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All the King’s Horses and All the
King’s Men: College Libraries at
the Beginning of the Digital Age
David W. Lewis
NITLE
October 31, 2012
© 2012 David W. Lewis. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Abstract:
This presentation will examine what the current state of
College Libraries. I will use the lens of Clayton Christensen’s
theories of disruptive innovation to attempt to determine
what jobs students and faculty will hire college libraries to do
and what theories we can use to look into the future and
make reasonable predictions about what is coming. A central
consideration will be the role of collections. Collections are of
prime importance because they are both where most of the
money goes and because they have shaped library practice
and values. They are core to how we see ourselves and how
others see us. But collections have large opportunity costs,
and if college libraries are to be successful in the next decade
they must shed some of these costs, without impacting their
users, and reinvest them in new services.
“That is what real revolutions are like. The old
stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put
in its place.”
Clay Shirky, “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” March 2009. Available at:
http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/03/newspapers-and-thinking-the-unthinkable/
Clay Shirky
Today’s Agenda
1. Importance of Theory
2. Disruption in Our World
3. Clayton Christensen’s Disruptive Innovation
Theory
4. What Job are We being Hired to Do?
5. Collections
6. Questions to Think About
The Importance of Theory
• Data is only available about the past
• Every time we take an action it is based on a
theory
• The lens of theory lets you see the future
• Usually our operating theory is that the
future will be a continuation of the past
The Importance of Theory
• The future will be a continuation of the past
is not the theory we need
• Clayton Christensen’s Disruptive Innovation
theory is a much better lens because it fits
our time
“Disruptive Innovation transforms a product
that historically was so expensive and
complicated that only a few people with a lot
of money and a lot of skill had access to it. A
disruptive innovation makes the product so
much more affordable and accessible that a
much larger population have access to it.”
Clayton Christensen, “Disruptive Innovation Explained,” HarvardBusiness, May 30, 2012. Available at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDrMAzCHFUU&feature=related
Our World is Being
Disrupted
1. The Big Shift
2. Ray Kurzweil
3. Clay Shirky
The Big Shift
John Hagel III, John Seely Brown, and Lang Davison, “Measuring the forces of long-term change: The 2009 Shift Index,” Deloitte
Center for the Edge, 2009. Available at: http://www.johnhagel.com/shiftindex.pdf
The Big Shift
The Big Shift
The Big Shift
Disruption Space
The Big Shift
• First Order Effect: Technology substantially
reduces barriers to entry and barriers to
movement on a global scale
• Second Order Effect: Competition intensifies
on a global scale
• Third Order Effect: As competition intensifies,
instability and uncertainty increase
The Big Shift
• Organizations have generally been unable to
apply the capacities made possible by the
technology to increase performance
• Power moves to consumers
• Power moves to trained and skilled
individuals
• Creates organizational and personal stress
See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-
accelerating-returns
Ray Kurzweil and “The
Law of Accelerating
Returns”
When a technology becomes digital the pace of
change becomes exponential.
See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-
accelerating-returns
See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-
accelerating-returns
See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-
accelerating-returns
“The moment we are living through, the
moment our historical generation is living
through, is the largest increase in expressive
capacity in human history.”
Clay Shirky, “How Social Media Can Make History,” TED Talk, June 2009. Available at:
http://www.ted.com/talks/clay_shirky_how_cellphones_twitter_facebook_can_make_history.html
Clay Shirky
Disruptive Innovation
Theory
Disruptive Innovation
Clayton Christensen
Disruptive Innovation
• The capacity for customers to use new
products and features increases, but at a
slow rate
• Products improve faster than customers can
use the improvements
• Products that are initially not good enough
become too good
Time
Time
Time
Undershot
Customer
Overshot
Customer
Disruptive Innovation
• Undershot Customer
– Wants and will pay new features
– Where money can be made
• Overshot Customer
– Doesn’t care about new features – performance
oversupply
– Basis of competition changes
– Wants product to be cheaper, faster, easier
– Commoditization
Time
Time
Disruptive Innovation
• Starts off as not being good enough for
established customers so they don’t care
about the product
• Often creates a new group of users who did
not have the time, expertise, or money to use
the established product
• Begins by competing against non-
consumption
Disruptive Innovation
• Needs
–New Technology (simplified solution)
–New Business Model
–New Value Chain
• How products become cheaper, faster, and
easier
Why can’t established firms adapt
disruptive innovations?
