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1. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 1 Primo @ Boston College 1st Gen. Next-Gen. Discovery
2. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 2 outline background
implementation process
quick demo
locally developed add-ons
user feedback/initial reactions
lessons learned
future Background: little bit about BC and about the need for a next-gen discovery platform
Background: little bit about BC and about the need for a next-gen discovery platform
3. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 3 30,000-foot view (NOT!)
4. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 4 What is Primo? Ex Libris next-gen. discovery and delivery platform
Decouples discovery layer from the ILS
Incorporates technologies developed outside the library arena
Two search components:
Local (your catalog, digital collections, IR content)
Uses locally indexed data
Remote (subscription databases)
Uses federated search
5. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 5 about BC Private, Jesuit university
User Population: 9,000 undergrads, 4,800 grad students, 850 faculty
Library Metrics: 2.5 million volumes, 200 FTE staff, $8m acquisitions budget
ARL library (since 2000)
Carnegie ClassificationDoctoral/Research Extensive
The place Bill Ayers didnt speak at
6. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 6 about library technology @ BC Small staff, so
No bleeding edge
Early followers
Willingness to experiment
Perfection is not the goal
Just Do It
Comfortable working with [certain] vendors
Staff of 8manage ILS, IR, Digital collections platform, digitization lab, desktop support, proxy server, ERM, link resolver, federated search
Positive relationship with ex libris that is mutually beneficialStaff of 8manage ILS, IR, Digital collections platform, digitization lab, desktop support, proxy server, ERM, link resolver, federated search
Positive relationship with ex libris that is mutually beneficial
7. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 7 Aha! moment 20062006
8. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 8 need for next-gen. catalog Traditional OPAC considered deficient/irrelevant as modern discovery tool
Growing number of library discovery systems with separate search interfaces
Google and Amazon have redefined search expectations for most of our users: simple search, relevant results
Web 2.0 features needed (tagging, recommendations, reviews, support for mobile devices, etc.) 20062006
9. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 9 need for next-gen catalog
10. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 10 Administrative perspective: too many discovery systems to maintain
11. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 11 Administrative perspective: too many discovery systems to maintain
12. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 12 Internal pitch: decoupling search from ILS
13. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 13 Choices (2006) Endeca
Primo
Charter-member program offered clear benefits (pricing, input on development)
Prior experience with Ex Libris as early adopters (SFX, MetaLib)
Opportunity to apply local expertise/resources where they will have biggest impact on our users
14. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 14 Implementation
15. 3 September 2012 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 15 Implementation Small technical implementation team
included staff from Systems, Reference & Instructional Services, and Cataloging.
Larger Public services group
established to coordinate ongoing assessment, recommend enhancements.
Intent was to solicit and incorporate feedback from end users, not just library staff
16. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 16 Scope of BCs Primo Local index (BC Collections)
Local catalog (ALEPH)
faculty publications (ALEPH-separate db)
statistical data (ALEPH-separate db)
ETDs (Digital Commons/DigiTool)
digital collections (DigiTool)
course reserves (ALEPH-separate db)
research guides (LibGuides)
17. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 17 Scope of BCs Primo Remote: Articles/Databases
Federated search via MetaLib Primo searches of citation and full-text databases that we subscribe to is done, behind the scenes, via MetaLib, Ex Libriss metasearch system. We currently offer access to approximately 120 metasearch targets, grouped by subjects into quicksets. Primo searches of citation and full-text databases that we subscribe to is done, behind the scenes, via MetaLib, Ex Libriss metasearch system. We currently offer access to approximately 120 metasearch targets, grouped by subjects into quicksets.
18. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 18 Shortly after our primo launch, Umich announced that they were making 100,000 of their records for digitized public domain books from the Google Books project, via OAI. We immediately loaded these into Primo, and they are now searchable as part of the BC Collections tab. Were looking at doing similar loads from the Open Content Alliance. Shortly after our primo launch, Umich announced that they were making 100,000 of their records for digitized public domain books from the Google Books project, via OAI. We immediately loaded these into Primo, and they are now searchable as part of the BC Collections tab. Were looking at doing similar loads from the Open Content Alliance.
19. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 19 Shortly after our primo launch, Umich announced that they were making 100,000 of their records for digitized public domain books from the Google Books project, via OAI. We immediately loaded these into Primo, and they are now searchable as part of the BC Collections tab. Were looking at doing similar loads from the Open Content Alliance. Shortly after our primo launch, Umich announced that they were making 100,000 of their records for digitized public domain books from the Google Books project, via OAI. We immediately loaded these into Primo, and they are now searchable as part of the BC Collections tab. Were looking at doing similar loads from the Open Content Alliance.
