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Diving Into E-Book Usage: ALA Update Las Vegas June 27, 2014 Michael Levine-Clark Associate Dean for Scholarly Communication & Collections Services University of Denver

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Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update,” Invited, ProQuest Day: Transforming Libraries, Transforming Research. Las Vegas, June 27, 2014.

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Page 1: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Diving Into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Las VegasJune 27, 2014

Michael Levine-ClarkAssociate Dean for Scholarly Communication &

Collections ServicesUniversity of Denver

Page 2: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Previous Presentations

• Different data set – All books available across a four-year period

(ebrary) or three-year period (EBL) ending in 2013– No information about time spent in book– No information about number/type of institutions

with access to a particular title• Tested the methodology

http://www.slideshare.net/MichaelLevineClark/presentations

Page 3: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Data Overview

All e-books from ebrary and EBL • Usage for 2013• Worldwide• Three library types– Academic– Public– Special

Page 4: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Usage Definitions• Session– Any time that a user interacts with an e-book

• Page View– A count of the number of pages examined

• Download– A download of the entire book

• Usage Time– Measured in seconds, the amount of time spent

looking at the book

Page 5: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Some aspects of usage aren’t comparable

• ebrary has far more libraries than EBL– Averages and totals only useful when comparing

within one aggregator• There may be some platform differences that

drive usage in different ways:– More downloads per session on EBL = fewer pages

viewed – EBL has a landing page and ebrary doesn’t.

Page 6: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

What can we learn by examining usage on such a large scale?

• Are we collecting the right things?• Does quality matter?• Are there general patterns by subject?• Can we identify disciplinary preferences?• What are the best ways to measure use?• Can those patterns and preferences help

shape our collections and guide our services?

Page 7: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

The Complete Data Set

Academic Public Special0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

250,000

300,000

350,000

400,000

Academic Public Special0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

250,000

300,000

Page 8: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Academic Library eBooks

• 280,008 titles– Available on average in 724

libraries

• 278,428 titles with LCCN– Available on average in 727

libraries

• 379,111 titles– Available on average in 72

libraries

• 345,891 titles with LCCN– Available on average in 73

libraries

Page 9: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Number of Titles Available: ebrary

H P Q R B T D L J G K E N M S F Z U

NO LCCN C V A

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

Page 10: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Number of Titles Available: EBL

H Q P

NO LCCN R T B D L K G J E S N M F U Z C V A

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

70000

80000

Page 11: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Academic Library eBook Usage

278,428 titles with LCCN

On average in 2013, each title:– Was held by 726.6 libraries– Had 424.9 sessions– Had 6,623.1 page views– Had 14.7 downloads– Was viewed for 54,556.8

seconds (15.2 hours)

345,891 titles with LCCN

On average in 2013, each title:– Was held by 73.3 libraries– Had 27.8 sessions– Had 571.7 page views– Had 3.5 downloads– Was viewed for 278.5

seconds (4.6 minutes)

Averages are per title across all libraries.

Page 12: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Academic Library eBook Usage

278,428 titles with LCCN

On average in 2013, at each library, each title:

– Had 0.58 sessions– Had 9.12 page views– Had 0.02 downloads– Was viewed for 75.09 seconds

345,891 titles with LCCN

On average in 2013, at each library, each title:

– Had 0.38 sessions– Had 7.79 page views– Had 0.05 downloads– Was viewed for 3.80 seconds

Page 13: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Average Number of Libraries with Title Available by Discipline

Arts & Humani-

ties

Social Sciences

STEM0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

ebrary

Arts & Humani-

ties

Social Sciences

STEM0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

EBL

Page 14: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Title Availability: Ebrary

E F U D M Z V B C P H J N A Q K G S R T L0.0

200.0

400.0

600.0

800.0

1000.0

1200.0

Average number of academic libraries with title available

Page 15: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Title Availability: EBL

H L J G E M Q D Z T B N F C R K P A V S U0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

70.0

80.0

90.0

Average number of academic libraries with title available

Page 16: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

ARE THESE THE RIGHT BOOKS?

