More Product, Less Process
- Concentrate efforts on creating a collection or subgroup level record for ALL materials before proceeding to series and file level processing;
- Maintain original order of collections whenever possible;
- If there is no discernible original order, arrangement should only be done to the series level;
- Keep weeding to a minimum. For example, remove duplicates only if they are obvious, such as a folder holding 5 copies of the same publication;
- In general, it is best to keep collections whole, that is, don’t separate out parts and pieces to disperse to other collections or storage areas. A few exceptions should be considered:
- Materials with special storage needs, for example, audio/video tape or photographic negatives, could be stored in a common area that supports their collective need for cooler temperatures and drier humidity;
- Select serial publications such as yearbooks or student newspapers will be more useful to researchers (and easier for staff to retrieve), if kept together as a set. Use this exception with care; not all serial materials should be separated;
- Oversize items that have special housing needs may need to be stored in a common area;
- Loose photographs and ephemera which have no clear relationship to an existing collection could be placed in a browsing file, arranged by subject and/or date;
- Do not remove metal fasteners such as staples and paper clips unless they are actively damaging the paper (i.e., rusting, obscure the text, or the paper is extremely brittle;
- Do remove rubber bands and place materials in a file folder;
- Replace file folders and other covers only if they are in poor condition themselves and no longer provide adequate support for the contents;
- Preservation steps such as re-housing into archival quality folders, boxes, sleeves, and wraps should be decided on a case-by-case basis, depending on the intrinsic value, condition or anticipated use of a collection;
- Remember that exceptions can always be made when based on sound reasoning and professional judgment.