20. 3 September 2012 ALA 2008 Midwinter Meeting, Philadelphia 20 This is what our original soft launch of Primo looked like, in Nov. 2007. We originally branded the system SuperSleuth *beta*, a name our Web designer came up with. A key component of the initial rollout was the prominent feedback form, asking users to provide input to help us make the system better. This is what our original soft launch of Primo looked like, in Nov. 2007. We originally branded the system SuperSleuth *beta*, a name our Web designer came up with. A key component of the initial rollout was the prominent feedback form, asking users to provide input to help us make the system better.
21. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 21 This is what our current Primo interface looks likethe biggest change has been the name, now Holmes OneSearch, the result of a naming contest we held, inviting students to propose and then vote on names for the system. This is what our current Primo interface looks likethe biggest change has been the name, now Holmes OneSearch, the result of a naming contest we held, inviting students to propose and then vote on names for the system.
22. Primo futurePrimo future
23. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 23 Quick look at some screenshots from Primoexample search here is hard lifein this case Im looking for Flann OBriens comic novel. The first result is a deduped/FRBRized record representing different editions of the same work, which all had separate records in ALEPH. Facets and scopes are available on the left for users to further refine their search, without having to understand the structure of the underlying search as they do with OPAC searching.Quick look at some screenshots from Primoexample search here is hard lifein this case Im looking for Flann OBriens comic novel. The first result is a deduped/FRBRized record representing different editions of the same work, which all had separate records in ALEPH. Facets and scopes are available on the left for users to further refine their search, without having to understand the structure of the underlying search as they do with OPAC searching.
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29. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 29 Weve also added a recommender system to Primo, based on the bibTip recommender project out of Karlsruhe University in Germany. Recommendations are based on an analysis of our ALEPH OPAC usage logs, tracking, by user session, views of full-records displays. We will be adding our Primo usage logs to the recommender system shortly.Weve also added a recommender system to Primo, based on the bibTip recommender project out of Karlsruhe University in Germany. Recommendations are based on an analysis of our ALEPH OPAC usage logs, tracking, by user session, views of full-records displays. We will be adding our Primo usage logs to the recommender system shortly.
30. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 30 usage stats: trends 93% of searches are basic searches (most users dont go use advanced search options)
Use of tagging and reviews is nominalnot clear if users arent interested or if we need to seed Primo with tags/reviews from external source (e.g., librarything)
Did you mean (2.5%) not used as much as we thoughtnot clear if thats because search results are mostly satisfactory, or did you mean suggestions are not on target
On average, every search leads to a full record display *or* a Get It link (to SFX link resolver)93% of searches are basic searches (most users dont go use advanced search options)
Use of tagging and reviews is nominalnot clear if users arent interested or if we need to seed Primo with tags/reviews from external source (e.g., librarything)
Did you mean (2.5%) not used as much as we thoughtnot clear if thats because search results are mostly satisfactory, or did you mean suggestions are not on target
On average, every search leads to a full record display *or* a Get It link (to SFX link resolver)
31. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 31 usage stats Local (bc collections) vs. remote: users are finding the articles/db tab (approx. 40% of searches)
Significant response time differences: less than 1 second for local search, avg. about 6 seconds for remote search, with only partial results in initial displayLocal (bc collections) vs. remote: users are finding the articles/db tab (approx. 40% of searches)
Significant response time differences: less than 1 second for local search, avg. about 6 seconds for remote search, with only partial results in initial display
32. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 32 User feedback
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37. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 37 big issues so far separate search tabs for local and remote searches
understandable from technical standpoint
but users dont know or care why
remote search not fast, unpredictable
understandable from technical standpoint
but users dont know or care why
38. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 38 Lessons learned Focus on user needs, not librarians
Redefining library search is easier for users than for librarians
We need more Java expertise
Targeted locally developed add-ons appear to be worth the investment
Library technology landscape is changing faster than we expected
40. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 40 Future? Were comfortable with Primo for near term (2-4 years)
Good alternatives available that we would be looking at if we were looking now
VuFind (open source), AcquaBrowser (commercial)
Elephant in room (or at least on horizon) is WCLmay be a game-changer
41. Whither (wither?) competition? 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 41
42. Back to the future! 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 42
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44. 21 May 2009 ARL Membership Meeting, Houston 44 Thank you
Questions?
url: http://bc.edu/holmes
contact: gerrityr@bc.edu