Page 17: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Sessions Compared to Availability

Arts &

Humanities

Socia

l Scie

nces

STEM

0100200300400500600700800900

ebrary

AvailabilitySessions

Arts &

Humanities

Socia

l Scie

nces

STEM

0102030405060708090

EBL

AvailabilitySessions

On this and the next two slides, sessions are multiplied to fit scale (ebrary X 1000, EBL X 100)

Page 18: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Sessions Compared to Availability: Ebrary

E F U D M Z V B C P H J N A Q K G S R T L0.0

200.0

400.0

600.0

800.0

1000.0

1200.0

1400.0

1600.0

AvailabilitySessions

Sorted by average availability (number of libraries with access)

Page 19: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Sessions Compared to Availability: EBL

H L J G E M Q D Z T B N F C R K P A V S U0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

70.0

80.0

90.0

AvailabilitySessions

Sorted by average availability (number of libraries with access)

Page 20: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

DO HIGHER-QUALITY E-BOOKS GET USED MORE?

Page 21: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

University Press Books

• A proxy for quality• ebrary – 41,177 titles• EBL – 34,525 titles

Do better books get used at a higher rate?

Page 22: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

University Press Title Availability by Discipline

19075

13260

7533

Arts & Humanities Social Sciences

STEM

14233

10390

7325

Arts & HumanitiesSocial SciencesSTEM

Page 23: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Overall Usage: titles with at least one session

All Titles with LCCN

University Press0.0%

20.0%

40.0%

60.0%

80.0%

100.0%

120.0%

97.3% 99.5%

ebrary

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.0%

20.0%

40.0%

60.0%

80.0%

100.0%

120.0%

73.5%80.1%

EBL

Page 24: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Overall Usage: average sessions per title per institution

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.000

0.100

0.200

0.300

0.400

0.500

0.600

0.700

0.584 0.615

ebrary

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.379 0.357

EBL

Page 25: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Overall Usage: average page views per title

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.001.002.003.004.005.006.007.008.009.00

10.00 9.12 9.51

ebrary

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0123456789

10

7.79 7.58

EBL

Page 26: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Overall Usage: titles viewed at least once

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.0%

20.0%

40.0%

60.0%

80.0%

100.0%

120.0%

99.3% 99.3%

ebrary

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.0%

20.0%

40.0%

60.0%

80.0%

100.0%

120.0%

72.3%79.1%

EBL

Page 27: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Overall Usage: time per title (in seconds)

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.0010.0020.0030.0040.0050.0060.0070.0080.0090.00

100.00

75.1083.73

ebrary

All Titles with LCCN

University Press Titles

0.000.501.001.502.002.503.003.504.004.505.00

3.80 3.87

EBL

Page 28: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

University Press Summary

• Used at a higher rate across most categories.• Does this mean that users are seeking out

quality books?

Page 29: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

BROAD DISCIPLINARY DIFFERENCES

Page 30: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

The Disciplines

HumanitiesB (Philosophy, Religion) excluding BF (Psychology)C, D, E, F (History)M (Music)N (Fine Arts)P (Language & Literature)

Social Sciences BF (Psychology)H (Social Sciences)J (Political Science)K (Law)L (Education)U, V (Military, Naval Sciences)

STEMQ (Science)R (Medicine)S (Agriculture)T (Technology)

Page 31: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Percentage of Titles Usedebrary

Discipline % Titles with a Session

% Titles Viewed % Titles Downloaded

Humanities 96.62% 96.35% 34.64%

Social Sciences 98.61% 98.40% 32.06%

STEM 96.38% 96.06% 30.45%

Baseline (all titles with an LCCN) 97.27% 97.01% 32.24%

Page 32: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Percentage of Titles UsedEBL

Discipline % Titles with a Session

% Titles Viewed % Titles Downloaded

Humanities 70.78% 69.64% 38.94%

Social Sciences 76.59% 75.71% 47.25%

STEM 72.83% 71.31% 43.58%

Baseline (all titles with an LCCN) 73.53% 72.34% 43.58%

Page 33: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Average Usageebrary

Discipline Sessions Page Views Full Downloads Time (Seconds)

Humanities 0.48 7.32 0.0156 63.41

Social Sciences 0.68 10.45 0.0234 87.88

STEM 0.59 9.61 0.0225 72.99

Baseline (all titles with LCCN)

0.58 9.12 0.0203 75.09

Page 34: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Average UsageEBL

Discipline Sessions Page Views Full Downloads Time (Seconds)

Humanities 0.30 6.16 0.0351 3.17

Social Sciences 0.45 8.90 0.0561 4.40

STEM 0.36 7.69 0.4858 3.51

Baseline (all titles with LCCN)

0.38 7.79 0.4796 3.80

Page 35: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Actions Per Sessionebrary

Discipline Views Per Session

Downloads Per Session

Time Per Session

Humanities 15.12 0.032 130.61

Social Sciences 15.42 0.035 129.42

STEM 16.40 0.384 124.06

Baseline (all titles with an LCCN) 15.59 0.035 128.05

Page 36: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Actions Per SessionEBL

