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The following are a few of the presentations made by Alexander Street management
to scholarly organizations, or by scholars speaking at Alexander Street customer events. If you would like to invite Alexander Street Press to present at your event, please contact us.



Tag! Are You It? Taxonomies & Folksonomies in Practice
Presented by Stephen Rhind-Tutt at the Society for Scholarly Publishing Annual Meeting, Boston, May 28, 2008 (PowerPoint)

 
Say What You Mean: How Semantic Tagging Makes Content More Discoverable, More Useful, and More Valuable
Presented by Stephen Rhind-Tutt at the Society for Scholarly Publishing Annual Meeting, Boston, May 28, 2008 (PowerPoint)

 
Is Reference Dead? Is Collecting Dead
Presented by Stephen Rhind-Tutt at The Charleston Conference, November 10, 2007 (PowerPoint)

 
Presented at the Society for Scholarly Publishing Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, November 14, 2007 (PowerPoint)

Stephen Rhind-Tutt discusses the ways in which electronic publishers add value through aggregation, mashing, linking, and licensing. 
 


Content Proliferations: Libraries and Publishers
Presented at the Digital Library Federation Forum, Pasadena, CA, April 23, 2007 (PowerPoint)

Stephen Rhind-Tutt looks at digital publishing and librarianship, and argues for removing content silos.


How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Web 2.0
Presented by Stephen Rhind-Tutt at The Charleston Conference in November, 2006 (PowerPoint)

 


Changes in Scholarly Communication
Presented at the American Association of University Presses, New Orleans, June 2006 (PowerPoint)

Stephen Rhind-Tutt takes a look at the state of scholarly communication and discusses the future role of publishers in the electronic world.


"Top of the Pop" by Gail Golderman and Bruce Connolly
Published in Library Journal, April 15, 2006.


"Free Is Good" by Stephen Rhind-Tutt
Published in Against the Grain, April 2006.

Stephen Rhind-Tutt discusses the rationale behind Alexander Street Press's free index, In the First Person.


The Music Library Association Conference: February, 2006, Memphis,TN
Presented at MLA, February 2006 (PowerPoint)

In "Music in context for the humanities and social sciences," Tim Lloyd explains our approach towards electronic resources for music and introduces two exciting new products that we’re planning to launch later this year. This presentation was given as part of our MLA Breakfast at Memphis on Feb 23. To view this presentation, click here.

Electronic Publication: Changes in How Academic Work is Disseminated and Read 
Presented at the University of California, San Diego, February 2006

Stephen Rhind-Tutt takes a look at the state of scholarly communication and discusses the future role of publishers in the electronic world.

The Charleston Conference: November 2-5, 2005, Charleston, SC

Alexander Street hosted two juried product development forums at the Charleston Conference: "Music to your ears: Is Alexander Street's music program on the right track" and "New pricing model - FREE! In the First Person: Index to Letters, Diaries, Oral Histories, and Narratives." We thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to interact with you and hear your ideas.



Increasing the visibility of Humanities Information in the Marketplace
Presented at the NFAIS Humanities Roundtable, October 14, 2005 (PowerPoint)

The 2005 NFAIS Humanities Roundtable followed the full product life cycle - from determining the needs of the individual user through to the deployment of the information resource within the library environment. Attendees left with a better understanding of how to provide must-have information resources to humanists by investigating every step of the product life cycle:

• The needs of the users
• Approaches for developing different types of content resources
• Enhancing the findability of the content
• Marketing the content to the purchaser
• Marketing the content to the user
• Other issues: Tim Lloyd's presentation, specifically, addressed the issue of maximizing the awareness of humanities information products and services without breaking the bank on marketing expenditures. He explained how we have increased the visibility of our products, and how we have leveraged technology to broaden the appeal of humanities information.

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Developments: New Forms of Digital Content
Presented at the Council on Library and Information Resources, April 2005 (PDF file: Adobe Acrobat required)

Alexander Street Press president Stephen Rhind-Tutt presented on the future developments in digital publishing to the Council on Library and Information Resources, April 2005.


