ACRL News Issue (B) of College & Research Libraries October 1991 / 573 Alternative sources o f revenue in academic libraries By Anne Beaubien H ead o f Access Services University o f Michigan and Mary J o Lynch Director ALA Office f o r Research and Statistics From, book sales to endowments‚ every little bit helps. E ditor’s Note:The ALA Office for Research and Statistics and the ACRL Task Force on Sources of Revenue in Academic Libraries recently completed a study with financial support from the H.W. Wilson Foundation. Results are described in an 80-page report entitled Alternative Sources o f Revenuein Academic Libraries, available fro m ALA. This article is based on the Executive Summary of that report. The library literature is full of articles about the financial problems of academic libraries. Much is known about such things as rising costs and how to manage budgets to meet them. Little is known, however, about how academic librarians are raising supplementary funds to augment the regular library budget. The extent and nature of those activities is largely undocumented. Neither the National Cen­ ter for Education Statistics (NCES) nor the Asso­ ciation of Research Libraries (ARL) collect statis­ tics on that topic. Several years ago the ALA Office for Research and the ACRL Task Force decided to explore it. The result is a groundbreaking report that describes a small but important component of the revenue stream of academic libraries. This summary article describes what was done and what was learned. In April 1990 a four-page questionnaire was mailed to a sample of over 800 academic libraries stratified by the four basic categories in A Classifi­ cation o f Institutions o f H igher Education pub­ lished by the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad­ vancement of Teaching: two-year institutions, lib­ eral arts colleges, comprehensive colleges and uni­ versities, and doctorate-granting institutions. Re­ spondents were asked to describe their revenues in the most recent fiscal year, from five possible “alter­ native” sources of revenue: services, sales, and special events; computerized catalogs and data­ bases, searching and printing; fines and replace­ ment charges; gifts and grants; and library endow­ ments. The report contains 30 tables and 12 figures that present results in detail. The two figures shown here summarize those results. Figure 1 (Figure 11 in the report) shows the percentage of respondents reporting various dollar amounts of revenue from all alternative sources. Figure 2 (Figure 12 in the report) shows the per­ centage of respondents reporting income from all alternative sources as a percentage of operating expenditures; it also indicates the relative impor­ tance of those dollars in a library’s total budget. The following statements highlight key findings. G en eral 1). Some libraries in each of the four Carnegie categories get some revenue from each of the five alternative sources. 2). Doctorate-granting institutions are most likely to get some revenue from each of the five sources and are most likely to get larger amounts of revenue from any source. 3). The total amount of revenue from all alterna­ tive sources varies widely by Carnegie category. Respondents reporting more than $10,000 from 574 / C&R L News these sources were 93% of doctorate-granting insti­ tutions, 56% o f comprehensive institutions, 35% of liberal arts institutions, and 24% of two-year insti­ tutions. 4). The percentage of operating expenditures coming from alternative sources is more than 1% but less than 10% in most institutions. Public two- year schools are least likely to report income from these sources. S ervices, sales, an d sp ecial events 5). Many academic libraries charge users for various services, sales, and special events. Practices vary, however, with the user and the situation in the same library and in different libraries. Sixty-four percent of doctorate-granting institutions reported more than $10,000 from this source. On the other hand, only 4% of two-year schools reported amounts that large. 6). In many cases, libraries do not receive the funds but pass them on to another agency or to the parent institution. 7). The vast majority of libraries in comprehen­ sive, liberal arts, and two-year institutions receive either nothing or less than $10,000 a year from services, sales, and special events. In most cases, the amount is less than 1% of their operating expendi­ tures. C o m p u terized catalo gs an d databases, s earch in g an d prin ting 8 ). Many academic libraries offer online catalog searching, remote database searching, and CD- ROM searching and some also offer searching of locally mounted tapes. The percentage of respon­ dents offering these services varies, with doctorate- granting institutions showing the highest percent­ ages for all four services. 