Title: LIS 901B: Summer 2005 Lecture 10
1LIS 901B Summer 2005Lecture 10
- Technical Services Organization, Management and
Future Trends
2Management of Technical Services
- Only the biggest libraries have librarians
without management responsibilities - Management is unavoidable
- Its part of professional life
- Justifies higher salaries
- Librarians determine what libraries do
- Even fewer non-managerial librarians in technical
services
3Management of TS (cont.)
- Top management
- Library directors, CIOs
- Middle management
- Library directors, assistant directors,
department heads - Unit management
- Library directors, assistant directors,
department heads unit heads, team leaders,
volunteer coordinators, etc.
4Job Titles of TS Administrators
- Technical Services Librarian
- Chief Acquisitions Librarian
- Head, Monographic Acquisitions Section
- Head of Technical Services
- Director of Technical Services
- Serials and Electronic Collections Librarian
- Head Cataloger
5Job Titles of TS Administrators (cont.)
- Head, Cataloging Department
- Senior Cataloger
- Cataloging/Systems Support Librarian
- Cataloging Manager
6What Makes TS Management Special?
- Service to in-house constituencies
- External business relations
- Close association with computer operations
- Extra-mural cooperation and external standards
- Production driven
- Reliance on support staff
- Financial management
7Service to In-House Constituencies
- Service to reference librarians
- Quick acquisition of materials
- Catalog (especially under authority control)
- Service to circulation staff
- Bibliographic and holdings records
- Inventory information
- Service to administration
- Statistical reports
8Service to In-House Constituencies (cont.)
- Service to patrons
- Relations with requestors
- Relations with selectors
- Relations with donors
- Catalog error reports
9External Business Relations
- Parent body departments
- Personnel
- Financial
- With publishers
- With vendors and suppliers
- With automation suppliers
- With consortium participants
- With exchange partners
10Close Association with Computer Operations
- Sometimes computer operations managed by
technical services manager - Early adopter of computer services
- Heavy user of computer services
- Most demanding user
- Creates/maintains the base data
- Participates in design specifications
11Extra-mural Cooperation and External Standards
- Earliest consortia for shared cataloging
- Cataloging standards
- Relationship between local needs and external
standards
12Production Driven
- Services often judged by
- Quantity
- Unit Cost
- Perceived local benefits
13Reliance on Clerical and Para-Professional Staff
- Supervision is ubiquitous
- From Webster existing or being everywhere at the
same time constantly encountered widespread - Job descriptions and differentiation
- Training is constant
- Evaluation is required
14Financial Management
- Budgeting
- Operations budgeting
- Unit cost assessment
- Collections budgeting
- Purchase price negotiations
- Vendor performance monitoring
- Price projections
15Shortage of TS Managers
- Shortages of all types of managers
- Shortages of technical services managers
- Small applicant pools
- Readvertising common
- Preparing for management positions
- Small project management
- Continuing education
16Advantages of Going Into Management
- Money
- Mobility
- Power/prestige
- Realize service vision
17Nine Steps Toward Better Recruiting for TS
Librarians
- Design good jobs
- Dont look for more than you need
- Build a better recruiting network
- Look beyond home base
- Identify categories of people to recruit
- Offer good salaries
18Nine Steps Toward Better Recruiting for TS
Librarians
- Provide attractive staff services
- Evaluate job candidates effectively
- Be open and honest with everyone
19Theory into Practice Making the Transition
- Preparation for ones first job theory plus
- Support systems for new hires
- The bottom line an investment
20How TS Can Contribute to Effective Public Services
- Communication and cooperation between technical
and public services - Development and maintenance of the catalog
- Technical knowledge
- Development of digital library
- Metadata
21How TS Can Contribute to Effective Public
Services (cont.)
- Instruction in catalog use
- Library staff
- Patrons
- Keeping up with the field
22Where Have We Been and Where Are We Going?
- And what did you say technical services are?
(is?) - What technical services is good at bringing
order to chaos
23Functions of TS Librarians
- Carry out technical services activities
- Acquire, organize, store access, preserve
knowledge - Coordinate technical services workflow
- Provide technical expertise
24Organization of Technical Services
- Historically kept together organizationally to
- Develop and use specialized knowledge
- Maintain economies of scale (share expensive
resources and tools) - Coordinate efforts
- Many tend to confuse the functions themselves
with how libraries historically have organized to
carry out these functions
25Organization of Technical Services (cont.)
- The reasons we carry out these functions remain
the same - Must be tied to libraries principles of service
- Freedom of inquiry
- Promotion of a knowledgeable and informed society
- Equitable distribution of knowledge
- And the central role of libraries in the above
26Organization of Technical Services (cont.)
- Those performing technical services need to
perform their jobs for a purpose and know how
that purpose ties into the librarys overall
goals - Avoid emphasizing process over services by tying
individual and/or departmental goals to service
27Traditional Organization of Technical Services
- Departmental
- Hierarchical
- Materials moves linearly (from acquisitions to
cataloging to circulation) while communication
may need to move up a level or two before
crossing departments
28Reorganization
- Need to move from
- Maximizing efficiency to maximizing flexibility
and coordination - Looking at efficiency to looking at effectiveness
- Focus on capabilities of processes to focus on
capabilities of employees
29Reorganization (cont.)
- Could reorganize around meeting the needs of the
users (client-centered) by centering activities
(technical and public together) around groups
of users - Children/adults/special needs
- Undergraduate/graduate/faculty
- Science/social science/humanities
30Reorganization (cont.)
