What Are We Really Doing to Market Electronic Resources?

my latest article has been published! it is available via library management (for a nice, typeset PDF) or via my institution’s repository (for a less nice, word-processed PDF).

Marie R. Kennedy. 2011. “What Are We Really Doing to Market Electronic Resources?” Library Management 32(3): 144-158. DOI:10.1108/01435121111112862

Purpose – This paper aims to identify which marketing activities libraries are using to promote electronic resources and to examine how libraries are measuring the successes or failures of their marketing plans.

Design/methodology/approach – The research analyzes the literature published in library science on marketing techniques for electronic resources in use at libraries; the corpus is composed of 24 documents published from 1994-2009. The literature is qualitatively analyzed to determine the techniques in use, the libraries’ goals, targeted groups, budgets, and assessments of their marketing plans.

Findings – A total of 38 unique marketing techniques were discovered in the 24 documents consulted for this research. The four most popular techniques were patron training in a group setting, flyers/brochures, e-mails to patrons, and surveys. Libraries were generally unclear about stating the goals for their marketing plans but were able to easily identify the target of their marketing efforts. Budgeting was inconsistent among libraries included in this research; nine libraries reported having either no budget for marketing or did not mention budgeting in the article. Assessment was the weakest part of the marketing plans, with four libraries not documenting an awareness of the need for assessment and seven libraries noting an understanding of the need to evaluate their plan but unsure how to do so.

Originality/value – Based on the analysis the paper makes it clear that as libraries engage in marketing activities, they should make themselves aware of general principles before beginning their plan. Special focus should be given to selecting activities that match the goals of the marketing plan and choosing an appropriate evaluation technique before beginning the marketing activities.

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my hands are bananas

Jenny R is awesome.

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the panic, it sets in

i’m sitting here at my desk popping wasabi peas and trying to talk myself off the ledge. here’s the thing. as the serials & electronic resources librarian it’s up to me to tell my university which print journals they can get rid of, journals that cost a LOT of money and are vital to current scholarship. if we have stable access to the electronic version it is redundant to retain a print subscription, especially when we know our users prefer the electronic version. if we have access in perpetuity (i.e., FOREVER) to the electronic version, why retain the old print? we don’t need the print version because we have access to the electronic version, and all those print volumes are taking up space. this is a perfectly logical thought process. librarians all over the world have followed this thought process, discarding print volumes of journals in favor of perpetual electronic access. so why is it that lately i’ve been mistrusting this thought process? it’s because i’ve been asking our journal vendors to provide me with titles and specific volumes/years that we should have perpetual access to. many of them have been slow to produce the list of titles/holdings, and i’ve returned many of those lists with added titles they’ve missed. that makes me nervous. what happens when it comes time to cash in that access? will the lists of titles and holdings we’re making now be honored later?

talk me down, people. how are you handling all of this at your own universities?

wasabi peas

Posted in e-resource mgmt, food, library, license agreements | 3 Comments

QuickCite app

screen captures of the new iphone app, QuickCite, and a summary of results.

This is the book I picked for the test. The barcode is on the bottom right hand of the back cover.

Scanning the barcode

This is a screen shot of scanning the barcode and having the citation retrieved.

Verification that the citation has been sent.

Verification that the citation has been sent.

Citation samples:

APA

sample APA citation email

Chicago citation example

Chicago citation example

MLA citation example

MLA citation example

The app worked quickly but the citations it sent me (regardless of style, regardless of book) were missing the location, a key piece for each citation style. Hope the team is working on a fix for this, as it’s a pretty neat service!

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Banana flash mob

tomorrow, 2/13/2011, at Hollywood and Highland, from 1:20-1:40.

http://blogging.la/2011/02/10/fun-with-your-banana-on-sunday/

Bring your banana and pretend its a cell phone.  Talk into it, text with it, take pictures with it, do what ever you do with a cell phone with it.

banana

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oddest thing i’ve seen in a license agreement

when i negotiate a license agreement it is usually to make sure that the publisher’s definition of “authorized user” matches ours, suggest changes to any wording that our university can’t agree to, etc. generally i make sure that any language that is enforceable by law fits with what our university is willing to accept. i’ve never seen language in a license that guides how a user should interpret the content of the resource published. i laughed when i saw this. of course i left it in because i wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment.
d) IF THE DATABASE INCLUDES ABSTRACTS, AUTHORIZED USERS SHOULD CONSULT THE FULL TEXT MATERIALS BEFORE REACHING OR SUGGESTING CONCLUSIONS.

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