Life cycle collection management is a way of taking a long-term approach to the responsible stewardship of the collections
of the British Library and is one of the library's strategic strands. It defines the different stages in a collection item's existence over time,
ranging from selection and acquisitions processing, through to conservation, storage and retrieval. Life cycle collection
management seeks to identify the costs of each stage in order to show the economic interdependencies between the phases over
time. It thereby aims to demonstrate the long-term consequences of what the library takes into its collections, by making
explicit the financial and other implications of decisions made at the beginning of the life cycle for the next 100 plus years.
Eventually it aims to combine the life cycle of both paper and digital collections, in order to reflect the totality of the
British Library's hybrid collections.
The paper covers the following areas on the first year of the life cycle collection management project:
•
What is it?
•
Why do it?
•
Who might use it and how can it be used?
•
What has been done so far?
•
What findings are emerging?
•
What is going to be done?
WHAT IS LIFE CYCLE COLLECTION MANAGEMENT?
Life cycle collection management takes a long-term view of the stewardship of the British Library's collections. On the one
hand, funding is governed by political short-termism, of a three-year funding cycle, whereas on the other hand the British
Library's collections have been built up over hundreds of years and the responsibility for the majority of them is in perpetuity
in the future.
Life cycle collection management is evidence-based stewardship that documents the relationship between all the stages in a
collection item's existence over time. Firstly, it defines the different stages in a collection item's existence. Then it
seeks to identify the costs of each stage, in order to show the economic interdependencies between the stages of a collection
item's management and how they change over a long period. These stages start with selection, acquisitions processing, cataloguing
and pressmarking and go through to preservation, conservation, storage, retrieval and the de-accession of duplicates. In this
way, it aims to demonstrate the long-term consequences of what the British Library takes into its collections, by making explicit
the financial and other implications of decisions made at the beginning of the life cycle for the next 100 plus years.
Figure 1 illustrates the stages in a collection item's management. At the top, the process begins with the selection of an
item. Then there are all the costs associated with processing that acquisition, from cataloguing to pressmarking, labelling
and stamping before putting it on a shelf. The item might have some initial preventive conservation, such as being put in
an archival box. Then it is stored. In time, after being used, it might require some interventive conservation. As usage patterns
change, it might be moved from its initial location. A surrogate copy might be made; a duplicate copy might be de-accessioned
in time. All these stages are interdependent.
Furthermore, there is the external dimension as shown in Figure 2. Over and above the British Library's internal management,
there are relationships on national levels, with collaborative agreements for specific activities, from collection development
to cataloguing. In the UK at the moment, the implications of the RLN (Research Libraries Network) are being defined. These
could have a significant impact on the British Library. Moreover, there is the third dimension, namely the international dimension,
with current and potential collaborative initiatives, such as the IFLA Universal Bibliographic Control and International MARC
Core Programme (UBCIM) and IFLA Universal Availability of Publications Core Activity (UAP).
The British Library-centric illustration in Figure 1 mirrors, for all types of collections, the 'Centripetal Model' suggested
by Lavoie (2003). The national and international model in Figure 2, reflects more the 'Centrifugal Model' (again for all types
of collections, not just digital)
WHY DO IT?
Life cycle collection management is complex and complicated but there are practical, economic, governance and political reasons
for taking this approach.
•
The practical reasons are for the British Library to document and, if possible, benchmark with other comparable organisations, the links
between the stages of the life cycle.
•
The economic reasons are to establish that resources are most logically apportioned. For example, that the proportion assigned to acquisitions
at the beginning of the process is appropriately proportionate to the amount spent on cataloguing, so that there are no backlogs
of inaccessible items waiting to be catalogued. Similarly, that this amount is calibrated with the amount spent on housing
and caring for the material over time, so that items are not inaccessible for being too fragile, waiting for conservation.
•
For the purposes of governance, it needs to be demonstrated that the British Library's statutory and legal obligation under the British Library Act (1972)
to manage its key intellectual assets is being done, consistent with best practice and in the most cost-effective way, now
and for the future.
•
For political reasons, the British Library needs to know what resources are necessary to make the approximately 150,000 legal deposit items
per year and the approximately 90,000 electronic titles received under voluntary deposit, accessible and to be able to look
after that material in perpetuity.
