> Shouldn't one also factor in benefits? Costs are not an absolute, but
> relative to benefits.
>
> kc
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) would include the loaded rate (salary and
benefits) plus the cost of doing business, which even in a lean organization
is always another chunk of change.
Then again, if you think of all the catalogers distributed around the
country, if the distributed SH were their work product, and they had
realistic but rigorous deliverables and goals to meet, all it would "cost"
would be what we shift to this effort from how we do things now.
Imagine the hive cataloger mind humming. We wouldn't need a Ranganathan or
Lubetsky; we'd have the collective brilliance of thousands of minds at work
toward the same goal. it works for Wikipedia...
K.G. Schneider
kgs_at_bluehighways.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> >From: "Sperr, Edwin" <sperr_at_NELINET.NET>
> >Sent: May 24, 2007 7:00 AM
> >To: NGC4LIB_at_listserv.nd.edu
> >Subject: [NGC4LIB] Subject Access -- Costs
> >
> >Tim poses a question that cuts to the heart of many of the debates over
> >providing subject access though LCSH:
> >"What *sort* of money are we talking about?". To begin to answer that,
> >we need to unpack the question of costs into at least two parts: 1) The
> >cost of assigning LCSH headings to individual records, and 2) The cost
> >of maintaining the entire LCSH ontology.
> >
> >The cost of adding and editing individual headings seems to be one of
> >the main arguments advanced for dumping (Calhoun) or de-emphasizing
> >(UC's BSTF) LCSH. There is no doubt that it's relatively expensive for
> >a person to analyze an item and then have to apply the proper heading.
> >However, it is also expensive to do all the *other* things involved in
> >acquiring and describing an item. Folks start off with "There's a of
> >waste and inefficiency in traditional cataloging" and move straight on
> >into "Burn the Red Books!" without really touching on any of the steps
> >in-between. What *actual* part of the total cost is the
> >subject-analysis-and-description-part? Big decisions need to be driven
> >by data instead of by anecdote (or the giddy thrill of saying something
> >Really Subversive).
> >
> >It's certainly possible that a good portion of these costs could be
> >lessened with better tools. Indeed, Dorothea Salo recently
> >(http://cavlec.yarinareth.net/archives/2007/04/24/irgrunt/) described
> >looking in her catalog and finding that no two copies of Eugene Onegin
> >had the same headings:
> >
> > "This isn't a cataloguer problem. It's a tools-and-processes
> >problem. Cataloguing
> > tools should have heuristics for recognizing a new translation
> >of Eugene Onegin and
> > pulling up the other records for such translations. Subject
> >assignment at that point should
> > be point-and-click, accept what's already in the catalogue
> >(with, of course, an option to add
> > new subjects if truly necessary-which I can't imagine it is
> >terribly often!)."
> >
> >Again, this stuff isn't rocket science -- just missed opportunities. It
> >is to be hoped that as more librarians start building their own tools
> >(just as with catalog discovery layers) that we'll see some progress on
> >this front.
> >
> >
> >As for the second question, I really have no idea. We're currently in
> >a situation (as much by historical accident as anything else) where LC
> >is not merely the library for a very special constituency, but the
> >de-facto national library as well. I imagine that riding herd over LCSH
> >*is* expensive, and that to least some folks over there it looks like
> >something of an unfunded mandate. Maybe we *do* need to start planning
> >for a future where they just don't want to (or feel they can afford to)
> >do it anymore.
> >
> >The problem for an LCSH sans LC is that controlled vocabularies have to
> >be *controlled* somehow. Theoretical rigor with regards to
> >broader/narrower/related headings would be nice as well, but at
> >*minimum* there needs to be a set of agreed upon terms. Otherwise the
> >whole notion of collocation falls apart.
> >
> >Do we invest The Power in a new authority (OCLC?, LibraryThing?) or do
> >we attempt to decentralize? What would a radically decentralized
> >Controlled Vocabulary look like in theoretical terms? (no, tag-clouds
> >don't count) Are there any current examples we could look at for ideas?
> >
> >
> >
> >Ed Sperr
> >Digital Services Consultant
> >NELINET, Inc.
> >153 Cordaville Rd. Suite 200 Southborough, MA
> >(508) 597-1931 | (800) 635-4638 x1931
>
>
> Karen Coyle - on the Road
> kcoyle_at_kcoyle.net
> skype: kcoylenet
Received on Thu May 24 2007 - 08:16:07 EDT