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To gather this information, a society will often need to supplement membership registration data with data gathered throughmember surveys. For an overview of conducting a membership survey, see Dalton and Dignam (2007), 98-102.
It is important to analyze institutional subscription trends in as much historical depth as possible. Over time,institutional price increases can mask the effect of gradual declines in institutional subscriptions. Therefore, a society must carefully monitor thetrend in its institutional subscription units, as well as in revenue. There are few empirical sources on subscription trends for society journals. Anecdotal evidence, and the publicly available studies,suggest that subscriptions to individual titles have been decreasing by about 3- 4% per year. See, for example, Watkinson (1999), which analyses UKjournals.
In addition to historical institutional subscription trends, understanding the complexion of a journal’s institutionalsubscribers by institution type allows a society to:
Some societies only show institutional subscription revenue on their journal financial statements. Other societies determine thecost of fulfilling individual member print subscriptions and explicitly allocate a commensurate portion of individual member dues to the operation of thejournal. Whether it is captured on the journal’s financial statement or not, an explicit understanding of the dues required to provide the member publicationbenefit is of practical importance, as it allows a society to:
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