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Always Be Circulating

Always Be Circulating. How Public Libraries Meet Demand and Increase Use. Selection, Distribution, Floating. Buy Smarter Turnover What Is The Goal Of Distribution? Depth & Breadth Formulas Statistics Floating And Don’t Forget Deselection. always be using … your public services staff.

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Always Be Circulating

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  1. Always Be Circulating How Public Libraries Meet Demand and Increase Use

  2. Selection, Distribution, Floating Buy Smarter Turnover What Is The Goal Of Distribution? Depth & Breadth Formulas Statistics Floating And Don’t Forget Deselection

  3. always be using … your public services staff make your collection work support readers’ advisory ensure communication between selection and public services staff allow all staff to “talk books” with patrons from http://digital.omahapubliclibrary.org/earlyomaha/galleries/librarian%20helping%20kid.jpg

  4. support readers’ advisory work people want to interact with books -- and with you from the late 2012 Pew Internet study (http://www.pewresearch.org/daily-number/even-in-the-digital-age-many-library-patrons-say-traditional-uses-are-important/)

  5. support readers’ advisory work bring back the serendipity encourage connection and conversation promote beyond the bestseller displays, book lists, personalized reading recommendations, blind date with a book from http://www.digitalforsyth.org/jpg/uzz/lbd/uzz_lbd_00358.jpg

  6. don’t forget the virtual...

  7. selection & public services staff from https://s3.amazonaws.com/WebVault/surveys/ReadersAdvisorySurvey_report_Jan2014.pdf

  8. selection & public services staff share newsletters, galleys, catalogs consider an internal newsletter highlighting what’s new and interesting (and outside the box) engage public services staff in the collection maintenance and refreshment work selection staff: work the desk!

  9. handsell the inventory you have staff -- at all levels -- who are passionate about reading: celebrate it your clerical and page staff have the most patron contact: take advantage of it from https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/151625739/book-stack-illustration-screen-print?ref=shop_home_active_2

  10. Merchandising and LayoutWendy Bartlett

  11. What’s your long term strategy? • “They loved the experience,” William S. Simons, the chief executive of Wal-Mart’s United States division, said at a recent conference. “They just bought less. And that generally is not a good long-term strategy.”

  12. Public Space with BOOKS!

  13. Three enduring merch principles • The first twenty feet are completely lost, so use it for branding—urls, books,etc. • People turn right, not left. The left is a dead zone. Put circulation or self check there. • Need to balance “the way men shop” with the need for “abundance”. That never changes.

  14. More says “value”

  15. A branch within a branch • Capturing the “Smash and Grab” customer • Mini-versions of our store front “retail” branch in our new/renovated locations. • Helps to increase our “items per transaction” and increase convenience.

  16. It’s all about perception “Historically, the more a store is packed, the more people think of it as value — just as when you walk into a store and there are fewer things on the floor, you tend to think they’re expensive,” said Paco Underhill,, founder and chief executive of Envirosell, who studies shopper behavior. .

  17. Competing Demands can Co-exist

  18. Commit to using the front door

  19. Be the Customer in Chief

  20. Silent Readers Advisory • Not “Passive Readers Advisory! There shouldn’t be anything passive about it. • Turn it in to PASSIONATE Readers Advisory and help your librarians curate a great browsing selection; the Pew Report says that’s what our customers want.

  21. Passionate RA the Cheap Way!

  22. Act like your job depends on it

  23. Bibliography • Why We Buy: the Science of Shopping by Paco Underhill, (revised 2008) • www.pacounderhill.com; and he’s on FB and Twitter • “Stuff Piled in the Aisle” NYTimes, April 7, 2011 • “Take the Merchandising Test” Dave Genesy. American Libraries. Apr2006, Vol. 37 Issue 4, p69-69. 1/2p.

  24. Contact Wendy Bartlett Collection Development Manager Cuyahoga County Public Library • wbartlett@cuyahogalibrary.org • Follow me on Twitter: CCPL_WendyB

  25. Dirty Little Secrets Or, How we really count!

  26. Let me count the ways we count!! How is your AV cataloged - individually or as a set? How is eBook circulation counted and is it just eBook or all eContent? How long are your circulation periods? How often can you renew items? What is your holds ratio? Does it change by format? How many items can your patrons check out? How many buildings are in your system?

  27. Robin Nesbitt, rnesbitt@columbuslibrary.org @CML_RobinReads Alene Moroni, amoroni@kcls.org @surlyspice Stephanie Chase, stephanie@bibliocommons.com @acornsandnuts Wendy Bartlett, wbartlett@cuyahogalibrary.org@CCPL_WendyB

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