I would be interested in paying (subject to approval from my head of school who holds the budget for such things). However, I would be interested in knowing more about the traffic that the site generates - more useful than hits is the number of unique visitors to the site. My main concern would be that not all departments would pay this fee and that the list would then not be so authoritative which would rather negate the value for those paying users. How about following a Yellow Pages model where everyone gets a free basic entry similar to the present situation but those who wish to pay an extra fee would receive a larger entry - possibly some kind of banner ad in addition to their normal text entry?
Just a thought.
Martin De Saulles
-----Original Message-----
From: Information and/or Library Studies in the UK [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Prof. Tom Wilson
Sent: 13 July 2007 23:25
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: World list again..
The World List... has been further expanded by the addition of a number of Latin
American countries, details for which were kindly provided by Ian Johnson as a
result of his 'Revistas' project
(http://www.rgu.ac.uk/files/Latin%20American%20Library%20Schools%20v7.doc) - I
still have to review the information for Argentina, Brazil and Mexico, where
there are larger numbers of departments, but that will happen. I've also added
one or two other countries myself and we now have a total of 92 countries and
586 institutions and I don't know how many departments and courses - perhaps
someone would like to count them! Xenu reports that there are 2,864 links to
check. I try to do that a couple of times a year and each time, some 30% of the
links have changed and need to be removed or corrected.
Which brings me to the question of maintenance. I regularly receive comments
about the value of the list for curriculum development and/or research
purposes, but maintenance is a key problem.
This can be dealt with by charging universities in developing countries an
annual fee for entry in the directory - perhaps by Department or School; this
would provide a service to everyone and a free service to the developing world.
Departments pay for entry in printed directories of courses, and something in
the order of $250.00 or £125.00 per entry (i.e., whatever appears under the
name of the department) would correspond favourably with the rates of printed
directories - with the added advantage of a world-wide readership (28,000 hits
on the index page since last September); naturally, under this regime, if a
university didn't wish to pay, it wouldn't get an entry.
Does the community value the list sufficiently to pay for it?
I'll be interested to hear the answer :-)
Professor T.D. Wilson, PhD, Hon.PhD
Publisher/Editor in Chief
Information Research
InformationR.net
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
Web site: http://InformationR.net/
___________________________________________________
|