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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Noorlander, Bill
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ844000
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author Noorlander, Bill
author_facet Noorlander, Bill
Noorlander, Bill
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Enterprise Content Buying--The New Landscape Noorlander, Bill Educational Finance Marketing Library Services Negotiation Agreements Contracts Vendors Costs Expenditures Economics Content is both a key ingredient for business and a major expense. Market research shows that the investment in content and data is generally one of the top expense items within a firm. For some firms, within the financial industry, for example, content costs are the second or third level of expense behind the cost of employees. While there has always been a focus on content, what to use and how much it should cost, the past 12-18 months have been different. The financial crisis and the impact on content usage and sourcing practices have mandated changes in how the buyers are working with the suppliers. The main objective is to pay less for the same services. This has always been a goal, a part of standard cost-containment practices, but never with the focus and intensity as is currently the case. In the past, this was discussed as part of the negotiating process; now it is often stated as a requirement, a part of the mandate that the negotiator has been given by his or her management. In this article, the author presents a summary of changes regarding content considerations and some trends seen as the focus on negotiations increases. The author contends that there will be an end to the financial crisis. In the interim, content buyers and suppliers have to innovate, work together, and focus on the long-term opportunities.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ844000
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2009
record_format eric
spellingShingle Enterprise Content Buying--The New Landscape
Noorlander, Bill
Educational Finance
Marketing
Library Services
Negotiation Agreements
Contracts
Vendors
Costs
Expenditures
Economics
Enterprise Content Buying--The New Landscape Noorlander, Bill Educational Finance Marketing Library Services Negotiation Agreements Contracts Vendors Costs Expenditures Economics Content is both a key ingredient for business and a major expense. Market research shows that the investment in content and data is generally one of the top expense items within a firm. For some firms, within the financial industry, for example, content costs are the second or third level of expense behind the cost of employees. While there has always been a focus on content, what to use and how much it should cost, the past 12-18 months have been different. The financial crisis and the impact on content usage and sourcing practices have mandated changes in how the buyers are working with the suppliers. The main objective is to pay less for the same services. This has always been a goal, a part of standard cost-containment practices, but never with the focus and intensity as is currently the case. In the past, this was discussed as part of the negotiating process; now it is often stated as a requirement, a part of the mandate that the negotiator has been given by his or her management. In this article, the author presents a summary of changes regarding content considerations and some trends seen as the focus on negotiations increases. The author contends that there will be an end to the financial crisis. In the interim, content buyers and suppliers have to innovate, work together, and focus on the long-term opportunities.
title Enterprise Content Buying--The New Landscape
topic Educational Finance
Marketing
Library Services
Negotiation Agreements
Contracts
Vendors
Costs
Expenditures
Economics
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ844000