 British Library digitisation services deliver high quality scanning, photography and project management services to suit a diverse set of digitisation needs. Books, newspapers, maps, magazines, journals. We've scanned artwork and medals. You name it, I think if we could scan it, if someone comes in we'll give it a go. Lots of people from all over the world will request digital images of our own collection. But what we're trying to do a lot more of is digitise other institutions' collections. Through dedicated digitisation studios in London and Boston Spa, heritage organisations, publishers, private researchers and public sector organisations are making their content accessible to new audiences through state-of-the-art digitisation equipment and expertise. We first started working with the British Library a couple of years ago. We were wanting to do a project around the First World War. We had a scrapbook that we wanted to have digitised. We were aware we would get some very high quality images from the service and they were also able to provide a very quick turnaround for us. We knew what we wanted to digitise and what was quite nice is that they were actually quite excited about it too. That was nice for us because obviously they'll see hundreds of wonderful things but you kind of felt that your items were special. As a result of the scrapbook being digitised we can actually engage a far wider audience and it means that the resources that we have here that are unique are accessible on a much broader scale. As the digitisation service of the British Library we provide access to one of the greatest resources of research material in the world with expertise to manage projects from start to finish to help fill gaps in your collections. ProQuest serves markets around the world, the academic market principally, and putting out millions of pages of content every year. So a lot of our focus is on finding the right digitisation partners. The British Library is pretty much the most flexible institution that we've ever had to work with. Everything that we get back from the British Library is very clear. It's the best quality material that we get. The library's been very accommodating in terms of balancing our needs for speed and scale with their own imperative conservation. So it's opening up new research opportunities for scholars around the world that simply wouldn't be available without this sort of partnership. We're going to provide the best product possible. We have the equipment, we have the people who are the most important part of that process. They're the experts and the output is always consistently the same. The British Library's been very accommodating in that they're happy to just scan precisely what it is we ask for. We can plan our schedules. It's a very smooth process. Working with the British Library has been really successful for us. And just the best turnaround and the quality of images they've produced has meant that we've been able to do so much work with them. So it's something that I think would be really good to do again, which we intend to do. And it's something I'd really recommend to other people.