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The Special Libraries Group: Six months for Karen. Caleb May Eura Ryan Daphne Tseng Li855: Collection Development Emporia State University. The Case:. Karen Nichols is a new selector in a large academic library.
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The Special Libraries Group: Six months for Karen Caleb May Eura Ryan Daphne Tseng Li855: Collection Development Emporia State University
The Case: Karen Nichols is a new selector in a large academic library. Her collection responsibilities encompass sociology, social work, family social science, and rural sociology. Karen’s background: Karen has an M.L.S. and a second master’s in family social science. She has eleven years’ experience as a subject specialist in the social sciences in two previous positions. Karen’s problem: Karen’s predecessor, who was a has left her with a great deal of information about the collection and her budget, but no information about her stakeholders and the users of the collection.
Karen’s six month plan of action: • Learn about her public • Segment her market • Gather secondary and primary data • Develop avenues for communication • Create a Marketing Plan • Promote her collections • Evaluate her performance
What Karen has to offer her constituents: • The library provides numerous digital resources, including indexes and abstracting sources, online reference tools, full-text files, and numeric data files. • The library has had an integrated, automated system for more than fifteen years and provides a multifaceted library web presence, though the page addressing the library’s collections and services in Karen’s subject areas is brief.
Mt. Sunflower State University • Location: Mt. Sunflower, Kansas • Numbers of students: 30,000 • Graduate Students: 6,276 • Numbers of faculty members in the Sociology, Social Work, Family Social Science and Rural Sociology Departments: 60 • Number of Graduate Students in these departments: 70 • Budget: $30,000
Step 1: Learn about her Public
Who are Karen’s stakeholders • There are two kinds of Stakeholders • External stakeholder, i.e. students & outside users. • To address these stakeholders, Karen will need to learn more about: • Knowledge of student needs and expectations • Student and stakeholder satisfaction • Relationship enhancement • Internal stakeholder, i.e. faculty & staff • To address these stakeholders’ needs, Karen will need to focus on: • Work systems • Faculty and staff education, training, and development • Faculty and Staff well-being and satisfaction
Ways to communicate with these stakeholders: • Satisfaction surveys • Designed surveys for improvement; • Benchmarking • Total Quality Management (TQM) and Continuous Quality Involement (CQI) approach
Gathering Secondary Data • Talk to Registrar to learn • Number of students in the programs she maintains and their levels • Number of faculty members and researchers • Karen should also become familiar with the faculty members’ web pages and curriculum vitae • Number of international students and scholars
Gathering primary data… http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FQM9JF9 • Karen will create a survey to give to faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students • By emailing the survey, Karen can also introduce herself to her users • Jensen (2009) found that using online survey tools created new relationships and was an easy way to find out exactly what the faculty need
Step 2: Develop Avenues of Communication
Communication… • Attend informational meetings and ask how the librarian can support projects. • Deliver items in person. • Host brownbag discussions and coffee hours on focused topics. • Make presentations at regular meetings of various groups. • Visit classrooms to offer her services.
Working with External Stakeholders • Form partnerships, for example, with the information technology department. • Get out and learn about other groups that use the social science library, including non-profits, area schools and government agencies • Attend fairs in the social sciences to market the library and learn more about her users.
Part 3: Karen’s Marketing Plan:Two studies
Neuhaus and Snowden (2003) • A prominent Iowa university library conducted a marketing study with promotional T-shirts, pens, bookmarks, etc. • The results were mixed and it was determined that the promotional materials were quite costly.
McMenemy (2008) • A Scottish public librarian vents his frustration in a no-holds-barred editorial pertaining to the increasing inclusion of private-sector style direct marketing in the public libraries of the UK • He strongly contends that there is a sacred trust between public libraries and library patrons that has been breached by aggressive marketing campaigns on the part of the public libraries in the UK.
Marketing Pointers for Karen • Ensure that there is support by the university administration for a marketing blitz and that there are available funds in the budget. • Make sure that students/faculty are comfortable with the level of direct marketing that will be employed by the library and that no “sacred” bond is broken through the increased exposure and promotions. • Work with other subject selectors • Use reference time.
Revamp her resource pages.. Easy to use Tabs Related Subject Links and Helpful Links Photo
Step 4 Evaluating her performance
Tools Karen can use: • Focus Groups • Three groups: faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students • Use a moderator and another person to take notes and keep the interactions as natural as possible • Comment box on web page and at desk • Circulation statistics
Bibliography Johnson, P. (2009). Fundamentals of collection development and management. Washington, D.C.: American Library Association. Harer, J. B. & Cole, B. R. (2005). The importance of the stakeholder in performance measurement: Critical processes and performance measures for assessing and improving academic library services and programs. College & Research Libraries, 66(2), 149-170. Jensen, K. (2009). Engaging faculty through collection development utilizing online survey tools. Collection Building, 28(3), 117-121. Kotter, W. (1999). Bridging the great divide: Improving relations between librarians and classroom faculty. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 25(4), 294-303. Leitao, B.J. & Vergueiro, W. (2000). Using focus group approach for evaluating customers’ opinions: The experience of a Brazilian academic library. New Library World, 101(1154), 60-65. McMenemy, D. (2008). A broken relationship: Pushing direct marketing to the public library user. Library Review, 57(6), 413-415. Neuhaus, C. & Snowden, K. (2003). Public relations for a university library: A marketing programme is born. Library Management, 24(4/5), 193-203.
Links for Further Research We have divided our resources by subject to better assist those interested in specific areas
Stakeholder/User Research Jensen, K. (2009). Engaging faculty through collection development utilizing online survey tools. Collection Building, 28(3), 117-121. • Link to Article Kotter, W. (1999). Bridging the great divide: Improving relations between librarians and classroom faculty. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 25(4), 294-303. • Link to Article Harer, J. B. & Cole, B. R. (2005). The importance of the stakeholder in performance measurement: Critical processes and performance measures for assessing and improving academic library services and programs. College & Research Libraries, 66(2), 149-170. Leitao, B.J. & Vergueiro, W. (2000). Using focus group approach for evaluating customers’ opinions: The experience of a Brazilian academic library. New Library World, 101(1154), 60-65. • Link to Article
Marketing Ideas Neuhaus, C. & Snowden, K. (2003). Public relations for a university library: A marketing programme is born. Library Management, 24(4/5), 193-203. http://0-www.emeraldinsight.com.www.whitelib.emporia.edu/Insight/viewPDF.jsp?contentType=Article&Filename=html/Output/Published/EmeraldFullTextArticle/Pdf/0150240402.pdf McMenemy, D. (2008). A broken relationship: Pushing direct marketing to the public library user. Library Review, 57(6), 413-415. http://0-www.emeraldinsight.com.www.whitelib.emporia.edu/Insight/viewPDF.jsp?contentType=Article&Filename=html/Output/Published/EmeraldFullTextArticle/Pdf/0350570601.pdf