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Rochester Hills Public Library

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Integrating Information Design with organizational planning ... Is the input of new data and updating of existing data to be centrally controlled ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rochester Hills Public Library


1
Building an information resource intranet for
library staff
Eric graham, custom services developer
2
Why are we here?
  • Libraries expend considerable resources building
    information systems for serving their patrons.
    While library staff members also have information
    needs, they are frequently overlooked when
    information automation is being planned. A
    library intranet can often address this
    information gap.

3
Agenda
  • What is an Intranet?
  • Intranet vs. extranet
  • Why an Intranet?
  • Advantages and Disadvantages
  • Intranet Myths
  • Common uses of a library staff intranet
  • Planning for an Intranet
  • Thinking about intranet design
  • Integrating Information Design with
    organizational planning
  • Measuring Intranet return on investment (ROI)
  • Tools and technologies available for building a
    staff intranet
  • Utilizing what you already have
  • Stuff you might not have, but is free (sort of,
    like free kittens)
  • Blogs Wikis
  • Technologies you need to employ to get free wiki
    or blog software Up and running

4
What is an Intranet?
  • An intranet is an internal informational presence
    containing information for managing an
    organization and its staff.
  • the true power of an intranet is realized when
    dynamic, collaborative, or data-driven, content
    is made available
  • Information can be served to staff through simple
    web pages, or through more advanced techniques
    such as RSS feeds and WIKI's.

5
Intranets vs. Extranets
  • Intranets differ from "Extranets" in that the
    former is generally restricted to employees of
    the organization while extranets can be accessed
    by library customers.
  • The intranet is your libraries room of ones own

6
What is an Intranet good for?
  • Intranets provide an extraordinary opportunity to
    change the culture
  • Providing information that everyone needs but not
    everyone usually gets
  • Creating collaborative means of drafting policy
    and managing projects
  • A way to invent new workflow, without creating
    more work
  • Creating an audit trail of your organizations
    history

7
Information an intranet needs
  • administrative information
  • policy manuals
  • procedures manuals
  • staff reports
  • committee minutes
  • accounting spreadsheets
  • staff news
  • links to staff email / telephone
  • links to databases
  • staff developed knowledge bases (fugitive facts)
  • links to public Internet sites used by staff
  • links to training modules
  • forms used by staff
  • staff directories
  • time clocks to count employee hours

8
Technical staff create a toolbox that will keep
them coming back
  • Updates
  • User tools
  • Discovery tools
  • A Web toolbox
  • Common applications
  • Support systems

9
Advantages of an Intranet
  • Workforce productivity
  • Time savings
  • Communication
  • E-Document management and versioning
  • Preservation and dissemination of institutional
    knowledge
  • Promotion of a common culture and can be an
    change agent
  • Enhance Collaboration

10
Disadvantages of an intranet
  • Inappropriate or incorrect information can be
    posted on an intranet.
  • Creating In a devolved intranets There is a
    balance to be struck between taking advantage of
    this freedom to achieve corporate goals and
    having appropriate controls in place to meet an
    organization's legal or moral responsibilities.
  • Expertise needed to administer and develop
    Intranet information within the organization.
  • Security of the intranet becomes an issue.
  • Constant maintenance Intranets should not be
    designed to be static enties with year updates.
    A good intranet changes its content all of the
    time. Staff time and effort will have to be used
    to keep the intranet relevant.

11
Planning for and creating an intranet
  • What are the goals of the intranet
  • Decide if the intranet is good for work.
  • Establish an Ongoing Content-Development Process
  • Develop an Editorial/Development Voice
  • Decide Who is going to take ownership of the
    content on the intranet (persons, departments,
    taskforce groups, projects groups)
  • What documents and information is to be shared on
    the internet.
  • Which person(s) or department(s) would "own"
    (take control of) the technology and the
    implementation.

12
Planning for and creating an intranet
  • How and when existing systems would be phased
    out/replaced
  • What steps will be taken to make the intranet
    secure
  • How make the internet comply with community
    standards
  • Level of interactivity desired (eg wikis, on-line
    forms, or static pages).
  • Is the input of new data and updating of existing
    data to be centrally controlled
  • Hardware and software decisions.
  • Participation issues and guidelines (like good
    taste, harassment, confidentiality), and features
    to be supported.
  • Implementation processes to be used

13
Intranet Myths
  • Intranets are cheap
  • Build and they will come
  • Intranets are for BIG organizations
  • Just another buzzword
  • Intranets require little maintenance
  • Intranets are internal webs

14
Integrating Information Design with
organizational planning
  • The intranet has been called the most important
    business tool since the typewriter. Despite many
    successes in cost and time savings, many sponsors
    of organization-wide intranets remain
    dissatisfied. Why? They have spent time and money
    on development, Net-enabled desktops, even
    intranet training, but still aren't enjoying
    significant enough productivity or cost savings.
    Why? While critics often point to technological
    glitches, the real problems may lie in
    information design.

