraries (accessed 20/9/2014)

Page 6: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

ebook lending in public librariesOverDrive operates two models:

One person, one book at a time.Simultaneous use for unlimited readers over a set

period.OverDrive ebooks are in EPUB format which

doesn’t work on Kindles. They can, however, be downloaded to mobiles and tablets using OverDrive apps.

Source: http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/384034/ebooks-the-final-chapter-for-libraries (accessed 20/9/2014)

Page 7: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

Publishers and ebook lendingMajor publishers like Random House,

Bloomsbury and HarperCollins do allow public libraries access to their full ebook offering. Several don’t: Penguin withdrew its agreement with OverDrive in 2012.

The HarperCollins model allows the book to be ‘loaned’ 26 times before it has to be paid for again.

Page 8: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

Publishers’ concernsPublishers worry about the potential risk that

libraries will simply buy one e-book which will be loaned to multiple readers, in multiple locations, and in multiple numbers.

Therefore they worry that uncurbed, a reader with a library card need never buy a book again.

‘Friction’ v. ease of accessRemote lending v. library visits

Source: http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/384034/ebooks-the-final-chapter-for-libraries (accessed 20/9/2014)

Page 9: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

The Sieghart Report (March 2013)

William Sieghart was commissioned to conduct ‘An Independent Review of e-lending in Public Libraries in England’ and reported in March 2013.

Recommendations:-ebooks should be freeThey should be available to access remotelyOne reader, one book at a timeebooks should ‘deteriorate’ thus forcing

repurchase

Source: DCMS ‘An Independent Review of e-lending in Public Libraries in England’ by William Sieghart

Page 10: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

An alternative model (Publishers Association 2010)

Payment for the service is made on the basis of the population size and is on a sliding scale depending on the number of potential users (i.e. those who live within the area and are eligible to hold library cards).

Publishers decide the size of catalogue available.The service operates through a remote viewing

platform, where content is held securely on the cloud and is viewed but not downloaded. Users can log on to the platform using any device with an internet connection.

Source: The PA ‘E-book lending in public libraries’

Page 11: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

ebook lending in public librariesSome anecdotal information from Stirling

Council Libraries:-5,228 visits last year and looking at an increase

this year.Most borrowed: fiction 77%; biography 6%.Ebooks are being actively promoted to schools,

resulting in an increase of around 6% of children's books.

Most people borrow between 3.00pm and 11.00pm with the peak at 10.00pm.

Page 12: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

Ebook purchasing models in higher educationLibraries are buying more ebooks, often along

with the print edition (bundling).Outright purchase, individually or as a bundle. In

theory this means indefinite access.Subscription: access is granted for a specific period.Credits: Ebooks are purchased with a number of

credits and each use (download or online) deducts a set amount of these credits. Once the credits run down to zero the library has to purchase another copy (Dawsonera).

Short-term rental (similar to interlibrary loan)Source: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. Ebook Acquisition and Lending Briefing, July 2013

Page 13: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

ebooks in higher educationThe Society of College, National and University

Libraries (SCONUL) Annual Library Statistics, 2010-11:UK university libraries offered access to more than 21

million ebooks More than 17 million ebooks were purchased 1,089 e-book databases were purchasedExpenditure on ebooks was £12.7m

In general libraries spend significantly more on online resources and subscription services like databases than print and ebooks.

Source: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. Ebook Acquisition and Lending Briefing, July 2013

Page 14: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

ebooks in higher educationEbrary global ebook survey, 2011, key findings

Ebook usage is on a par with print books, with almost equal numbers of students using each type.

72% of students would use ebooks if there were more titles in their subject area.

60% of students would use ebooks if there were less restrictions on printing & copying.

85% of students want to download to a PC.

Source: Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. Ebook Acquisition and Lending Briefing, July 2013

Page 15: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

Ebooks. And...?‘Given the very nature of the digital

marketplace and the medium, it is not just ebooks that the market consumes. Opportunities exist not only in creating ebook collections, bookshelves and the like, but in delivering learning content in a far more interactive and dynamic manner.’

Source: The PA Statistics Yearbook 2013

Page 16: Ebook Summit Wednesday 24 th September 2014. UK book sales market 2013 The invoiced value of all UK book sales was £3.389m in 2013. Digital sales accounted

NHS Scotland Knowledge Services

ebook Summit

Wednesday 24th September 2014