Robert Freeman Asleson

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Robert Freeman Asleson was a major contributor to the publishing, library and information industries.[1] He led a number of key information companies as they evolved from print, to microfilm, to mainframe, CD-ROM and then web based databases. He brought professional management to entrepreneurial library companies, without which they might not have succeeded. Some of these organizations are now among the titans of the library industry.

His connection with the information industry began in 1961 as a sales representative with the Xerox Corporation. In 1964 he became Manager of Sales Promotion[2] at University Microfilms International (UMI) which had been acquired by Xerox in 1961. UMI was a pioneer in the field of micropublishing, and one of the most significant players in the field.[3] In 1990 Eugene B. Power, the founder of UMI, acknowledged Asleson’s pioneering role in setting up sales and marketing for the company. In 1967, Asleson became president of UMI. The company later became ProQuest, It remains one of the largest vendors in the field with revenues in excess of $350m (2010) and more than 2 billion pages of archival materials.

In 1976 Asleson left UMI to become president of R.R. Bowker, a reference-book publisher in New York. As the publisher of Books-in-Print and Serials-in-Print Bowker held a pivotal role in cataloging publishing output.[4] This corporation now trades also under the ProQuest brand.

From 1980 to 1982 he led Information Handling Services, a Colorado based vendor of business information . At that time it was close to becoming the world’s largest commercial producer of microfilm with nearly 3 million feet of material. IHS remains a major player in electronic publishing.

In 1988 he became President of The Library Corporation (TLC), an Inwood, West Virginia based library automation company.

In 2001 he became Chairman at Paratext, LLC. an electronic publisher of research databases in history, documents, scholarly reference and classical studies. Together with Eric Calaluca he developed a number of innovative reference products

From 1988-2010 Asleson served as president of The Redalen Group. He later co-founded the Children’s Literature Comprehensive Database.

He was chairman of the board of directors of the Information Industry Association (1979).[5] He was a member of the board of the National Micrographics Association (now part of AIIM), where he received a Distinguished Service Award in 1977.[6] He was a member of the National Advisory Board for the Library of Congress’s Center for the Book and the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science: Task Force on Public and Private Sector. He was active in the creation of major library protocols and standards, including Z39.50. He attended the White House Conference on Library and Information Services in 1979.[7]

He wrote and lectured extensively on the evolution of the information industry and in particular on the transition from micropublishing to electronic databases.

Asleson died on July 22, 2010 of prostate cancer at his home in Bethesda.

References

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