ALA Midwinter Technology Showcase: Tim Lloyd on audio archives
Presented at ALA Midwinter, 2005 (PDF file: Adobe Acrobat required)

Recent advances in digital technology have enabled librarians to make previously unpublished audio archives available through online databases. Whether these valuable archives contain recorded music, spoken word performances, oral history, or speeches, certain issues complicate their delivery.

For instance, rights clearances may require royalty payments or meeting of specific release conditions. Archivists also must balance audio compression and quality. Tim Lloyd presented on these issues at the ALA Midwinter meeting in January of 2005--you can read all about it here.


An interview with Stephen  Rhind-Tutt,  CEO, Alexander Street Press
Published in The Charleston Advisor, January 2004

You've brought some great products to market, but perhaps even beyond that, some unusual ways of thinking about customers and products. I think I will never forget Eileen Lawrence, at the Top Management Round Table for SSP this last fall telling publishers: "Hug your critics" I suspect that this means something for the whole company, can you tell us what it means for Alexander Street Press?

We’re a small scholarly publisher of large collections of primary texts in the humanities and social sciences. We’re small, but our collections are very large! We absolutely have to get them right. Customer criticism has been one of the best ways to do this. If we don’t listen to our customers, how can we be sure we’re building products that they need?

In 2000 when Alexander Street was founded, Eileen and I noticed...


New oral history index will offer single-point access to worldwide collections
Published in the Winter 2003 Issue of the OHA Newsletter, from the Oral History Association

Early this year, Alexander Street Press embarked on an ambitious initiative to create an online index to English-language oral histories from around the world and dubbed it Oral History Online. Our goals are simple – to provide scholars, students, and lay people a quick way to find oral histories specific to their needs, and to give users click-through access to the interviews if they are available on the Internet.


Physical and Virtual Artifacts - Philosophy and Practice
Presented at the RBMS Conference, Toronto, 2003 (PowerPoint)

This paper explores how well we are able to replicate physical artifacts in electronic form and suggests that we need to do more work on enabling their digital surrogates to be found, explored and analyzed.


Pricing models for electronic products - as tangled as ever?
Presented at the Charleston Conference, 2002

This paper updates an earlier paper on pricing models, and examines different ways in which we value information.


Forms of Black Drama - Presentation by Dr. Femi Euba
Presented at the Alexander Street breakfast at ALA Midwinter, 2002


An overview of Black Drama and its forms.

A different direction for publishers - how indexing can increase functionality
Published in Technicalities, April 2001

This paper discusses semantic indexing and what it can do to improve the functionality of
electronic texts.


With Portals, Licensing Increasingly Makes Sense...
NFAIS Newsletter, Volume 42, Issue 6, June 2000

The most notable attribute of the Web is its inter-connectedness. Publishers need to examine their licensing strategies to make sure they're taking advantage of this.


What happens after E-books ?
Presented at The Charleston Conference, November 2000 (PowerPoint)

What are the likely developments for E-books ? This presentation examines similar technologies and the underlying potential of the Web medium and makes some suggestions as to how E-books will develop in the future.

Pricing, Cost, Value...Aspirin or Surgery ?
Presented at Society for Scholarly Publishing, Top Management Roundtable, October 1999 (PowerPoint)

Electronic products should be measured by how effectively they perform. Alas, typical usage statistics don't do this. What's more they can be manipulated to make products seem more valuable than they are in reality. This paper goes on to suggest strategies in adding value, pricing, licensing and partnering for electronic library products.

Lessons from Wendy's: Where's the beef ?
Presented at The Charleston Conference, October 1999 (PowerPoint)

Is traffic volume the right measure for electronic products ? What about traditional publishing values - quality, relevance, organization, search precision and performance ? Is lowest common denominator the only approach ? This paper discusses how these issues have impacted recent RFPs, licensing strategies, interface design and new product development. It examines two products -- Literature Online and The Digital National Security Archive -- to show how traditional publishing values can win through.

Oh! What a Tangled Web We Weave - A Review of Pricing Models and the Forces that Drive Them.
Published in Against the Grain, February 1999.

This paper looks at the forces that drive prices in the electronic publishing marketplace. It suggests that pressure for lower prices is causing multiple pricing models as publishers attempt to maximize their revenues.

Lessons from Joe Isuzu: Pricing and Value in the Electronic Marketplace
Presented at The Charleston Conference, October 1998 (PowerPoint)

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