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An Introduction to LibQUAL

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Title: An Introduction to LibQUAL


1
An Introduction to LibQUAL
  • Amy Hoseth
  • Massachusetts LSTA Orientation Meeting
  • Boston, MA
  • October 21, 2005

2
Total Circulation
Note. M. Kyrillidou and M. Young. (2003). ARL
Statistics 2002-03. Washington, D.C. ARL, p.8.
3
Reference Transactions
Note. M. Kyrillidou and M. Young. (2003). ARL
Statistics 2002-03. Washington, D.C. ARL, p.8.
4
Assessment
  • The difficulty lies in trying to find a single
    model or set of simple indicators that can be
    used by different institutions, and that will
    compare something across large groups that is by
    definition only locally applicablei.e., how well
    a library meets the needs of its institution.
    Librarians have either made do with
    oversimplified national data or have undertaken
    customized local evaluations of effectiveness,
    but there has not been devised an effective way
    to link the two.
  • Sarah Pritchard, Library Trends, 1996

5
LibQUAL Goals
  • Improve mechanisms and protocols for evaluating
    libraries
  • Develop Web-based tools for assessing library
    service quality
  • Identify best practices in providing library
    service
  • Support libraries seeking to understand changes
    in user behavior
  • Assist libraries seeking to re-position library
    services in todays new environment

6
LibQUAL Process
  • SERVQUAL dimensions served as a priori
    theoretical starting point
  • SERVQUAL originally created for use in the
    business sector

7
Multiple Methodsof Listening to Customers
  • Transactional surveys
  • Mystery shopping
  • New, declining, and lost-customer surveys
  • Focus group interviews
  • Customer advisory panels
  • Service reviews
  • Customer complaint, comment, and inquiry capture
  • Total market surveys
  • Employee field reporting
  • Employee surveys
  • Service operating data capture
  • A SERVQUAL-type instrument is most suitable for
    these methods

A. Parasuraman. The SERVQUAL Model Its Evolution
And Current Status. (2000). Paper presented at
ARL Symposium on Measuring Service Quality,
Washington, D.C.
8
The LibQUAL Premise
PERCEPTIONS SERVICE
  • .only customers judge quality
  • all other judgments are essentially
  • irrelevant

Zeithaml, Parasuraman, Berry. (1999). Delivering
quality service. NY The Free Press.
9
The Survey Over Time
10
76 Interviews Conducted
  • York University
  • University of Arizona
  • Arizona State
  • University of Connecticut
  • University of Houston
  • University of Kansas
  • University of Minnesota
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • University of Washington
  • Smithsonian
  • Northwestern Medical

11
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12
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13
Dimensions of Library ServiceQuality
14
Reliability
  • You put a search on a book and its just gone
    its not reacquired. Theres more of a problem
    of lost books, of books that are gone and nobody
    knows why and nobodys doing anything about it.
  • Faculty member

15
Affect of Service
  • I want to be treated with respect. I want you to
    be courteous, to look like you know what you are
    doing and enjoy what you are doing. Dont get
    into personal conversations when I am at the
    desk.
  • Faculty
    member

16
Ubiquity of Access
  • Over time my own library use has become
    increasingly electronic. So that the amount of
    time I actually spend in the library is getting
    smaller and the amount of time I spend at my desk
    on the web is increasing.
  • Faculty member

17
Comprehensive Collections
  • I think one of the things I love about academic
    life in the United States is that as a culture,
    we tend to appreciate the extraordinary
    importance of libraries in the life of the mind.
  • Faculty member

18
Library as Place
  • One of the cherished rituals is going up the
    steps and through the gorgeous doors of the
    library and heading up to the fifth floor to my
    study. I have my books and I have six million
    volumes downstairs that are readily available to
    me in an open stack library.
  • Faculty member

19
Library as Place
  • I guess youd call them satisfiers. As long as
    they are not negatives, they wont be much of a
    factor. If they are negatives, they are a big
    factor.
  • Faculty member

20
Library as Place
  • The poorer your situation, the more you need the
    public spaces to work in. When I was an
    undergraduate, I spent most of my time in the
    library, just using it as a study space.
  • Faculty member

21
Self-Reliance
  • first of all, I would turn to the best search
    engines that are out there. Thats not a person
    so much as an entity. In this sense, librarians
    are search engines just with a different
    interface.
  • Faculty member

22
Self-Reliance
  • By habit, I usually try to be self-sufficient.
    And Ive found that I am actually fairly
    proficient. I usually find what Im looking for
    eventually. So I personally tend to ask a
    librarian only as a last resort.
  • Graduate
    student

23
LibQUAL Core Questions(Year I)
  • __________________________________________________
    ___________________________
  • Factor_ ______ _
  • No. I II III IV Item Core
  • __________________________________________________
    ___________________________
  • 32 .84947 .12848 .24465 .13335 1 Willingness
    to help users
  • 33 .80847 .13662 .25348 .14147 1 Giving users
    individual attention
  • 7 .80757 .17881 .12781 .21125 1 Employees
    deal with users caring fashion
  • 50 .79273 .19288 .18847 .12497 1 Employees
    who are consistently courteous
  • 31 .77262 .16358 .26461 .20061 1 Employees
    have knowledge answer questions
  • 5 .74072 .14754 .18453 .29624 1 Employees
    understand needs of users
  • 3 .74052 .15102 .17296 .20793 1 Readiness
    to respond to users' questions
  • 18 .71718 .19757 .18289 .26766 1 Employees
    who instill confidence in users
  • 43 .62487 .22402 .29970 .28256 0
    Dependability handling service problems
  •  
  • 20 .16556 .87679 .11430 .16236 2 A haven
    for quiet and solitude
  • 2 .17739 .83172 .08498 .13901 2 A
    meditative place
  • 19 .22362 .83147 .14705 .22566 2 A
    contemplative environment
  • 25 .16013 .80492 .18894 .16628 2 Space that
    facilitates quiet study
  • 41 .20398 .80204 .17599 .20255 2 A place
    for reflection and creativity

