Technology from SAGE, a division of SAGE Publishing, announced the acquisition of Sciwheel, an award-winning tool providing library patrons with an easy way to discover, read, annotate, write, and share research.
With this acquisition, Sciwheel will be integrated with Technology from SAGE’s Lean Library, to create a comprehensive academic workflow tool.
Founded by the entrepreneur behind the Current Opinion journals, Current Drugs, F1000 and BioMed Central, Vitek Tracz, Sciwheel was created to go beyond traditional reference management by assisting students and researchers throughout the entire writing process. The company includes a web-based application, a browser extension, and add-ins for Google Docs and Microsoft Word to connect resource discovery with academic writing. More than 200 institutions around the globe use its services to provide library patrons with reading, referencing and authorship support.
Commenting on the acquisition, Vice President Product Innovation of SAGE Publishing, Martha Sedgwick, said:
“We have put the librarian at the center of our strategy for Technology from SAGE, as they are critical enablers of learning and research on campus. To support them, we’re handpicking innovative technologies that help libraries to solve student and faculty workflow problems and ultimately, make the process of learning and research easier. With Sciwheel, Tech from SAGE will add collecting, managing, annotating, and citing literature; writing the thesis or manuscript; and collaborating with others, to the support we offer – and all in one proven tool.”
Martha further added:
“The Sciwheel-Lean Library partnership is uniquely well suited to meet the challenges that arise as libraries shift from a collection-centred focus to a user-centred focus, to increasingly address needs online and off-campus.”
Post the acquisition, the Sciwheel product and engineering team will join Technology from SAGE.
Technology from SAGE provides workflow services and resource access solutions from Lean Library; resource list management services and collaborative annotation services from Talis; and archival discovery solutions from Quartex. These technologies help libraries support faculty, researchers and undergraduates, and deepen relationships with their users, and are used by over 300 institutions in 40 countries around the world.
Matthew Hayes, Managing Director of Technology from SAGE companies Lean Library and Talis, has said:
‘Sciwheel fits well alongside our Lean Library and Talis products, addressing a crucial part of the patron workflow for our library customers. We are particularly excited to integrate Sciwheel with Lean Library, offering librarians and their patrons a uniquely comprehensive workflow tool – one that improves patron productivity, brings actionable insights back to the library, and can take library services into key parts of the patron workflow without the need for a browser extension (harnessing Sciwheel’s Google Docs and Word plugins). We are confident that folding Sciwheel into Lean Library will offer current Sciwheel customers increased patron usage and value whilst giving current Lean Library customers greater choice in their provision of reference management tools.“
Driven by the belief that social and behavioral science has the power to improve society, the company focuses on publishing impactful research, enabling robust research methodology, and producing high quality educational resources that support instructors to prepare the citizens, policymakers, educators and researchers of the future. It publishes more than 1,000 journals and 600 new books globally each year, as well as library resources that include archives, data, case studies, video, and technologies for discovery, access, and engagement.
SAGE’s founder, Sara Miller McCune, has transferred control of the company to an independent trust, guaranteeing its independence indefinitely.
Speaking on the partnership with SAGE, Founder of Sciwheel, Vitek Tracz, said:
“Sciwheel has become a leading platform for individuals and organizations seeking an advanced reference management and authoring tool. We are delighted that it has found a long-term home within SAGE. I have been greatly impressed with SAGE’s approach to library software, always differentiating themselves by investing in innovation and risk over legacy. Their acquisition of Sciwheel and plans for the Sciwheel-Lean Library integration typify this, challenging the status quo in reference management and expanding patron workflow tools into new frontiers.”
Lean Library has grown significantly in the past two years with the shift to remote learning and research, doubling its customer base as well as its average usage to 30% of an institution’s FTE. The acquisition comes in response to extensive research on the role of the librarian in supporting patron workflows.