Current trends in the purchasing and supply of electronic products

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Current trends in the purchasing and supply of electronic products James Mullan (BIALL LIG Chair) LPE/LIG Meeting BIALL Dublin Conference June 2008

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A presentation prepared for the Legal Publishers Executive meeting at the BIALL Conference

Transcript of Current trends in the purchasing and supply of electronic products

Current trends in the purchasing and supply of electronic products

James Mullan (BIALL LIG Chair)LPE/LIG MeetingBIALL Dublin Conference June 2008

Presentation coverage

• The current marketplace for electronic products• The impact on Law Firms• The impact of free products• The flourishing of niche products• Disaggregation• Costs and Budgets• Integration• CD-Rom and other alternatives to online• New “technologies”

The current marketplace is….

• …a shrinking marketplace• Consolidation of the marketplace means that the Legal

Sector is dominated by the “big three”

– Kluwer/CCH– Thomson Reuters/Sweet & Maxwell– Lexis Nexis Butterworths

What does this mean for Law Firms?

• Less choice/competition• “Cross selling” of products• A captive market for the big three• Pressure from fee-earners to subscribe to products that

other Law Firms have

The impact of free products

• This is still unknown, however there have been major developments to free online databases this year including;

– The Statute Law Database– The OPSI Legislation Website– BAILLI (British & Irish Legal Information Institute)– PreCYdent http://www.precydent.com/ a U.S.

database which is making a big splash in the U.S.

Niche Products

• Increasingly Law Firms are being offered “niche”products by publishers

• These products are aimed at users within specific practice groups for example;

– Complinet (Financial Services)– DebtWire– Mlex

• Ultimately more products no matter how good they are = more cost!

Disaggregation

• This has become a major issue recently:

– FT Content is now only available through Lexis Nexis or Westlaw with an additional licence

– PLC has often “hived” off content to create additional services at extra cost

– Factiva refusing to sell direct to the Legal Market

Costs and Budgets

• Many firms are experiencing downward pressure on their budgets

• Justifying the cost of a new subscription is becoming increasingly difficult

• Yet Publishers continue to rollout above inflation price increases

Integration

• Increasingly Law Librarians are looking to provide federated search solutions

• These provide their users with an easy way to access content from multiple sources

• Publishers should be aware of this and provide tools to support its development

• Lexis Nexis Butterworths have developed some tools in this area (LNB Publisher, Ozmosys)

Integration (2)

• Publishers are also increasingly offering integration as an added extra

• Unfortunately the provision of this service is not consistent across all publishers, some offer it for free, some charge for access to their content

• Law Librarians need to check contract terms carefully if they are considering integrating content from an external source

CD-Rom and other media types

• Most Law Librarians agree that CD-Roms are an outdated technology.

• They require installation, regular updating and often are only available for single users.

• Yet many publishers continue to offer these as “additional” content.

– The White Book (Sweet & Maxwell)– Palmers Company Law (Sweet & Maxwell)

CD-Rom and other media types (2)

• There are alternatives to CD-Roms which publishers could utilize including;

– Secure internet sites which allow the downloading of content and could be password protected

New “technologies”

• I couldn’t help myself…• …what about Web 2.0?• Publishers are and should look to develop their

databases to take advantage of Web 2.0 technologies.• Particularly around the use of RSS as a means to

distribute content

New “technologies” (2)

• This should make their services more “marketable” especially outside of the Legal Sector

• The Legal Sector is at the very early stages of adopting Web 2.0 technologies

• Adoption and development of these technologies will only grow and publishers should be aware of its impact

Questions/Thoughts

• I hope to see you all at the BIALL Conference. If not…

[email protected]• http://ligissues.blogspot.com• http://www.twitter.com/jimmy1712