Apologies for cross-postings -- this message is only relevant to institutions 
in the United States. My LYRASIS colleague asked me to share the below call for 
interest.

---



Greetings all,



To bolster our existing programs, LYRASIS is considering establishing a United 
States DataCite<https://datacite.org/mission.html> Community, which would allow 
non-profit organizations in the US to create DOIs* (digital object identifiers) 
for digital assets like research data and other scholarly outputs created and 
hosted locally for a reduced fee as part of DataCite’s consortium member model.



We are checking in with you to gauge interest in such a program, which we would 
anticipate to begin in January 2021 with an annual per-institution fee of 
$1,600 plus a DOI fee depending on the number of DOIs created at each 
institution:



Annual DOI Fees:

  *   1-1,999 DOIs created = $.95 per DOI
  *   2,000-10,000 DOIs created = $1,900 flat rate
  *   Any organizations creating more than 10,000 DOIs per year would need to 
operate as a direct member with DataCite.



The more institutions participating, and the more DOIs created, the more 
everyone can potentially save due to DataCite’s consortium fee caps.This 
program would provide a savings of approximately 40% per participating 
institution compared to what any single organization might pay for becoming a 
direct member with DataCite.



If your organization is in the US and would be interested in joining our 
DataCite consortium, please complete this brief 
form<https://forms.gle/sKNNN44KpvtHuBwc8> by Sept. 25 to let us know.



Many thanks, on behalf of the LYRASIS Content & Scholarly Communication team!



*DOIs are unique, persistent identifiers that can be created by institutions 
through a DOI registration service (such as DataCite) and assigned to digital 
works in order to make them easier to find on the web in a reliable manner over 
time. DOIs are commonly assigned to objects such as digital journal articles, 
white papers, OERs (open educational resources), slide decks, posters, or other 
works on the web. For example, the DOI for the document “Recommendations for 
Supporting ORCID in Repositories” is https://doi.org/10.23640/07243.7777274.





Sheila Rabun, MA, MLIS [cid:2afd1efe-ef2a-4f51-ae87-7924c088a218]  
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1196-6279

ORCID US Community Specialist

Web: http://orcid-us.org<http://orcid-us.org/>

Twitter: https://twitter.com/USconsortium

Phone: 1-800-999-8558 x4809

Pronouns: she/her/hers



[cid:a46ccb1b-b3ba-41cf-8a80-2bf3daa958d1]

[cid:67bfe362-34de-4d37-af3d-61a816d80019]



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