24
Dimensions of Library ServiceQuality
25
Survey Instrument
26
The Value of QualitativePerspectives
  • Only with in-depth, local, qualitative,
    culture studies can libraries know and
    understand what compels some to remain as far
    away from the library as possible, while others
    refrain from engaging library staff in their own
    search for proficiency and self-reliance
    (Lincoln, Y. Insights into Library Services and
    Users from Qualitative Research. Library
    Information Science Research 24, Issue 1, 2002).

27
Cultural Perspective/Self-Reliance
  • If Foucault is correct that we in the West live
    in surveilled societies, then what function does
    self-reliance serve? The library user who wishes
    to navigate resources with as little help as
    possible seeks a kind of privacy from the
    surveillance of librarian help Having found the
    relative anonymity of cyberspace and a virtual
    world, this self-reliant user now seeks the same
    independence and lack of surveillance in the
    text-based and digitized universe of information
    resources known as the library. (Lincoln, p. 12).

28
Cultural Perspective/Library as Place
  • Its beyond the ease with which you can find
    information, just because the library experience
    is something like Greece or Athens
    (Undergraduate)
  • The library needs to welcome them in. It needs
    to make them feel like this is a place where they
    can be in almost a haven, a refuge (Business
    professor)
  • Writing an undergraduate thesis with this big
    dome over his headhe felt really like a
    scholar (Linguistics professor)

29
Cultural Perspective/Collections
  • In the physical vs. virtual reality, texture
    has become important. Density of collections
    becomes important, and, if collections are not
    complete, users want to know where they can find
    missing volumes, journal articles, and/or how
    swiftly interlibrary loan will work for them
    (Lincoln, p. 11).

30
E-mail to SurveyAdministrators
  • A number of the LibQUAL survey questions
    asked to rate the library from low to high, with
    n/a if it doesnt apply to me. The latter wasnt
    clear, but there were a number of questions which
    implied what a library should be that I dont
    agree with. For example, a number of questions
    asked whether the library was a contemplative
    place or a center for intellectual
    stimulation. I dont think our library is, but I
    dont want it to be, and I certainly wouldnt
    want any scarce resources to be devoted to this.
  • Communication to Webmaster

31
Service as Performance
  • as users have metamorphosed from penitents to
    self-reliant information surfers, the rules of
    engagement have changed. Service is not
    something dispensed rather, it is enacted as an
    elaborate cultural ritual, the texture and fabric
    of which is changing in front of us. Service may
    now embody multiple overlays of meaning, many too
    dense for anything but an anthropological
    fieldwork study to uncover (Lincoln, p. 15).

32
E-mail to SurveyAdministrators
  • Other questions implied that any good library
    staff would empower me to find my own research.
    I dont mean to sound snippish, but if I wanted
    to be empowered to be able to find all my own
    research, Id enroll in the outstanding school of
    library science here on campus. I thought the
    reason we bring in talented and trained
    librarians is so that we can efficiently divide
    labor, and I can remain dependent on them
    unempowered, if you will, to assist me when I
    need it. (And let me assure you I AM dependent,
    and they ARE excellent in assisting me.)
  • Communication to Webmaster

33
Dimensions of LibraryService Quality
34
Focus Group Follow-Up(at Texas AM)
  • Downward trend in scores on question, Employees
    have knowledge to answer user questions.
  • What employees? I asked for help in searching on
    the 1st floor of the annex. They said they arent
    trained in that
  • What knowledge? Some just say, I dont know.
    Do you know who could tell me? I ask, and
    sometimes, they dont know that either (Crowley
    Gilreath, p. 82-83).

35
The Box
  • Why the box is so important
  • About 40 of participants provide open-ended
    comments, and these are linked to demographics
    and quantitative data
  • Users elaborate the details of their concerns
  • Users feel the need to be constructive in their
    criticisms, and offer specific suggestions for
    action

36
Rapid Growth
  • Languages
  • American English
  • British English
  • French
  • Dutch
  • Swedish
  • Consortia
  • Each may create 5 local questions to add to their
    survey
  • Types of Institutions
  • Academic Health Sciences
  • Academic Law
  • Academic Military
  • College or University
  • Community College
  • European Business
  • Hospital
  • Public
  • State
  • Countries
  • U.S., U.K., Canada, Ireland, the Netherlands,
    Sweden, France, South Africa, Egypt, Australia

37
LibQUAL Participants
38
World LibQUAL Survey
39
In Closing
  • LibQUAL methodology focuses on success from the
    users point of view (outcomes)
  • Demonstrates that a Web-based survey can handle
    large numbers users are willing to fill it out
    and survey can be executed quickly with minimal
    expense
  • LibQUAL requires limited local survey expertise
    and resources
  • Analysis available at local and
    inter-institutional levels
  • Many opportunities for using demographics to
    discern user behaviors

40
LibQUAL Resources
  • LibQUAL Websitehttp//www.libqual.org
  • Publications http//www.libqual.org/publications
  • Events and Training http//www.libqual.org/event
    s
  • LibQUAL Online Tutorial
  • http//www.libqual.org/Information/Tools/index.cf
    m
  • LibQUAL Procedures Manual http//www.libqual.or
    g/Information/Manual/index.cfm
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