Discipline Views Per Session

Downloads Per Session

Time Per Session

Humanities 20.49 0.117 10.55

Social Sciences 19.97 0.126 9.86

STEM 21.59 0.136 9.86

Baseline (all titles with an LCCN) 20.59 0.127 10.03

Page 37: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Disciplinary Summary

• Social sciences far outperform humanities and STEM in two categories– Percentage of books used– Average amount of use

• STEM outperforms the others in actions per session• Readers in the humanities spend more time in the

book per session

Page 38: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

MEASURING PREDICTED USE

Page 39: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Performance Relative to Predicted Use

H B J R D L K M E G Q N C A S V Z U F T P0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%

20.00%

25.00%

% of available % of titles with a session

Page 40: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Performance Relative to Predicted Use

H R L N D M E A B G C Z V J U F S K P T Q0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%

20.00%

25.00%

30.00%

% of Titles Available % of Sessions

Page 41: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Performance Relative to Predicted Use

H L T J R N D M E Z A V S C G B U F K P Q0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%

20.00%

25.00%

% of Titles Available % of Titles with a Session

Page 42: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Performance Relative to Predicted Use

H L R G N J A C Z V M U S F E D K B T P Q0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%

20.00%

25.00%

30.00%

% of Titles Available % of Sessions

Page 43: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

INTENSIVE / EXTENSIVE USE

Page 44: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Breadth vs Depth

PERCENTAGE OF TITLES USED

AVER

AGE

AMO

UN

T O

F U

SE

Page 45: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

ebrary Sessions – Avg and % Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Page 46: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

EBL Sessions – Avg and % Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Page 47: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

ebrary Page Views – Avg and % Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Page 48: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

EBL Page Views – Avg and % Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Page 49: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

ebrary Downloaded – Avg and % Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Page 50: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

EBL Downloaded – Avg and % Narrow (low %) but Deep (more usage of each title)

Broad (high %) andDeep (more usage of each title)

Narrow (low %) andShallow (low usage of each title)

Broad (high % and Shallow (low usage of each title)

Page 51: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update
Page 52: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update
Page 53: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

CAN WE DETERMINE LEVEL OF IMMERSION IN A BOOK?

Page 54: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Page Views Per Session

T Q F N R D H G C E M L Z P J B S K U A V0.002.004.006.008.00

10.0012.0014.0016.0018.0020.00

15.86

Page 55: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Seconds Per Session (Time in the Book)

E D F U H J M R G P K L C Q T N B S Z V A0.00

20.00

40.00

60.00

80.00

100.00

120.00

140.00

160.00

128.05

Page 56: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Page Views Per Session

F N V M T E R Q G A D C H S P J K B Z U L0.00

5.00

10.00

15.00

20.00

25.00

30.00

20.59

Page 57: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Seconds Per Session (Time in the Book)

F E D J M C V G A K U R H P Q B T N S L Z0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

14.00

16.00

10.03

Page 58: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Summary: Level of Immersion

• Users spend the most time (in seconds) in history books (D, E, F)

• Users examine a lot of pages in technology books (T) but spend a relatively small amount of time

Page 59: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update
Page 60: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

CONCLUSIONS

Page 61: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

There are many ways to measure use

• Difference from predicted use• Depth vs breadth– Books used a lot vs a lot of books used

• Type of use (session, view, download)• Amount of use per session

Page 62: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Quality Matters

• University press books used at a higher rate by most measures

• Users appear to be making some judgment about quality

Page 63: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

There are clear (but nuanced) differences by subject

• Two examples– F (History, Americas) • Low usage as % of available F titles• Low average usage rate• Very poor performance relative to availability of F titles• High # of page views by session• Lots of time in the book

– L (Education)• High usage as % of available L titles• High average usage rate• Very strong performance relative to availability of L titles• Relatively low # of page views by session/time in book

Page 64: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

How do we use these observations to build better collections and

better serve our users?

Page 65: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

White Paper…

…coming soon

• Merged data (EBL and ebrary)• Longer time range• Analysis by library type• Analysis by region• Will be on the EBL and ebrary web sites

Plus future publications and presentations

Page 66: Levine-Clark, Michael, “Diving into E-Book Usage: ALA Update

Thank You

Michael Levine-ClarkAssociate Dean for Scholarly Communication and

Collections ServicesUniversity of Denver [email protected]

http://www.slideshare.net/MichaelLevineClark