WHO MIGHT USE IT AND HOW CAN IT BE USED?
The life cycle collection management approach can be used by a variety of people in a variety of ways. Firstly an individual
curator or selector can use this methodology. For example, a curator being offered a collection by donation can evaluate the
real long-term implications over 100 years of that intake. This point can be illustrated by a couple of examples in the British
Library in the last decade. A medieval Psalter bought in very good condition, with a purchase price of circa 1 million, could cost a modest amount over time, for example, the storage of a single item is quite low. On the other hand,
a collection of 19th century papers that were bequeathed to the library, carried no 'purchase' price as such, but, being several
boxes full, required a lot of cataloguing and initial preservation to stabilise them and so worked out at over 50,000 over time (Stephens, 1994).
Secondly, at a library-wide strategic level, it can be used to ensure the optimum calibration of resources. Life cycle collection
management can be used for predictive long-term financial modelling to feed into planning and better benchmarking. It can
be used for decision-making such as for the future storage requirements of collections. It can be used to make external bids
for the resources to reflect the implications of long-term responsible stewardship of the British Library's additional intake of traditional and digital collections over time. So, it can be used to make decisions about new collections
and different types of media. It can be used to understand what the collections cost over time. It can be used for future
bidding. A strong word of caution should be made at this point, with a strong proviso about using this for political lobbying
for additional funds. It could very well be a "two-edged sword". Rather than having shown how much it costs to really look after material for the long term in order to argue for resources,
a government, ministry or other funding body could respond that if it costs that much, then it should not be done at all.
WHAT HAS BEEN DONE SO FAR?
External Reviews
Before settling on a method for life cycle collection management, a number of external reviews were undertaken to see if any
work was applicable from other fields. A literature review of the library, archive and heritage sectors was undertaken. The
nearest possible model was a whole-life cycle costing approach in the built heritage sector to manage historic buildings in
a sustainable way, but was not found to be directly applicable. The most relevant work was carried out, interestingly, in
the British Library in the late 1980s, which defined a blueprint for the phases in the life cycle of tangible collections
and was re-used as the basis of this project's formula work (Stephens, 1988).
In the specifically digital arena, the majority of work is currently being done in the areas of research and practical projects
in digital asset management and digitisation life cycle costs. For example, Beagrie and Greenstein (1998), Hendley (1998),
Russell and Weinberger (2000; for CEDARS) and some interesting business models are emerging from projects such as the EU PRESTO project (Wright, 2002). A number of projects were examined and parallels drawn with data derived from current digitisation
projects underway at the British Library (appendix 2).
Secondly, a broad review was carried out of economic, commercial and non-heritage fields, for example eco-life cycle management
(in particular environmental impact analysis). Given the time-scales of toxic, and especially, atomic waste management (with
the half-life of radioactive substances of half a million years) it was thought there would be applicable management models.
Apart from the Department of Long Term Stewardship in the US Department of Energy, again, little was translatable.
Areas where the concept of life cycle costing is known to be used were looked at, namely product development and defence procurement.
The technique is used to see whether the gains from a particular product development are sufficient to justify the developmental
costs. Two issues of potential relevance to the British Library were identified from this quarter. Firstly, that overheads
should be excluded when undertaking a life cycle costing, otherwise they skew the costs to too great an extent; given the
large proportion of the British Library budget allocated as overheads (circa 60 million in 2001/02). Secondly, that a number of authors comment on the need for appropriate software to be able to manage
life cycle costing effectively.
One of the original objectives of the project was to benchmark, if possible, life cycle collection service and resourcing
dependencies with other comparable institutions. Oxford University Library Services has recently embarked on an activity-based
accounting exercise and an initial comparison was undertaken.
Whilst much work is being done in some parts of the digital arena, for example, with digitisation projects, nevertheless,
it was found that no one seems to have taken a joint approach of trying to combine both traditional (or "paper") and digital
life cycling. It is one of the objectives of this current work, in order to reflect the totality of a library such as the
British Library's collections.