- Could reorganize around information services
(Boissonnais) - Delivery- acquisitions, ILL, circulation,
preservation - Mediation- selection, cataloging, reference
- And then forge links between the two services
31Reorganization (cont.)
- Both the above reorganizations add flexibility
and coordination - Shared responsibility
- Pooling of staff
- Ability to focus staff on urgent needs (getting
out large orders, scanning in electronic
reserves, etc.)
32Reorganization (cont.)
- Alternative organizations have become possible
because of technological changes that brought
about the integrated library systems and
individual workstations - Consider the cost of change
- Are technical and public services merging,
and should they? - Most importantly, does the organization serve its
users well or can it do better?
33Too Much with Too Little
- Growing collections
- Growing e-resource collections
- Shrinking technical services departments
34Boosting Productivity
- Updating staff skills
- Changing workflows
- Rethinking assumptions
- Learning what users find truly important
- Better equipment and tools
- Better use of technology
- Managing change
35Some TS Workflow Redesign Principles
- Look at the whole process (e.g., selection to
ordering to receipt to cataloging to shelf-ready) - To the greatest extent possible, handle items
only once - Capture bibliographic data as far upstream as
possible - Perform work where it makes the mostbsense
- Maximize acquisitions/cataloging collaboration
- Maximize use of support staff
36Libraries, Librarians Technical Services
- for the Next 5 to 10 Years Tops!
37Digital Library Myths
- Soon everything will be digital
- Digital is better than print
- Digital replaces print
- Digital is cheaper than print
- Digital serves all disciplines equally well
- All digital library projects are worth our
attention
38Issues Trends General
- It was the best of times, it was the worst of
times - A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens
39Issues Trends General
- We must all be concerned with the future -because
were going to spend the rest of our lives
there. -
- -Charles Kettering
40Technology and Todays College Freshmen
- Popcorn has always been cooked in the microwave.
- Atari pre-dates them they never played Pac Man.
- Born the year Sony introduced the Walkman.
- Compact discs were introduced when they were 1
year old. You sound like a broken record means
nothing to them - Have always had VCRs, cable TV, remote controls,
and MTV.
41Technology the New Librarian
- Never used an electric eraser or tied catalog
cards. - Dont know the difference between the Red and
Blue rules, nor do they care that OCLC cards had
subject headings that werent printed in red. - Think 10 days is a long wait for an ILL item.
- Think Sigma 9 is another galaxy, Beehives are
places are to make honey, and that Rowland Brown
might have been a power forward for the Knicks. - Have only used online catalogs, never searched
through paper cumulations of indexes, and are
unaware of any debate about closing the catalog
42Changes Facing Libraries
- Greater demand for customized client services
- Higher expectations for content management of
print and e-resources - Increasing demands for the latest technology
43Issues Trends The Hybrid Library
- Libraries are, and will remain, a varied and
complex mix of collections and services - Collections will continue to be in print,
electronic, and digital formats - Services must increasingly be disconnected from
time and place - Staff will be called upon to gain new
competencies and fulfill new roles
44Issues Trends Indexes
- Authentication issues
- Lease v. purchase (continued access
preservation) - The plethora of databases available often leaves
the user adrift - Problems that need solving
- Robust authentication
- Integration of access (one-stop searching,
linking to content, etc.) - Advice and guidance on database selection
45Issues Trends Content
- We are still in low hanging fruit mode
- We will continue to have islands of digital
content in a sea of print - Therefore
- We need to integrate access to information in all
forms - We need to make print more desirable
46Issues Trends Personnel
- Staff will be called upon to do an increasing
variety of technical and non-technical tasks - Learning on-the-job and constantly is required
- When hiring, personality traits count more than
skills or experiences
47Desirable Personality Traits
- An ability to learn constantly and quickly
- Personal and professional flexibility
- An innate skepticism toward technology
- A propensity to take risks
- An abiding public service perspective
48Desirable Personality Traits (cont.)
- An appreciation of what others offer and the
ability to work cooperatively - Skill at enabling and fostering change
- The capacity and desire to work independently
49Being In Their Face Why?
- Many catalogs and search systems are difficult to
understand and use - Users need help at the moment they get stuck
email is inadequate - Unless assistance is obvious and convenient, the
user will remain stuck - Other, readily available information sources, can
be convenient but inadequate (web search engines,
for example)
50What We Must Do Individually
- Learn constantly
- Make strategic learning decisions
- Be flexible
- Dont move at the speed of the organization
51Predictions
- There will be no wholesale retrospective
conversion of print material to digital - In some areas (e.g. novels) there will be little
migration to e-books. In other areas, such as
reference or textbooks, print will disappear - Academic print journals will be replaced by
electronic journals
52Predictions
- Decline of print and TV news media due to web
delivery, but will still be dominated by existing
media corporations - Expansion of specialized electronic newsletters
- Most mainstream journal articles will be
available via document delivery access will be
possible by bypassing the library
53Predictions
- Libraries will increasingly spend their time
managing the tools to access information and
advising on use and less on acquiring and
organizing primary material - Tools to assist end users will improve rapidly
- Small interest groups will have increasingly
sophisticated ways to control and organize the
information resources they generate - Agree or Disagree
54Conclusion?
- Anyone who remains calm in the midst of all
this confusion simply does not understand the
situation.
55Yogi Berra
- Prediction is very hard, especially when its
about the future.