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LIFE2 case study: SHERPA DP

LIFE2 case study: SHERPA DP. Stephen Grace Centre for e-Research. What is SHERPA DP?. Providing digital preservation services to institutional repositories Following OAIS functional model Institutional repository responsible for first acquisition of content Funded by JISC and CURL.

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LIFE2 case study: SHERPA DP

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  1. LIFE2 case study: SHERPA DP Stephen Grace Centre for e-Research

  2. What is SHERPA DP? • Providing digital preservation services to institutional repositories • Following OAIS functional model • Institutional repository responsible for first acquisition of content • Funded by JISC and CURL

  3. Bringing SHERPA DP to LIFE • Some costs were easy to find • Directly incurred staff costs • Others less so • Directly allocated staff time • Mists of time • Used TRAC for full Economic Cost (fEC) • Estates and Indirect costs added to salary

  4. 1 Creation or purchase • Cost = £0 • No creation, no purchase

  5. 2 Acquisition • Aq = £74,050 in Yr1, £77,510 in Yr5, £81,515 in Yr10 • Majority of costs for development of OAI-PMH and integrating harvester with AHDS repository

  6. 3 Ingest • I = £763 in Y1, £2841 in Y5, £7630 in Y10 • QA largely responsibility of source IRs • Characterisation is automated via DROID

  7. 4 Metadata creation • M = £0 • Implicit in other areas • PREMIS generated automatically

  8. 5 Bit-stream preservation • BP = £19,848 in Y1, £125,870 in Y5, £223,818 in Y10 • Duplicate storage and storage provision major costs

  9. 6 Content preservation • CP = £13,233 in Y1, £64,615 in Y5, £129,217 in Y10 • Technology watch, preservation planning consistent across time • Harder to predict preservation action so assumed major task every 3 years

  10. 7 Access • Ac = £11,907 in Y1, £45,875 in Y5, £88,334 in Y10 • Almost entirely for user support (in this case, of our IR colleagues) • SHERPA DP2 will address return of content to repositories

  11. Lessons learned • Costing exercises are difficult – they take time, evidence not readily to hand • LIFE offers a consistent methodology • Value of third-party preservation service

  12. Key findings and costs • 10yr cost per object preserved = £8.13 (N=6526) • Reducing storage costs will have significant effect

  13. Conclusions • Third-party preservation can be cost-effective • LIFE methodology works for us • Helps with development of a charged preservation service

  14. Why it was useful • Comparison across services and institutional settings • Costs  Cost model  Business model • Dovetails with our case study for ‘Keeping research data safe’

  15. Thank you • Stephen Grace • Centre for e-Research • King’s College London • www.kcl.ac.uk • stephen.grace@kcl.ac.uk • 020 7848 1972

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