At the time of the LIBER conference, an interesting paper by Chapman (2003) was published, comparing storage costs of a high-density
store for traditional formats and a digital archive. The article explicitly declaims that it "examines pricing associated
with one component of digital preservation, repository storage, at one organisation (OCLC), at one point in time" and compares it to baseline costs "to store comparable collections in analog formats in the Harvard
Depository". Nevertheless it represents a very useful development of attempting a like-for-like comparison between one stage
of the life cycle of both paper and digital collection material.
Internal methodology
In this initial phase the project concentrated on that part of the British Library's collections that currently form the printed
national archive, namely, traditional paper-based monographs and serials legally deposited with the British Library. This
is because it comprises a large proportion of the collection and the British Library has a legal responsibility in perpetuity
for it. Other types of material, for example purchased oriental and occidental manuscripts, may involve different costs or
costs in different proportions and are to be investigated in a later phase. Having defined the phases that comprise the life
cycle, formulas were devised for the life cycle costs of legally deposited monographs and serials in traditional formats.
An internal data gathering exercise was undertaken using the Library's finance system in conjunction with performance information
for the year 2001/2, in order to put figures against each phase.
The project aimed to determine whether the life cycle model for traditional material could be used for the digital life cycle.
Three types of digital material currently being produced or acquired by the British Library were defined and analysed in parallel
with the work on traditional formats. The three strands of digital activity were: digitised masters, purchased electronic
publications and electronic material voluntarily deposited at the British Library since January 2000.
•
The British Library has a number of substantial digitisation projects underway which are producing a large number of digitised
masters. A formula was developed from the traditional, paper-based material and applied to large British Library digitisation
projects such as the New Opportunities Fund 'In Place' (now entitled Collect Britain).
•
Approximately 1.5 million collection development figures spent on purchased electronic publications in the year 2001/2002 was analysed by
both the traditional and digitisation formulas.
•
The UK has had voluntary deposit of offline electronic material since January 2000. Figures from an impact study were extrapolated
together with data emerging from a real-time, live pilot to manage voluntarily deposited electronic material were used.
Therefore, concurrent strands of traditional, paper-based and digital activities were pursued, with the aim of eventually
coming together to one, in order to reflect the totality of the British Library's collections.
Traditional life cycle
The example of traditional paper-based material will be used to illustrate what was done. Much thought was given to the time
span of the life cycle and three key "life stages" were identified. These were year 1 (when many initial collection management
costs are incurred), year 10 (when a first review or technological change may incur costs) and year 100 (as a useful indicative
time-scale for forecasting downstream costs). Give that the British Library has to look after the collections for which it
has a legal obligation in perpetuity, 100 years was chosen as a symbolically long time, like the Biblical '40' or the Buddhist
'1000'. There is a whole issue as to whether "death" is countenanced at any stage in the life cycle, which was a source of
great debate. The project reviewed collection management activities and subsequently defined the phases in the life cycle
management of the collections.
1. Monographs
The life cycle costs K(t) for monographs were defined as follows:
K(t) = s+a+c+pl+hl+p(t)+cs(t)+r(t)
Where s is the selection cost,
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a is the acquisition processing cost (excluding the purchase price)
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c is the cataloguing cost
•
pl is the initial preservation cost (such as an archival enclosure)
•
hl is the initial handling cost (including pressmarking, labelling and placing)
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p(t) is the likely preservation cost over time (including interventive conservation)
•
cs(t) is the collection storage cost over time
•
r(t) is the likely retrieval and replacement cost over time
The activities are defined in the appendix.
2. Serials
The life cycle costs for serials were defined as:
K(t) = s+at+c+plt+hlt+p(t?)+cst?+rt?
Where selection and cataloguing costs are one-off costs incurred in year 1;
•
the recurrent annual costs of acquisitions processing, initial preservation and initial handling are multiplied by the number
of years in the period t for example, 100 years;
•
p(t?) is the likely preservation costs to be incurred for the first and each subsequent issue during the time between its
acquisition and the time it forms part of the collection;
•
ht? is the approximate storage cost for the first and each subsequent issue during the period t; t? is t"termial" = t?+1+2+3...t)
This means these are cumulating costs, for example, in year 1 a single serial volume is stored, in year 2 this rises to 1+1,
in year 3 to 2+1, in Year 4 to 3 + 1 volumes and so on.
