The business magazines we receive, catalogue, and display are generally those with a considerable history and/or issued by durable trade associations.  I assume the cataloguing on them is in order, but that is not my department.
 
I think  you get a great many evanescent publications in the business world, things that appear over the transom, and punchy junk.  Also, certain business publishers are in their conduct simply uninterested in the library market and refuse to honor any claims, simply extending a subscription in response to complaints, and complaints they get if their fulfillment house truncates the addressee.    They do not behave as if they expected anyone to keep an archive of their product.  I suppose this influences the interest institutions have in cataloguing these wares, so you have no records or error-laden records from off-brand libraries who had whimsical or peculiar reasons for cataloguing it.  That would be my hypothesis. 
 
 
IW
 
 
 
On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 9:26 AM, Jewell, Carol H <CJewell@uamail.albany.edu> wrote:

Sorry. They are commercial business magazines.

 

From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU] On Behalf Of Ian Woodward
Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2011 9:18 AM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: Re: [SERIALST] Questions about OCLC records for electronic journals

 

You do not say if these are commercial business magazines or if they are publications which disseminate the research of business school faculty.  IW

On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 11:56 AM, Jewell, Carol H <CJewell@uamail.albany.edu> wrote:

Sorry for any duplication.

 

I am the Periodicals Copy Cataloger at the University at Albany Libraries, State University of New York. About 98% of my job is devoted to providing online access to periodicals.

 

Over the last year or so, I have noticed that, when I search OCLC for a bibliographic record for a periodical with a scientific scope, I usually find excellent records, which require little, if any, editing. On the other hand, when I search OCLC for records for periodicals with a business scope, the records I find are usually of poor quality, if I find any at all, that is! I end up having to do a lot of original cataloging for business periodicals.

 

I have been trying to determine why this is so. A search of the literature was frustrating, to say the least.

 

If anyone has any clues, ideas, etc., I would be most grateful. If I get enough information, I may write an article.

 

Thanks in advance.

Carol

---

 

Carol H.  Jewell,

Cataloging Services

University Libraries,

University at Albany, State University of New York

 

 




--
I. Woodward
Serials Desk
Colgate University Libraries
Case Library and Geyer Center for Information Technology
13 Oak Drive
Hamilton, N.Y. 13346

Ph.:    315-228-7306
Fax:   315-228-7934

I haven't gone anywhere.  I'm employed.  -  Joe DiMaggio  [att.]




--
I. Woodward
Serials Desk
Colgate University Libraries
Case Library and Geyer Center for Information Technology
13 Oak Drive
Hamilton, N.Y. 13346

Ph.:    315-228-7306
Fax:   315-228-7934

I haven't gone anywhere.  I'm employed.  -  Joe DiMaggio  [att.]