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eXcellence in eReference. Heather Lausten , Dana Shreve, Dave Wildermuth Grand Canyon University. Nov. 15, 2013. Introductions. Heather Lausten ~Curriculum Librarian Responsible for integrating library resources into the online classroom. Introductions. Dave Wildermuth
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eXcellencein eReference Heather Lausten, Dana Shreve, Dave Wildermuth Grand Canyon University Nov. 15, 2013
Introductions • Heather Lausten • ~Curriculum Librarian • Responsible for integrating library resources into the online classroom
Introductions • Dave Wildermuth • ~ Reference Librarian • Responsible for answering reference inquiries via e-mail, phone, chat and in-person
Introductions • Dana Shreve • ~Reference Manager • Responsible for overseeing reference inquiries • 8 Reference Librarians • 4 Library Supervisors • 40 Student Workers
Grand Canyon University • 40,000 online students • 8,000 ground students • Expanding ground campus (additional location)
GCU Library • Open 99 hours (expanding to 113) • Hours: Mon-Fri 7a-10p, Sat-Sun 10a-10p (expanding to midnight Sun-Thur.) • Services • Phone – incoming calls all open hours • Email – answered within 24 hours and during open hours • Chat – M-F 9a-4p (up to 2 chats at a time) • In-person – all open hours, on demand • Library instruction
2013 Number of interactions (all modalities) • January – June - 23,357 • July – September - 14,858
How do we do it? • Weekly meetings • Training • Practice • Teamwork • Exceptional customer service
Good Customer Service is the Expectation. If their experience is good, they might tell someone. If their experience is bad, they will tell everyone.
The Customer is NotAlways Right. However… The Customer is Always the Customer.
Every Customer Deserves Your Best. Treat every customer as though they are the most important person you will serve that day.
Quick Survey • When you need help/don’t have an answer are you likely to: • Give up • Work at it until I figure it out, even if it takes years • Push myself until I’m frustrated enough to call for help • Ask for help immediately
Who Are You Talking To? • Assumptions: • Someone with a need (embarrassed, state of need is volatile, always comes with emotional baggage) • Someone frustrated (It doesn’t exist- this system sucks) • Has tried already (tried for FIVE DAYS!)
Who are you? What They See • Assumptions: • Blocking the Way • The Enemy/Culprit • An Expert • Savior
What is in the way? • Lack of information • Lack of resources • Lack of skill/knowledge • Another party (person, group, thing) • Themselves (emotions, bias, stubbornness)
How to Help • Identify the need • How? • They tell you • You know from experience • You perceive it • Eliminate barriers to the need • Some tips
Aggravation, Frustration, and Tears • Don’t let these be yours! • A person in need is already in a heightened emotional state
Bring it Down- Controlling Emotions • Set the Stage • Good attitude • Listen • Affirmative language • A promise of good customer service • Develop rapport
Fulfilling the Need • Deal with the most obvious problem first • Evaluate how to help • Give it to them • Teachable moment • Redirect
But They’re Still: Crying Yelling Mean
What is their state? • Black Belt Librarian says follow your ABCCs: • A= Anxious: Not abusive but clearly upset • B= Belligerent: Increasingly hostile. May be cursing the situation, but not you personally. May be calling you fairly innocuous names. • C= Control, Out of: Yelling, Disruptive, Cursing you Directly • C= Calm
Solving in the Electronic medium • Language! • Never say “Calm Down” • Positive language • Tone • Don’t Give them Rope • Emphasize don’t Agree • Redirect/Focus on solving issue
The Challenge: “Hot Calls”
10% instruction, 90% therapy • Irate • Therapy calls • Distracted • Discouraged • Impeded • Confused