3. Life cycle costs
Having defined the formula, costs were assigned based on management information data for the financial year 2001/2.
In year 1, excluding the purchase price, the ratios of the amount of money spent on the eight stages of the life cycle cost
for monographs are:
selection:
14
acquisitions:
10
cataloguing:
21
1st preservation:
0
handling:
4
preservation:
0
storage:
2
retrieval
1
So these are the proportionate amounts spent in year 1. See Figure 3.
By year 10, the amount spent on each activity as a proportion of the total costs for those 10 years is shown in Figure 4.
So, for example, the amount already spent on cataloguing stays the same as that spent in year 1, but it is a smaller percentage
of the total costs over 10 years.
The cumulative figures over 100 years are particularly informative, as shown in Figure 5.
These illustrate the total costs over 100 years (that is, they are not just the costs in the hundredth year). In general terms,
the costs have moved from the right to the left. For example, as a proportion of the total amount of life cycle costs over
100 years, selection is now relatively small. It is the same amount as in year 1, but is a smaller proportion of the total
over 100 years. Storage, preservation and retrieval are more substantial. It should be emphasised that these are all looked
at 2002 valuation prices.
Aside from demonstrating this proportionality, the headline cost conclusions can be extracted, and the overall costs of traditional
material are:
The cost of a monograph over 1 year is: 50.46 = 26% of 100 years
The cost of a monograph over 10 years is: 76.47 = 39% of 100 years
The cost of a monograph over 100 years is: 197.48 = 100% of 100 years
There are different ways of interpreting these initial findings. For example, over 10 years, two-thirds of the costs are incurred
in the first year, or over 100 years, a quarter of the costs are incurred in the first year. Alternatively, over 100 years
just under two thirds of the costs are incurred in years 11-100. Similar headline costs were made for serials.
4. Example of how it can be used - additional 100,000 on monographs
The following example demonstrates the application of the life cycle approach and the caution required in interpreting it.
Question. If there was an additional 100,000 spent on acquiring monographs, what are the downstream costs?
Answer:
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1478 monographs @ 67.74 = 100,000
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Year 1 life cycle costs: 1478 x 50.46 = 75,000
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Over 100 years:1478 x 197.48 = 290,000
Therefore, 100,00 buys just under 1500 monographs, and the life cycle management costs in year 1 are just under 50 per monograph, which is 75,000, or a ratio of 1 to 0.75.
The life cycle management costs over 100 years are just under 200 per monograph which is 290,0000, or a ratio of 1 to 2.9
A word of caution should be introduced again. There are different interpretations of this example, which illustrate the complexity
of the issue. The resource-intensive first year could be interpreted as representing about a quarter of the costs over 100
years. Conversely, the average cost for every year of the next 99 years can be interpreted as a modest 1.47 per monograph.
e-life cycle
The project aimed to determine whether the life cycle model for traditional material could be used for the e-life cycle. Three
types of digital material currently being produced or acquired by the British Library were defined and analysed in parallel
with the work on monographs and serials in traditional format. These four concurrent strands were pursued, with the aim of
eventually coming together to one, in order to reflect the totality of the British Library's collections. The three strands
of digital activity were:
1. Digitised masters
A number of digitisation projects at the British Library were analysed, ranging from large scale (New Opportunities Fund Collect Britain) to small scale (such as digitisation of subject-specific, analogue sound recordings). From these, a formula was developed
(adapted from the one for traditional material) for the life cycle costs of digitised masters.
The life cycle costs of digitised masters were defined as:
K(t) = s + ipr + cons + r + cap + q + m + acs(t) + p(t)
where K(t) is the total cost of digitised item over a period of t years,
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s is the selection cost
•
ipr is the cost of checking intellectual property rights
•
cons is the conservation check and remedial conservation costs
•
r is the retrieval and reshelving costs
•
cap is the cost of capture of digitised master
•
q is the cost of quality assurance of digitised master and production of service copies
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m is the metadata creation cost
•
acs(t) is the access cost over time
•
p(t) is the preservation and storage costs over time
Storage, preservation and access costs were difficult to determine. In particular, their long-term cost implications could
not be determined with certainty ahead of a Digital Object Management programme. Therefore, a 10 year life span, with uncertainty
over preservation and storage costs, was attempted. The headline costs for digitised master are that overall costs extrapolated
over 10 years for the New Opportunities Fund 'Collect Britain' digitised masters files are 77 per object.