Business Models
Value Proposition
A product that helps
customers do more
effectively, conveniently and
affordably a job they’ve been
trying to do
Business Models
Value Proposition
A product that helps
customers do more
effectively, conveniently and
affordably a job they’ve been
trying to do
Resources
People, technology, products,
facilities, equipment and cash
that are required to deliver
this value to customers
Value Proposition
A product that helps
customers do more
effectively, conveniently and
affordably a job they’ve been
trying to do
Resources
People, technology, products,
facilities, equipment and cash
that are required to deliver
this value proposition to
customers
Processes
Ways of working together to
address recurrent tasks in a
consistent way: training,
development, budgeting,
planning, etc.
Business Models
Business Models
Value Proposition
A product that helps
customers do more
effectively, conveniently and
affordably a job they’ve been
trying to do
Resources
People, technology, products,
facilities, equipment and cash
that are required to deliver
this value proposition to
customers
Processes
Ways of working together to
address recurrent tasks in a
consistent way: training,
development, budgeting,
planning, etc.
Profit Formula/Values
Assets and fixed cost
structure, margins,
professional values, career
paths, etc.
Business Models
Value Proposition
A product that helps
customers do more
effectively, conveniently and
affordably a job they’ve been
trying to do
Resources
People, technology, products,
facilities, equipment and cash
that are required to deliver
this value proposition to
customers
Processes
Ways of working together to
address recurrent tasks in a
consistent way: training,
development, budgeting,
planning, etc.
Profit Formula/Values
Assets and fixed cost
structure, margins,
professional values, career
paths
Business Models
• Established values make in nearly impossible
for organizations to create disruptive
innovation
• Separation is the only strategy that works
• Firms that survive sacrifice business units
that don’t
Value Chain
Product or Service
Sales and Service
Supplier
Customer
Value Chain
Product or Service
Sales and Service
Supplier
Customer
NEW Product
Value Chain
Product or Service
Sales and Service
Supplier
Customer
NEW Product
Value Chain
Product or Service
Sales and Service
Supplier
Customer
NEW Product
NEW Supplier
Sales and Service
NEW Customer
Value Chain
OLD Customer
NEW Product
NEW Supplier
Sales and Service
NEW Customer
Response to Disruptive Innovation
• Cramming — Try to make the innovation
work within old organization processes and
culture
This rarely works
• Move up market — Focus make a better
product for the best customers and concede
lower end
Eventually the market tops out
What Job are We being
Hired to Do?
Ronald Harry Coase
“The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4
(16): 386–405 1937
Question: If markets are efficient, why do we
have firms?
Ronald Harry Coase
“The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4
(16): 386–405 1937
Question: If markets are efficient, why do we
have firms?
Answer: Transaction Costs
Ronald Harry Coase
“The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4
(16): 386–405 1937
• Where the market has high transactions
costs firms bring activities in house
“The Nature of the Firm” and Libraries
• In the past the market could not answer
questions
• Now answering many kinds of questions is
easy
• What is hard now is evaluating what you find
“The Nature of the Firm” and Libraries
• In the past the market could not manage
collections
• Now access to many kinds of collections is
easy
• What is hard now is curation and
preservation of “unpublished” and special
materials
Old Job:
Provide documents to
users by building a local
collection
Our approach to collections has
created our values and it is how
others judge us.
Changing this will be very hard!!
Redefining the Academic Library: Managing the Migration to Digital Information Services, Advisory Board Company 2011. Available at:
http://www.theconferencecircuit.com/wp-content/uploads/Provosts-Report-on-Academic-Libraries2.pdf
Redefining the Academic Library: Managing the Migration to Digital Information Services, Advisory Board Company 2011. Available at:
http://www.educationadvisoryboard.com/pdf/23634-EAB-Redefining-the-Academic-Library.pdf
10 M
20 M
22 M30 M ?
Two Drivers of Change in Collections
1. Open Access
2. Change from Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
Two Drivers of Change in Collections
1. Open Access - Journals
2. Change from Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
- Books
Open Access
“Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of
charge, and free of most copyright and licensing
restrictions. OA removes price barriers (subscriptions,
licensing fees, pay-per-view fees) and permission
barriers (most copyright and licensing restrictions).”
– Peter Suber
Peter Suber, “Open Access Overview,” at: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm
Open Access
• Open Access is a disruptive innovation (Clayton
Christensen)
– New technology
– New business model
– Starts out as an inferior product
– Improves over time and its advantages make
it dominant
– Adoption follows an S-curve not a straight line
David W. Lewis, “The Inevitability of Open Access,” College & Research Libraries September 2012.
