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Harking back to a simpler time
Harking back to a simpler time
Just because I loved this! (and the link in case the embedded video doesn't work for you)
Summer Reading Program Continues Through August!
There's still plenty of time to join the Summer Reading Program!
Have you joined the the Palos Verdes Library District’s Summer Reading Program? It’s easy! Drop by Malaga Cove, Miraleste or Peninsula Center Library to pick up a free book bag, bookmark and reading log. Read any books you like and for every 2 1/2 hours you read, you can collect a cool patch. Read 15 hours and win a special certificate. You can read and collect patches through August 31st. Reading in summer helps prepare kids for the school year and it’s fun too. Preschool children can join too, and earn patches when they listen to stories. Check out our huge collection of books for all ages and interests and make a splash reading this summer!
Our special activities will continue through Aug. 13. Check our on on-line calendar at http://host5.evanced.info/pvld/evanced/eventcalendar.asp?Lib=ALL&EventType=Young+Reader for details!
Getting the best answers
Getting the best answers
A couple of days ago the Fast Company blog posted this article about the relaunch of Ask.com. In its new incarnation people will be able to post questions and Ask.com will crawl the web to compile answers from other sites that connect questioners with human "experts", like Yahoo Answers. If no good match can be found on the web the question will posted for response by any member of the Ask.com community.
Leaving aside the issue of how a questioner would verify the qualifications of the human responders, I thought this statement was particularly telling -
"Ask.com can't compete with Google on sheer algorithmic muscle; nobody can, really. But there are chinks in Google's armor, chinks Google itself is perfectly aware of. Google knows that curated answers can often be more useful..." [emphasis mine]
Librarians may not be experts in a particular specialized field of knowledge per se they are experts in finding, validating, and curating information. Curating answers is a large part of what we currently do, and maybe an even larger part of our professional self-identity.
The challenge is that to date, at least as far as public libraries are concerned, we mostly provide those curated answers to people who walk through our doors, or maybe call us on the phone. A number of libraries, PVLD included, have experimented with other channels such as websites ("Ask A Librarian"), instant messaging/chat, and text messaging but everything I have seen or read indicates that the volume of questions through these channels is a very small proportion of the total questions that we answer. Not to mention that the total questions answered is on a long-term downward trend.
It seems to me that if libraries and librarians want to hold on to providing curated answers as a key part of our value proposition and professional identitiy we nee to establish ourselves on the Web as a trusted source of answers, something we have not managed to do after many years of trying. Ask.com says that it has 90 million visitors monthly...that is nearly 3x the total number of reference questions answered by California libraries of all types through all channels in a year! And what about the people who go to Yahoo Answers, ChaCha or other online sources of curated answers.
What would it take to get even 10% of the people who use commercial "answer" sites to turn to libraries instead? Some of the things that come to my mind -
- A single web-based portal for all libraries (or at least all public libraries) designed by people with real consumer user interface experience, not librarians (we tend all too often to design things the way we think they should work!) and that can be easily accessed by mobile devices, tablet computers, etc. as well as traditional computers. This probably also means development of apps for a variety of platforms as well.
- Effective use of search engine optimization (SEO) techniques to ensure that when someone searches Google, Bing, or any other search engine the library website is near the top of the list. This probably requires employing SEO experts on an ongoing basis.
- Investment in consumer marketing including web advertising (such as becoming a "sponsored link" on Google), as well as in other forms of advertising and marketing.
- A way of harnessing the collective knowledge and skills of librarians across time zones to provide extremely prompt, succinct and high quality answers (actual answers, not bibliographies and references to where to find information!) to questions as soon as they are posted...live and in real time.
In other words, it will require a significant investment of hard cash and time, the engagement of a whole set of non-librarian professional skills (e.g. user interface design, app design, SEO, consumer marketing) and a level of collaboration (even to agree on the design of the system) that is rare.
Is it possible? Maybe. Should we hang our hats on a future where providing answers remains at the core of our value proposition? I'm not so sure....
(Perhaps) We are Not Alone
Recent news headlines claiming that NASA’s Kepler spacecraft had identified 100 earth-like planets outside our solar system were incorrect, the space agency has reported. Since its launch in 2009, Kepler has sent back data which indicates the existence of over 700 extrasolar planets, or exoplanets.
The data must be tested using “extensive follow-up observations” in order to confirm whether these planets in the Milky Way Galaxy are truly earth-like. It is thought that such small and rocky planets, and not large and gassy ones like Jupiter, would be potentially capable of sustaining life.