Based on the above and data collated from other digitisation projects (appendix 2) across the British Library and other institutions,
it was concluded that
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the up-front scanning is a relatively small percentage
•
selection and curatorial input can vary from insignificant to 75% of the costs
•
checking of intellectual property rights can add significantly to costs
•
calculation of storage and preservation costs are currently the most difficult and within the British Library await the Digital
Object Management Programme
•
preservation assessment of material and remedial conservation are frequently overlooked
2. Voluntary and Legal Deposit of Electronic Material
The figures from the Electronic Publishing Services study on the Impact of Legal Deposit to non-print publications were extrapolated together with data emerging from the VDEP-module
of the Digital Object Management programme.
3. Purchased electronic publications
The Collection Development figure of 1,936,346 for 2002/03 for electronic material was analysed by both the traditional and digitisation formulae. The headline
costs for purchased electronic material are that overall costs of purchased electronic in year 1 are estimated at 127.95 per item. Due to this being in the early stages of the Digital Object Management programme, storage, preservation and
access costs were not included in this figure.
This is the most telling area of comparison to be made between traditional and electronic material, which can be made in the
first year only at this stage.
The year 1 life cycle costs for a traditional monograph are 50.46
The year 1 life cycle costs for an electronic monograph (excluding storage, preservation and access) are 127.95
Phase by phase comparison between traditional and electronic are useful, eg
The selection cost for a traditional monograph is 13.43
The selection cost for an electronic monograph is 100.59
WHAT FINDINGS ARE EMERGING?
•
"It's a way of thinking". This was a phrase coined when the project was first aired. It is noticeable how often 'life cycle'
is being used as a phrase, albeit with multiple meanings, across the library but all alluding to the interconnectedness of
the phases of collection management. It is one of those phrases that seems to have as many interpretations and meanings, as
'digital library'.
•
It is a very complex subject with many practical, financial and strategic interdependencies. A project principle established
early on was one of simplicity, in that it could easily be huge, unmanageable and undoable. Consequently, an incremental approach
is being adopted.
•
Whilst moving towards evidence-based librarianship/stewardship, this is not just a management information project. It was
acknowledged that all the data would not be available in the first instance, and that estimates and best judgement are legitimate.
•
The most significant variant is time. Over time, the costs shift from staff costs in the activity-intensive first period,
to overhead and maintenance costs.
•
The overall conclusion in the digital arena extrapolated from all the three electronic strands of work, namely digitised masters;
purchased electronic material and voluntary deposit of electronic material, is that it is very early days for the availability
of reliable data. A lot of very interesting comparisons are becoming possible in the early stages. For example between the
first year life cycle costs of a traditional monograph and those of an electronic monograph, or a telling example is between
the costs of selecting a paper title and the costs of selecting an electronic title.
•
Generally, it is the phases of archiving and access costs for digital material that are the most difficult to quantify now.
Experience at the British Library with the management of digital objects received under voluntary legal deposit, whereby DigiTool is being used (a product of Ex Libris with whom the British Library is developing its Integrated Library System) as a real
time pilot will help in the next phase.
•
Therefore, the lack of reliable digital storage, preservation and access costs make it currently premature to elide the strands
of e-life cycling with traditional life cycling.
WHAT IS GOING TO BE DONE?
From all the debate and discussion within the British Library about this subject, five key questions have been posed to be
addressed in the next phase, which are currently being scrutinised.
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Are the implications of the money spent on acquiring material clearly understood over time?
•
Can we afford to acquire serials in more than one format i.e. print and electronic? At what point do we make the decision
to transfer, and with what degree of confidence, from paper to electronic?
•
Are there different ways of managing the collections, for example, elements of 'just-in-time' instead of 'just-in-case'?
•
Does the life-cycle approach suggest opportunities for greater collaboration with other libraries within the UK and internationally?