Available at: http://crl.acrl.org/content/73/5/493.full.pdf+html
Open Access
0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
100.0%
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Figure 3: Pace of Substitution of Direct Gold OA for
Subscription Journals (normal scale)
Laakso, et. al. Estimates
S-curve Extrapolation Based on 2000-2009
S-curve Extrapolation Based on 2005-2009
David W. Lewis, “The Inevitability of Open Access,” College & Research Libraries September 2012.
Available at: http://crl.acrl.org/content/73/5/493.full.pdf+html
From January 1, 2012 to October 25, 2012
18,414 Articles Published
eLife is a researcher-driven initiative for the very best in science and
science communication. We promote rapid, fair, and more
constructive review. We will use digital media and open access to
increase the influence of published works. We commit to serving
authors and advancing careers in science. At eLife,
Publishing is just the beginning.
If we can set a goal to sequence the human
genome for $99... then why not $99 for
scholarly publishing?
PeerJ is an Open Access publisher of scholarly articles. We aim to
drive the costs of publishing down, while improving the overall
publishing experience, and providing authors with a publication venue
suitable for the 21st Century.
Available at: http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/files/2012/09/Berstein-report-on-Elsevier.pdf
Implications of Open Access
1. Changes in review practices because space is
not an issue
2. “Journal” becomes less important than the
article
3. Large sites replace individual journals, for
example PLoS One or SSRN
Implications of Open Access
1. As more journals become open access, the
library will have to pay for fewer journals
2. Escape from the grip of monopolistic
publishers
3. Libraries in their role of information
providers, won’t be part of the system
Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
• In a typical research library 50% of the books
that are purchased never circulate
• In the past this made sense as an insurance
policy
Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
• Now nearly any book can be purchased at
any time with very quick delivery
• Why purchase before the user needs an item
if you don’t have to?
• Since past use is the best predictor of future
use, books users “select” are likely to get use
in the future
• Print books delivered nearly
as quickly as digital files
• Digital readers nearly as good
as print books
For what might come next, see: Mike Matas, “A Next-Generation Digital Book,” TED Talk, March 2011. Available at:
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/mike_matas.html
Implications of
Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
1. Aggressively work at not buying books that
will never be used
2. Book purchases will decline
3. But impact on readers will be minimal
1. Will impact scholarly publishers by reducing
revenue
They don’t see this coming
Questions to Think
About
1. What do we give up?
• Disruptive Innovations have replaced our
expensive and hard to use services
• Can we free ride on commercial services or
other libraries?
• Implications for our role on campus
• Implications for the status of the campus
2. What Do We Do Differently?
• Can aggressively pursued sustaining
innovations keep us ahead of our
competitors?
• Can we collaborate to achieve greater scale
and efficiency?
• Can we disrupt our own services?
3. What New Things Can We Do?
• Can we disrupt others?
• Are there new jobs we can be hired to do?
“That is what real revolutions are like. The old
stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put
in its place.”
Clay Shirky, “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” March 2009. Available at:
http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/03/newspapers-and-thinking-the-unthinkable/
Clay Shirky
Questions?
Comments
© 2012 David W. Lewis. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

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David Lewis on Libraries

  • 1. All the King’s Horses and All the King’s Men: College Libraries at the Beginning of the Digital Age David W. Lewis NITLE October 31, 2012 © 2012 David W. Lewis. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
  • 2. Abstract: This presentation will examine what the current state of College Libraries. I will use the lens of Clayton Christensen’s theories of disruptive innovation to attempt to determine what jobs students and faculty will hire college libraries to do and what theories we can use to look into the future and make reasonable predictions about what is coming. A central consideration will be the role of collections. Collections are of prime importance because they are both where most of the money goes and because they have shaped library practice and values. They are core to how we see ourselves and how others see us. But collections have large opportunity costs, and if college libraries are to be successful in the next decade they must shed some of these costs, without impacting their users, and reinvest them in new services.