15
Information Design and organizational planning
  • Intranets should help employees collaborate on
    processes and projects
  • Focus on processes rather than departments
  • Successful process-oriented intranets look and
    work as differently as the processes they enable.
  • Don't Overlook Design
  • Think About Tasks Rather Than Documents
  • Organize Tasks Into Larger Processes
  • Create Virtual Workgroups Organized Around
    Processes
  • The Intranet Reflects the Library the library
    Reflects the Intranet
  • Good Design is Good Business

16
Measuring Intranet Return On Investment
  • The surge in interest surrounding intranets may
    remind one of the early and heady days of the
    World Wide Web. The Intranet is the new hero,
    leading the panel discussions at library
    conferences. It seems that about the only thing
    intranets can't do is make tea. Calculating
    intranet ROI is more art than science
  • Cost Savings
  • Fast access to information
  • Increased Productivity

17
Getting started Testing the Intranet waters
  • Use familiar technologies
  • For users' sake, keep your starter site simple
  • Make it as secure as possible
  • Keep things safe on the inside
  • Aggressively test your system
  • Make it easy to update
  • Form an intranet advisory team
  • Make sure that someone is in charge
  • Keep your technical options open
  • Be patient and supportive
  • Promote your intranet

18
Now the fun stuff Technologies to applications
to enable the staff Intranet
19
Leverage what you already own Cheap is good!
  • Internet Information Services (IIS) - Demo
  • RSS - Demo
  • Reporting Services -Demo
  • Active Directory/Exchange Integration
  • Shared Calendars

20
Stuff you might not have, but is inexpensive
(through your educational reseller) from Microsoft
  • Sharepoint Document Management System and more
    - Demo

21
Stuff you might not have, but is free (sort of,
like free kittens)
  • Blogs WIKIs
  • Blogs (short for Weblogs) and wikis (Polynesian
    for quick) are proliferating everywhere,
    including in the library community. By early
    2007, there were hundreds of library blogs and
    scores of library wikis. Despite the fact that
    blogs and wikis have become commonplace, they are
    often confused with one another. A blog is an
    electronic broadcast by the owner of the blog.
    If the owner of the blog permits it, others can
    respond by adding comments, but they cannot edit
    the content. Instead, the comments are displayed
    in a separate area. A wiki is a collaborative
    content development tool. It is a Web site that
    allows anyone, without knowing HTML, to post
    content to it.
  • -Dick Boss

22
Library Blogs
  • There are many of library blogs. Some list
    library events, others blog about books. Some
    libraries utilize blogs that contain reports of
    staff activity (the goings on at the reference or
    desk, comments on programs, news from the latest
    library conference, results of ballot
    initiatives, minutes from staff meetings, etc)

23
Blogging Software
  • Blogging software is required to create a blog,
    but only a Web browser is required to read a
    blog. A legion of open source blogging software
    products available for download and installation.
  • Apache Roller (www.rollerweblogger.org),
  • Geeklog (www.geeklog.net)
  • LifeType (www.lifetype.net).
  • Community Server (http//communityserver.org)
  • Movable Type (http//www.movabletype.org).

24
Wiki
  • Wiki is an Intranet in a box
  • From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • A wiki is a medium which can be edited by anyone
    with access to it, and provides an easy method
    for linking from one page to another. Wikis are
    typically collaborative websites, though there
    are now also single-user offline implementations.
    Ward Cunningham, developer of the first wiki,
    WikiWikiWeb, originally described it as "the
    simplest online database that could possibly
    work". One of the best-known wikis is
    Wikipedia.

25
Wiki ... What is it, I mean really...
  • Wikis contain ALL the features that you need to
    create a successful intranet, combined in one
    convenient, easy to use software package.
  • Wiki Terminology
  • A single page in a wiki is referred to as a "wiki
    page", while the entire body of pages, which are
    usually highly interconnected via hyperlinks, is
    "the wiki". A wiki is essentially a database for
    creating, browsing and searching information

26
Wiki Advantages...
  • WIKI pages can be easily created and updated.
  • Editing wiki pages is easier than using HTML
  • Document management and page versioning is built
    in
  • Controlling changes is easy
  • Navigation
  • CamelCase easily linking and creating pages
  • Searching All wikis are indexed for searching,
    indexes may be Full text or using metadata with
    controlled vocabulary, you choose
  • Wiki Farms Get a taste of the wiki experience.

27
Wiki Advantages...
  • Security
  • The open philosophy wikis, allowing anyone on
    staff to edit content, does not ensure that all
    editors are well-meaning. Vandalism can be a
    major problem. Wikis by their very nature are
    susceptible to intentional disruption. Wikis tend
    to take a soft security approach to the problem
    of vandalism making damage easy to undo rather
    than attempting to prevent damage.
  • Set Up
  • Wiki's are open source software. Although the
    wiki-software itself is not unnecessarily hard to
    set up an maintain, The initial installation
    requires a system administrator to install many
    moving parts in order to get the Wiki running.

28
  • Wiki Demo http//freewiki.info/

29
The Moving Parts
  • Technologies needed to get free wiki or blog
    software Up and running
  • HTTP (Web Server software) or
  • HTTP Application Server software
  • Open Source Database servers (MySQL, PostgreSQL)
  • OpenSource WebScripting language (PHP,Perl,
    etc..) extensions
  • The JAVA SDK

30
Installing OpenSource
  • Installing OpenSource
  • Read the (online) Manual TWICE
  • Don't believe one word of it, search the net, and
    find out how others have solved the puzzle of
    installation on your hardware platform.
  • Install the Java SDK FIRST
  • Install the SQL server
  • Install the web service/HTTP server
  • Install the SQL server web extensions
  • Install the programming language web service
    extensions
  • Install Your application
  • Realize the manual was right, just worded badly
    ......
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