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A pronounced move from print subscriptions to electronic resources
in all types of libraries has fundamentally impacted the library
and its users. With the influx of resources such as e-journals;
e-books; index, abstract, and/or full-text databases; aggregated
databases; and others, the shift to electronic resources is rapidly
changing library operational and organizational procedures.
""Electronic Resource Management in Libraries: Research and
Practice"" provides comprehensive coverage of the issues, methods,
theories, and challenges connected with the provision of electronic
resources in libraries, with emphasis on strategic planning,
operational guidelines, and practices. This book primarily focuses
on management practices of the life-cycle of commercially acquired
electronic resources from selection and ordering to cataloging, Web
presentation, user support, usage evaluation, and more.
Using database-driven web pages or web content management (WCM)
systems to manage increasingly diverse web content and to
streamline workflows is a commonly practiced solution recognized in
libraries to-day. However, limited library web content management
models and funding constraints prevent many libraries from
purchasing commercially available WCM systems. And, the lack of
much needed technical expertise in building in-house WCM systems
presents a great challenge for libraries of all types. Content and
Workflow Management for Library Websites: Case Studies provides
practical and applicable web content management solutions through
case studies. It contains successful database-to-web applications
as employed in a variety of academic libraries. The applications
vary in scope and cover a range of practical how-to-do-it examples
from database-driven web development, locally created web content
management systems, systems for distributing content management
responsibilities, dynamic content delivery, to open source tools,
such as MySQL and PHP to manage the content. Issues and challenges
associated with the development process are discussed. Authors will
also discuss detours, sand traps, and missteps necessary to a real
learning process.
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