  • 3. “That is what real revolutions are like. The old stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put in its place.” Clay Shirky, “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” March 2009. Available at: http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/03/newspapers-and-thinking-the-unthinkable/ Clay Shirky
  • 4. Today’s Agenda 1. Importance of Theory 2. Disruption in Our World 3. Clayton Christensen’s Disruptive Innovation Theory 4. What Job are We being Hired to Do? 5. Collections 6. Questions to Think About
  • 5. The Importance of Theory • Data is only available about the past • Every time we take an action it is based on a theory • The lens of theory lets you see the future • Usually our operating theory is that the future will be a continuation of the past
  • 6. The Importance of Theory • The future will be a continuation of the past is not the theory we need • Clayton Christensen’s Disruptive Innovation theory is a much better lens because it fits our time
  • 7. “Disruptive Innovation transforms a product that historically was so expensive and complicated that only a few people with a lot of money and a lot of skill had access to it. A disruptive innovation makes the product so much more affordable and accessible that a much larger population have access to it.” Clayton Christensen, “Disruptive Innovation Explained,” HarvardBusiness, May 30, 2012. Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDrMAzCHFUU&feature=related
  • 8. Our World is Being Disrupted
  • 9. 1. The Big Shift 2. Ray Kurzweil 3. Clay Shirky
  • 10. The Big Shift John Hagel III, John Seely Brown, and Lang Davison, “Measuring the forces of long-term change: The 2009 Shift Index,” Deloitte Center for the Edge, 2009. Available at: http://www.johnhagel.com/shiftindex.pdf
  • 14. The Big Shift • First Order Effect: Technology substantially reduces barriers to entry and barriers to movement on a global scale • Second Order Effect: Competition intensifies on a global scale • Third Order Effect: As competition intensifies, instability and uncertainty increase
  • 15. The Big Shift • Organizations have generally been unable to apply the capacities made possible by the technology to increase performance • Power moves to consumers • Power moves to trained and skilled individuals • Creates organizational and personal stress
  • 16. See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of- accelerating-returns Ray Kurzweil and “The Law of Accelerating Returns” When a technology becomes digital the pace of change becomes exponential.
  • 17. See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of- accelerating-returns
  • 18. See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of- accelerating-returns
  • 19. See: Ray Kurzweil, “The Law of Accelerating Returns,” March 7, 2001, available at: http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of- accelerating-returns
  • 20. “The moment we are living through, the moment our historical generation is living through, is the largest increase in expressive capacity in human history.” Clay Shirky, “How Social Media Can Make History,” TED Talk, June 2009. Available at: http://www.ted.com/talks/clay_shirky_how_cellphones_twitter_facebook_can_make_history.html Clay Shirky
  • 21.
  • 22.
  • 25. Disruptive Innovation • The capacity for customers to use new products and features increases, but at a slow rate • Products improve faster than customers can use the improvements • Products that are initially not good enough become too good
  • 26. Time
  • 27. Time
  • 29. Disruptive Innovation • Undershot Customer – Wants and will pay new features – Where money can be made • Overshot Customer – Doesn’t care about new features – performance oversupply – Basis of competition changes – Wants product to be cheaper, faster, easier – Commoditization
  • 30. Time
  • 31. Time
  • 32. Disruptive Innovation • Starts off as not being good enough for established customers so they don’t care about the product • Often creates a new group of users who did not have the time, expertise, or money to use the established product • Begins by competing against non- consumption
  • 33. Disruptive Innovation • Needs –New Technology (simplified solution) –New Business Model –New Value Chain • How products become cheaper, faster, and easier
  • 34. Why can’t established firms adapt disruptive innovations?
  • 35. Business Models Value Proposition A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job they’ve been trying to do
  • 36. Business Models Value Proposition A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job they’ve been trying to do Resources People, technology, products, facilities, equipment and cash that are required to deliver this value to customers
  • 37. Value Proposition A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job they’ve been trying to do Resources People, technology, products, facilities, equipment and cash that are required to deliver this value proposition to customers Processes Ways of working together to address recurrent tasks in a consistent way: training, development, budgeting, planning, etc. Business Models
  • 38. Business Models Value Proposition A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job they’ve been trying to do Resources People, technology, products, facilities, equipment and cash that are required to deliver this value proposition to customers Processes Ways of working together to address recurrent tasks in a consistent way: training, development, budgeting, planning, etc. Profit Formula/Values Assets and fixed cost structure, margins, professional values, career paths, etc.
