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Project Management ILEAD U Scenario 1 February 23, 2010
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A collaborative text message reference project – first in the US Over 60 libraries from the US and Canada Over 800 questions per month Using Altarama and gmail interface Started July 2009 Hours open: Mon-Fri 8-10 am; Saturday 9-5; Sunday 12-6 Project coordinated by Alliance Library System All business and meetings conducted online
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Cell phone access higher than broadband internet use Number of text messages sent has increased over 250 percent over the last two years Typical mobile subscriber sends or receives 357 text messages a month compared to sending or receiving 204 phone calls Although libraries were offering the service, they were not offering for many hours We did not see any collaborative services
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Patrons text a question to My Info Quest The question is forwarded from Altarama to gmail The librarian receives the question in gmail The answer is provided and goes through gmail to Altarama and the patron’s phone
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Every library has a representative to the group advisory board which meets online monthly Other committees to participate in: Policies and procedures, training, public relations, evaluation All groups meet online
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Put out a call for participants on electronic mailing lists (March-April 2009) Hosted online meetings for everyone interested (March-July 2009) Talked to vendors to arrange for a trial (February-April 2009) Began website development (May 2009) Committees meet to work on pr, procedures etc) Training (May-June 2009) Soft launch of service (July 2009) Larger program launch (September 2009)
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Offer more hours of service Expanded expertise available Shared coverage Shared cost Shared development time Shared promotion Shared risk
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Staff the desk two hours per week Attend online advisory meetings Promote the service Attend training sessions Participate in google discussion group
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Altarama Peoplewhere Both agree to free 6 month trial and provide support for the group
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Scheduling Best practices in answering reference questions in this mode – i.e. should we use wikipedia? Should we use text speak? Sustainability/Funding
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Very important so libraries can decide if they want to continue, go out on their own, or discontinue Lead by Lili Luo, San Jose State University SLIS with a team of volunteers to assist
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What types of individuals used the service? What types of questions did users ask (e.g., consumer health, job search, or school- related)? When did users ask questions? What are users. perceptions of the service they received? Does offering this service reach out to individuals who have not previously used library services? What outreach methods are most effective in promoting the service? What was the length of time for responding to users. questions (transaction turnaround time)?
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What are the core skill sets required in providing text message reference services? What are the obstacles, if any, in providing text message reference services? What aspect(s) of the training was most helpful? What information was missing from the training that should have been included? Is there any difference in librarian satisfaction (or product satisfaction) based on the type of library s/he works for? To what extent does the service performance uphold the professional guidelines established by the Reference and User Services Association?
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Administrative Perspective What are the advantages and disadvantages to offering text message reference services through a collaboration of libraries? What are the challenges when scheduling librarians to staff the service? What service learning benefits did SLIS graduate students realize through their involvement? How can successful service learning opportunities be created for graduate students in a collaborative reference service? What is the level of cost-effectiveness of offering the service?
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282 transactions 189 – ready reference – questions that request a single, uncomplicated and straightforward answer 49 – about local libraries – questions that inquire about patrons’ local libraries resources, services, policies, etc. 16 – specific search questions – request answers in the form of giving the user a document, list of citations, etc. 14 – questions about Infoquest 9 – unclear questions 5 – inappropriate questions
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868 questions – 74% from repeat users Response time – 5 minutes and less – 33.5% 6-10 minutes – 23.9% Remainder is over 11 minutes
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What’s In It for My Organization? “In the jungle, the mighty jungle, the lion sleeps tonight!” When it comes to inter-organizational collaboration, the sleeping lion is your own org Each organization has its own mission and “weltanschauung” Does inter-organizational collaboration work well when times are good, but suffer when times are tough?
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Individuals who are volunteering their own time, not necessarily representing an organization Individuals who are self-employed Neither fish nor fowl Are they orgs-of-one? Harness their passion for the project
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What’s In It for My Users? What do we really know about the users of a collaboratively conceived and delivered service? What do we want or need to know? Protecting privacy and confidentiality Placing the onus on users ZIP codes or 3-letter code for the org with which they are most affiliated
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Getting to one voice for the collaborative project Who speaks for the collaborative project? Traditional stance toward vendors: Buyer/Renter and Seller Suspicion Hostility Selecting vendors and third party service providers Migrating to other vendors and service providers
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The way a project launches may be the single most important determining factor for the overall success of your project. What type of launch do you want for your project? Soft launch Big, splashy launch Can the launch be controlled by the project team?
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We don’t have the luxury of Goldilocks Too hot, too cold, just right Too hard, too soft, just right Must be both effective and efficient Strong Opinion Alert: Tom P. thinks most library projects involve too much pre-launch planning and too little post-launch planning.
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“Watch” how people are using the service Read and listen to their comments and suggestions Allow the service to evolve, if the user community wants it to evolve
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Lori Bell Director of Innovation Alliance Library System LBell@AllianceLibrary System.com LBell@AllianceLibrary System.com 309.694.9200 (x2128) Tom Peters CEO TAP Information Services TPeters@TAPinformation.com TPeters@TAPinformation.com 816.616.6746
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