IFLA Guidelines for Best Practice in Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery
Guidelines for Best Practice in Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery
This leaflet stems from discussions held among members of the Document Delivery and Resource Sharing Section of IFLA. It is based on best practices formulated from the following studies:
Performance of Interlending in Nordic Academic Libraries: Report for NORDINFO Board
Pentti Vattulainen, 2003
Measuring the Performance of Interlibrary Loan Operations in North American Research & College Libraries
Mary E. Jackson. Washington: Association of Research Libraries, 1998
Interlibrary Loan and Document Delivery Benchmarking Study
National Resource Sharing Working Group; Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2001
These are brief guidelines for use within your own interlibrary loan department and are standards to strive for. We are aware that not all libraries will be able to implement all the recommendations, but we would nevertheless encourage libraries to use these guidelines as a basis for their current service and to influence future development.
General Recommendations
Streamline the process within your own library
Define performance indicators for service levels and turnaround time and monitor your performance against them
Evaluate your own routines and change them accordingly
Reduce the number of hands through which the requests are passing
All requests should be handled in one electronic system, preferably with the ability to interoperate with other ILL/DD systems
Keep statistics to suit national monitoring schemes and local needs
Make holdings available on Union Catalogues and keep them up-to-date, with an indication of availability for resource sharing
Explore reciprocal arrangements
Staff
Use the expertise of skilled staff members
Staff members should continuously be able to develop competencies and be trained in using new tools and resources
Encourage the exchange of experience at the local or international level
Technology
Hardware and software must be up-to-date
Encourage users to submit requests electronically
Give the end users the ability to check the status of requests online
Handle all communication about requests electronically
Users
Focus on the needs and preferences of the end user
Perform user surveys on a regular basis
Recommendations for the requesting library
ILL should be an integrated part of the Library's service to users
Introduce new technology in all processes
Do not limit unreasonably the number of requests from users
Involve the end user as much as possible in requesting
Give end users access to union catalogues with requesting facilities
Process requests from end users quickly
Use your experience to select supplying libraries according to speed of service and cost
Adhere to conditions of suppliers and treat material with care
Offer IFLA vouchers as payment
Deliver the material as fast as possible to the end user
Send copies electronically if at all possible
Check speed of supply on a regular basis
Recommendations for the supplying library
Use experienced staff to collect requested material from your collections in order to minimise mistakes
Use the fastest delivery methods
Try to satisfy requests in the best possible way
Be sure that your licence agreements for your e-resources will allow ILL/DD
Create online order forms and/or interoperate with other ILL/DD systems
Make your library's lending policies available on your web site and in policy directories
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, <2015>