  • 39. Business Models Value Proposition A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job they’ve been trying to do Resources People, technology, products, facilities, equipment and cash that are required to deliver this value proposition to customers Processes Ways of working together to address recurrent tasks in a consistent way: training, development, budgeting, planning, etc. Profit Formula/Values Assets and fixed cost structure, margins, professional values, career paths
  • 40. Business Models • Established values make in nearly impossible for organizations to create disruptive innovation • Separation is the only strategy that works • Firms that survive sacrifice business units that don’t
  • 41. Value Chain Product or Service Sales and Service Supplier Customer
  • 42. Value Chain Product or Service Sales and Service Supplier Customer NEW Product
  • 43. Value Chain Product or Service Sales and Service Supplier Customer NEW Product
  • 44. Value Chain Product or Service Sales and Service Supplier Customer NEW Product NEW Supplier Sales and Service NEW Customer
  • 45. Value Chain OLD Customer NEW Product NEW Supplier Sales and Service NEW Customer
  • 46. Response to Disruptive Innovation • Cramming — Try to make the innovation work within old organization processes and culture This rarely works • Move up market — Focus make a better product for the best customers and concede lower end Eventually the market tops out
  • 47. What Job are We being Hired to Do?
  • 48. Ronald Harry Coase “The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4 (16): 386–405 1937 Question: If markets are efficient, why do we have firms?
  • 49. Ronald Harry Coase “The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4 (16): 386–405 1937 Question: If markets are efficient, why do we have firms? Answer: Transaction Costs
  • 50. Ronald Harry Coase “The Nature of the Firm” Economica 4 (16): 386–405 1937 • Where the market has high transactions costs firms bring activities in house
  • 51. “The Nature of the Firm” and Libraries • In the past the market could not answer questions • Now answering many kinds of questions is easy • What is hard now is evaluating what you find
  • 52. “The Nature of the Firm” and Libraries • In the past the market could not manage collections • Now access to many kinds of collections is easy • What is hard now is curation and preservation of “unpublished” and special materials
  • 53. Old Job: Provide documents to users by building a local collection
  • 54. Our approach to collections has created our values and it is how others judge us. Changing this will be very hard!!
  • 55. Redefining the Academic Library: Managing the Migration to Digital Information Services, Advisory Board Company 2011. Available at: http://www.theconferencecircuit.com/wp-content/uploads/Provosts-Report-on-Academic-Libraries2.pdf
  • 56. Redefining the Academic Library: Managing the Migration to Digital Information Services, Advisory Board Company 2011. Available at: http://www.educationadvisoryboard.com/pdf/23634-EAB-Redefining-the-Academic-Library.pdf 10 M 20 M 22 M30 M ?
  • 57. Two Drivers of Change in Collections 1. Open Access 2. Change from Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time
  • 58. Two Drivers of Change in Collections 1. Open Access - Journals 2. Change from Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time - Books
  • 59. Open Access “Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions. OA removes price barriers (subscriptions, licensing fees, pay-per-view fees) and permission barriers (most copyright and licensing restrictions).” – Peter Suber Peter Suber, “Open Access Overview,” at: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm
  • 60. Open Access • Open Access is a disruptive innovation (Clayton Christensen) – New technology – New business model – Starts out as an inferior product – Improves over time and its advantages make it dominant – Adoption follows an S-curve not a straight line David W. Lewis, “The Inevitability of Open Access,” College & Research Libraries September 2012. Available at: http://crl.acrl.org/content/73/5/493.full.pdf+html
  • 61. Open Access 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0% 100.0% 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Figure 3: Pace of Substitution of Direct Gold OA for Subscription Journals (normal scale) Laakso, et. al. Estimates S-curve Extrapolation Based on 2000-2009 S-curve Extrapolation Based on 2005-2009 David W. Lewis, “The Inevitability of Open Access,” College & Research Libraries September 2012. Available at: http://crl.acrl.org/content/73/5/493.full.pdf+html
  • 62. From January 1, 2012 to October 25, 2012 18,414 Articles Published
  • 63. eLife is a researcher-driven initiative for the very best in science and science communication. We promote rapid, fair, and more constructive review. We will use digital media and open access to increase the influence of published works. We commit to serving authors and advancing careers in science. At eLife, Publishing is just the beginning.
  • 64. If we can set a goal to sequence the human genome for $99... then why not $99 for scholarly publishing? PeerJ is an Open Access publisher of scholarly articles. We aim to drive the costs of publishing down, while improving the overall publishing experience, and providing authors with a publication venue suitable for the 21st Century.
  • 65.
  • 67. Implications of Open Access 1. Changes in review practices because space is not an issue 2. “Journal” becomes less important than the article 3. Large sites replace individual journals, for example PLoS One or SSRN
  • 68. Implications of Open Access 1. As more journals become open access, the library will have to pay for fewer journals 2. Escape from the grip of monopolistic publishers 3. Libraries in their role of information providers, won’t be part of the system
  • 69.
