Media SW Supports Center's Loan & Rental Opertaions
        
        
        
        Iowa State University's Media Resource Center is a large                  centralized support service that supplies A/V equipment and                  titles to many clients, both on campus and off.                   The center relied on a paper-based solution for equipment                  check-outs; reservations for the numerous media products --                  films, slides, videodiscs and more -- were handled by an                  expensive and limited mainframe system. What was needed was                  software that would handle circulation, recordkeeping plus                  financial management tasks.                   More Accurate                  According to Don Rieck, director of the Media Resources                  Center, the university began to investigate such a solution                  roughly two and a half years ago. "We were growing rapidly,"                  he recalls. "Requests came faster than the staff could handle                  them. We wanted to be more accurate and standardized."                   Different programs were brought in and tested, and Rieck                  visited other institutions to watch systems in action. In April of                  1993, he decided to purchase Medianet media and equipment                  scheduling software from Dymaxion Research Ltd. in Halifax,                  Nova Scotia, Canada. The staff of eight to nine individuals spent                  several months learning the new system, and in August it was up                  and running.                   The decision to upgrade included hardware as well. A Digital                  Equipment Corp. MiniVAX Model 3100 was purchased to run                  Medianet; along with six workstations, a mixture of DOS and                  Mac computers networked together via Ethernet act as dumb                  terminals.                   Vast Array of Resources                  The center's library includes a collection of 6,000 film and video                  titles, a couple hundred videodiscs and CD-ROMs, plus                  another several hundred slide series. In addition 10,000+ slide                  projectors, overhead projectors, 35mm cameras, video                  recorders and players, and more were available. "We have 20                  to 25 categories of products," Rieck explains, "and a $3 million                  inventory."                   To make the most of this vast array of resources, the center also                  operates a rental operation that makes the equipment available                  to other institutions. Medianet's ability to handle both types of                  check-outs, plus maintain financial records, made it the best                  choice.                   Rieck maintains that the system's main advantage is that it allows                  his staff to readily answer questions for clients. Historical data is                  at their fingertips, with powerful search capabilities that include                  keywords to facilitate use. Now staff can perform electronic                  searches rather than try to answer questions from memory; plus                  a change of personnel d'esn't affect the overall knowledge                  base.                   "I can now pull off monthly figures concerning circulation, data                  that was difficult to collect manually," Rieck asserts.                   Another plus is the "pick lists" feature, which shows items that                  are going to be picked up that day. Some equipment is                  pre-booked, but a good deal is loaned out on a walk-in basis.                  Says Rieck, "Medianet is very fast and allows us to handle                  walk-ins better than other packages."                   Paying for Itself                  Although it is a little early for exact figures, Rieck says he                  developed a formula that indicates the system would pay for                  itself within three years. However, the way things are going, it                  looks like it may even be less than two years.                   "It used to cost us $30,000 per year to support the mainframe                  software alone. We bought into this system for $45,000,                  including the software and hardware. Although there are still                  some things we need the mainframe for, we will save                  approximately $20,000 a year in mainframe costs, plus we can                  do so much more now."                   An added bonus is the program's built-in cataloging module,                  which will develop catalogs, fliers and other marketing materials.                  Comments Rieck, "We offer a lot of services on a no-charge                  basis because we have some off-campus revenue -- we're like a                  small business in ways. Getting information out to paying                  customers will help us support our non-paying clients."