9). O f the four computerized services, most academic libraries charge only for remote database searching. Funds are not always received by the library, however. The percentage of respondents reporting that they receive the funds is lower than the percentage that charge by at least 12 percentage points in all Carnegie categories and lower by 19 points for comprehensive institutions. Students of­ ten get some or all searching free. 10). The vast majority o f academic libraries re­ ceive either nothing or less than $ 10,000 a year from searching and printing of computerized catalogs and databases. F in es and re p la c e m e n t ch arg es 11). Fines are charged in the majority of aca­ demic libraries. In over half of the libraries, how­ ever, fine monies are not available to the library. F ig u r e 1 Figure 1. Percentage o f respondents (vertical) reporting various d ollar amounts o f revenue fr o m all alternative sources (horizontal). October 1991 / 575 F ig u re 2 Figure 2. Percentage o f respondents reporting income fr o m all alternative sources (vertical) as a percentage o f operating expenses (horizontal). 12). Replacement costs are an even more com­ mon charge. In this case, the dollars are usually available to the library. Gifts and grants 13). Doctorate-granting institutions are more likely to receive gifts and grants from any of the nine sources listed on the questionnaire. 14). Gifts and grants were more likely to be a source of $10,000 or more than any other type of alternative sources studied and more likely to con­ stitute more than 1% o f operating expenditures. L ib rary endowments 15). Seventy-five percent of responding libraries in doctorate-granting institutions reported having an endowment but only 40% of comprehensive institutions have them, 27% of liberal arts colleges, and 9% of two-year colleges. 16). Most library endowments are less than $1 million. However, 32% of respondents in doctor­ ate-granting institutions reported endowments of more than $1 million. 17). Only 2% of two-year institutions reported revenue of over $10,000 from interest or endow­ ment. Amounts of that size were reported by 54% of doctorate-granting institutions, 12% of compre­ hensive institutions, and 14% of liberal arts institu­ tions. 18). Endowment interest constitutes more than 2% of operating expenditures in 18% of doctorate- granting institutions, 8% of comprehensive institu­ tions, 17% of liberal arts colleges, and 2% of two- year colleges. Fundraisin g — financial developm ent 19). Well over half of doctorate-granting institu­ tions were involved in some kind of library fund­ raising in the three years preceding spring of 1990, but considerably fewer institutions were so involved in the other Carnegie categories. 20). The percentage of institutions reporting the presence of professionals devoted to library fund raising is relatively small for all Carnegie categories except doctorate-granting institutions. Even for those institutions, only 49% reported such a person paid from the library budget and only 36% reported someone paid from the institutional budget. It was hard to do research on alternative sources of revenue because of a lack of agreement in the library community regarding financial terminol­ ogy. Despite that, the study provides baseline data 576 / C &R L News that show how each of these five sources fits into the revenue picture in each of the four Carnegie cat­ egories. The information should be useful as librar­ ians plan activities in this arena and respond to suggestions from campus administrators. Alternative Sources o f Revenue in Academ ic L i­ braries (ISBN: 0-8389-5742-0) is available for $8. Write to: Order Department, American Library Association, 50 E . Huron Street, Chicago, IL 60611. ■ ■ Potential money savers While the survey on Alternative Sources o f Rev­ enue is helpful for indicating other areas of revenue, libraries are also looking for ways to cut costs. We thought readers might find this list of money-saving ideas by the University of California, Irvine’s, Li­ brary Management Advisory Council and Budget Planning Task Force (first appearing in UCI L i­ brary Items, August 12, 1991) of interest. All the ideas are in the “preliminary consideration stage” and library staff are aware that some suggestions di­ rectly affect the students. “Since UCI has just undergone a 40% increase intuition and fees, these suggestions will be subject to intense scrutiny … both in the Library and campus administration. Here are the top 18 ideas, in no particular order.” 1) Raise photocopy charges (including micro­ form). 2) Charge public for printing MELVYL/CD- ROM. 3) Raise fee for Friends of Library card. 4) Increase lost card fee. 5) Reduce open hours. 6) Set time for holding positions vacant. 7) Reduce Library Security Monitor (LSM) hours. 8) Reduce binding. 9) Reduce targeting volumes. 10) Stop producing and sending Serials Lists on fiche. 11) Replace voice mail with phone answering machines. 12) Reduce costs for librarian searches. 13) Reduce professional development travel. 14) Reduce administrative travel. 15) Eliminate book title system (BTS). 16) Introduce vending machines. 17) Reduce/eliminate duplication service. 18) Students pick up duplication costs for Hu­ manities 75 materials.