•
Should we establish a hierarchy of library collections, to inform prioritisation in the application of the life-cycle collection
management approach, for example, with the national published archive at the top and with other countries/formats as variously
lower priorities?
Taking a realistic, incremental approach, the plan for year 2 is to amplify the findings so far, to examine them in greater
depth and to begin to apply the findings to current live issues, such as web archiving. The plan is to develop a tool kit
to embed a life cycle collection management approach, including a communication plan to disseminate the approach across the
British Library and the development of a predictive data-modelling tool. The aim is to test the method in greater detail,
by investigating specific phases in the life cycle, such as cataloguing, storage and preservation and identify small, opportunistic
pilots to apply alternative approaches, such as the implications of a 'just-in-time' approach. The final strand is to identify
the best work being done internationally that is applicable to this approach and develop collaborative opportunities with
organisations on a compatible scale.
CONCLUSION
Life cycle collection management will never be a substitute for intellectual judgement. There will be cases when it is the
better thing to do to take in the boxes of 19th century donated papers with all their downstream costs rather than the one
small, exquisite, inexpensive-to-store Medieval Psalter. And some of our greatest collections have been built up by leaps
of faith. But it may provide one approach to the long-term stewardship of the British Library's collections.
Acknowledgements
Particular thanks are due to Stephen Morgan, the project manager over the past year of the Life Cycle Collection Management
project. Also to the Stakeholder panel, namely Clive Field, Andy Stephens, Sharon Johnson, Sandra Bradbury, Natalie Ceeney,
Caroline Brazier, John Tuck, Ian Henderson, Richard Boulderstone, Ronald Milne (Oxford University Library Services), Jean-Frederic
Jauslin (National Swiss Library). Thanks are due to colleagues who supplied information, especially, Neil Smith, Jim Vickery,
Dennis Pilling, John Byford, Alistair Greenhalgh. Other helpful input has been received from Lynne Brindley, Ian Millar, Dawn
Olney, Jill Finney, Kate Byrne.
REFERENCES
Beagrie, N., Greenstein, D. A strategic policy framework for creating and preserving digital collections. British Library. Research and Innovation Report, 107, 1998
Stephens, A. The application of life cycle costing in libraries. British journal of academic librarianship, 1988, 3(2) pp. 82-88
Stephens, A. The application of life cycle costing in libraries: a case study based on acquisition and retention of library
materials in the British Library. IFLA journal, 1994, 20(2) pp. 130-140
Selection - the intellectual process of selecting or (declining to select) material for the Library's collection. Includes
scanning bibliographies, publishers' catalogues, reviewing items sent on approval and potential donations.
Acquisitions processing - a number of processes related to obtaining collection items for the Library. Includes ordering,
receipting invoice processing, ownership marking and for second and subsequent serials issues, labelling.
Cataloguing - the compilation of a list that records, describes and indexes items that comprise the Library's collection.
Includes amendments to the records that form the list.
First handling - a number of processes relating to placing collection items into storage and ensuring that they can be found
again when required by Library users or staff. Includes pressmarking & labelling and placing.
Initial preservation - those specific policies and practices involved in protecting library materials from deterioration,
damage and decay including provision of boxes for unbound serial parts and pamphlet material, binding new serial volumes,
phase boxing and placing material in acid free envelopes.
General preservation - interventive conservation including rebinding.
Retrieval & replacement - the retrieval of collection material required by users from storage and replacing in storage after
use. While these activities are not strictly speaking collection management activities it was felt crucial to include them
since they involve significant costs and are key to providing access to physical items in the collection.
APPENDIX 2
Examples of British Library digitisation projects
Percentage of time spent on activity
Activity
project A
project B
project C
Management
7%
7%
2%
Selection
4%
0%
3%
Preparation
4%
1%
4%
Digitisation
12%
41%
42%
Metadata
4%
51%
25%
Ipr
0%
0%
24%
Project A: Selection was high, because it required very specialised selection by an expert. Metadata was low, because it was
derived from existing records.
Project B: No selection was required, but metadata creation took twice as long.
Project C: PR checking was significantly time-consuming and a manual process.