  • 70. Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time • In a typical research library 50% of the books that are purchased never circulate • In the past this made sense as an insurance policy
  • 71. Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time • Now nearly any book can be purchased at any time with very quick delivery • Why purchase before the user needs an item if you don’t have to? • Since past use is the best predictor of future use, books users “select” are likely to get use in the future
  • 72. • Print books delivered nearly as quickly as digital files • Digital readers nearly as good as print books For what might come next, see: Mike Matas, “A Next-Generation Digital Book,” TED Talk, March 2011. Available at: http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/mike_matas.html
  • 73. Implications of Just-in-Case to Just-in-Time 1. Aggressively work at not buying books that will never be used 2. Book purchases will decline 3. But impact on readers will be minimal 1. Will impact scholarly publishers by reducing revenue They don’t see this coming
  • 75. 1. What do we give up? • Disruptive Innovations have replaced our expensive and hard to use services • Can we free ride on commercial services or other libraries? • Implications for our role on campus • Implications for the status of the campus
  • 76. 2. What Do We Do Differently? • Can aggressively pursued sustaining innovations keep us ahead of our competitors? • Can we collaborate to achieve greater scale and efficiency? • Can we disrupt our own services?
  • 77. 3. What New Things Can We Do? • Can we disrupt others? • Are there new jobs we can be hired to do?
  • 78. “That is what real revolutions are like. The old stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put in its place.” Clay Shirky, “Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable,” March 2009. Available at: http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/03/newspapers-and-thinking-the-unthinkable/ Clay Shirky
  • 79. Questions? Comments © 2012 David W. Lewis. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. The Foundation Index, with an index value of 153 in 2008, has increased at a 10 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) since 1993.This index, shown in Exhibit 4, tells the story of a swiftly moving digital infrastructure propelled by unremitting price performance improvements in computing, storage, and bandwidth that show no signs of stabilizing.The Flow Index, with an index value of 139 in 2008, has increased at a seven percent CAGR since 1993.The Flow Index, shown in Exhibit 6, measures the rate of change and magnitude of knowledge flows resulting from the advances in digital infrastructure and public policy liberalization.This index is designed to measure the rate of change and magnitude of the impact of the Big Shift on three key constituencies: Markets, Firms, and People. For People, it attempts to determine how effective they are as consumers and creative talent at harnessing the benefits of knowledge flows unleashed by advances in the core digital infrastructure. Because they are already good at doing this—and are only getting better at it—the index is set to increase as they derive more value from the Big Shift.At least in the short term, however, Markets and Firms appear to be moving in the opposite direction. Partly at the hands of the consumers and talent who are doing so well, pressures on returns are unparalleled, and the traditional way of doing business is increasingly under siege. So as markets grow more volatile, competition intensifies, and firm performance declines, the Impact Index will also increase.
  2. Findings from the 2009 Shift Index suggest that deep changes in our economic foundations continue to outpace the flows of knowledge they enable and their impact on markets, firms, and people. Fitting a trend line to each of the three indices, we see that the Foundation Index has moved much more quickly in the past 15 years (with a slope of 7.83) relative to the Flow Index (5.95) and the Impact Index (1.93). These comparative rates of change are shown in Exhibit 3.Comparing the relative rates of change and magnitudes of the three indices reveals telling gaps. The gap between the Foundation Index (153) and the Impact Index (111), for example, defines the scope of the challenges and opportunities that arise from rapidly changing digital infrastructure. Essentially, it measures the economic instability that results from performance potential (reflected by the Foundation Index) rising more quickly than realized performance (reflected in the Impact Index). If realized performance is significantly lower than potential performance, there is growing room for disruptive innovation to narrow this gap.
  3. Findings from the 2009 Shift Index suggest that deep changes in our economic foundations continue to outpace the flows of knowledge they enable and their impact on markets, firms, and people. Fitting a trend line to each of the three indices, we see that the Foundation Index has moved much more quickly in the past 15 years (with a slope of 7.83) relative to the Flow Index (5.95) and the Impact Index (1.93). These comparative rates of change are shown in Exhibit 3.Comparing the relative rates of change and magnitudes of the three indices reveals telling gaps. The gap between the Foundation Index (153) and the Impact Index (111), for example, defines the scope of the challenges and opportunities that arise from rapidly changing digital infrastructure. Essentially, it measures the economic instability that results from performance potential (reflected by the Foundation Index) rising more quickly than realized performance (reflected in the Impact Index). If realized performance is significantly lower than potential performance, there is growing room for disruptive innovation to narrow this gap.