Library resources: Extrasolar planets
Luftslottet som sprängdes aka The Air Castle That Exploded aka The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest (2009) Sweden
Flickan som lekte med elden aka The Girl who Played with Fire (2009) Sweden
Män som hatar kvinnor aka Men who Hate Women aka The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2009) Sweden
Movie on the Roof–Savvy?
We’re showing Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl this Thursday night. Come sit out under the stars on our new carpet and pillows, or bring your own chair. Enjoy snacks and bring a book for the book exchange table. It may be a bit cold so you might want to bring a snuggly!
“So, there is a curse? That’s interesting”
~Captain Jack Sparrow
Thursday, July 29th
7:00-9:30 pm
Peninsula Center Library Roof
Librarians as Business Mentors
Librarians as Business Mentors
I just came from a meeting of the local Chamber of Commerce's Business Development Committee and was surfing through my Google Reader blog feeds while catching my breath before heading off to a meeting about how to further develop PVLD's Zerunyan Center for Business, Entrepreneurship, and Community Development when I came across this post from the personal finance blog Wise Bread.
As a Library Director who is firmly committed to reaching out to and supporting local businesses I LOVED that Librarian was # 3 on the list:
3. LibrarianYour local library is in the business of giving information (literally), and the head librarian is usually very well versed in all kinds of free resources for those wanting to know more about local regulations, tax law, continuing education, and networking opportunities. If you haven't visited your local branch in awhile, take a day to go in and introduce yourself. Let the librarian know who you are, what you do, and how you could benefit from the library's resources. Then let them do the talking. They will most likely share all of the perks available to you, including interlibrary loan programs, free information on funding and grants, and more!
And as Chair-elect of the Palos Verdes Peninsula Chamber of Commerce it was great to see Chambers of Commerce in the #4 slot, too.
In this economy small businesses need all the support they can get, and public libraries (and Chambers of Commerce) stand ready to help!
I Love PVLD, PFL President Janey Jones Says
This made my day!
This made my day!
Just came across this review of our Peninsula Center Library on Yelp. Great work staff!
Say YES! to Technology 2010
I ♥ PVLD – Your Turn
Thinking about the future
Thinking about the future
Over the years a number of my posts have been about the transformational nature of the brave new world of digital information and the Internet. I'm still wrestling to make sense of my own thoughts about how this transformation will impact libraries, and how libraries should respond. Recent articles, like this one from the front page of yesterday's Los Angeles Times about how new digital formats are transforming reading and learning, heighten my sense that both the risks and opportunities are huge, but I am finding it hard to carve out the "thinking time" to process all that I am reading.
That is why I have particularly appreciated a couple of recent blog posts from my friend Genesis Hansen on her Wrong Again blog.
The first highlights that we are truly moving into brand new territory and calls out the need for explorers ("the Lewis and Clark of libraryland") to move out into these new worlds and help the rest of us understand what they hold.
The second talks about the risks inherent in either thinking that we can give ourselves a "digital facelift" without fundamentally rethinking what we do and how we do it, or in "circling the wagons" and focusing on short-term survival rather than dealing with the profound changes that will, whether we like it or not, affect us.
Both posts touch on my fear that as libraries across the country face cutbacks in funding, staff, and hours of operation (1) the temptation to circle the wagons becomes stronger just when we most need to be thinking about how we can ensure our long-term relevance, and (2) stress and fear make it harder than ever to put our heads up above the trenches, so to speak, so that we can even see the terrain around us.
I know that as the leader of a library system that, while more fortunate than many, faces substantial financial pressure I think every day about how to make wise decisions that sustain the services that our community uses and values today and at the same time lay the foundation for the long-term vitality of the library. It ain't easy!
We need to avoid being the lumberjack in this apocryphal story from Patrick Guanciale's blog via Nicholas Bate (whose blog, by the way is a constant source of inspiration) -
There’s a fable about a lumberjack who was purported to be the best in the land and had won numerous competitions. The edge of his axe blade was honed to perfection; the tried and true methods he used were passed down from his father and his father before him. He was in the prime of his life and his strength, but he never changed his techniques or invested in new technology. One day, a lanky youngster challenged him to a tree-felling competition. The lumberjack laughed and took the bet. They squared off, facing their respective stand of trees, and the starter yelled, “Ready, set, go!” at which point the kid drop-started his chainsaw. The lumberjack dropped his axe and with a look of bewilderment on his face, exclaimed, “What’s that noise?!”
In the case of libraries I think we know what the noise is, the question is what we do about it...the questions Genesis is raising in her posts. Read them let me know what thoughts they spark for you.
