Title: FY02 ASA Presentation Provide Library Services
1FY02 ASA Presentation Provide Library Services
- Presented by
- Susan Whitmore
- Chief, Information Education Services Section
- NIH Library
- Susan_whitmore_at_nih.gov
- Office of Research Services
- National Institutes of Health
- 18 November 2002
2Table of Contents
- Main Presentation
- ASA Template ...4
- Customer Perspective...5
- Customer Segmentation ......5
- Customer Satisfaction..12
- Internal Business Process Perspective
..20 - Conclusions from Discrete Services Deployment
Flowcharts...21 - Process Measures....22
- Learning and Growth Perspective..
.32 - Conclusions from Turnover, Sick Leave, Awards,
EEO/ER/ADR Data...33 - Analysis of Readiness Conclusions.
..34 - Financial Perspective...36
- Unit Cost.36
- Asset Utilization.39
- Unique Financial Measures.....
43 - Conclusions and Recommendations..50
- Conclusions from FY02 ASA...51
- Recommendations.52
3Table of Contents
- Appendix
- Page 2 of the ASA Template
- Customer segmentation graphs
- Customer satisfaction graphs
- Block diagram
- Process charts/Deployment flowcharts
- Internal Business Performance Measures and
Control Charts - Learning and Growth data table
- Analysis of Readiness Information
- Asset utilization data
- Unit Cost of Information data
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5Customer Perspective
6Telephone Survey
- Telephone survey of 400 randomly chosen Library
users conducted in 2000 and 2002 - Included questions about primary library
services, providing copies of publications, and
self-service photocopy service - Customer segmentation data reveals customers
primary work and position - Most respondents engaged in research
- Most respondents identified themselves as post
doctoral fellow, staff scientist, administrator,
senior investigator, or research fellow
7How Telephone Survey Respondents Spend Their Time
8Positions Held by Telephone Respondents
9Customer Segmentation
- Customer segmentation data by IC available for
providing copies of publications, self-service
copiers, translate documents and custom service - Customers spread across all ICs
- Heavier use of services by larger groups and ICs
engaged directly in biomedical research, ex.,
NCI, NIAD, NICHD, NINDS, NHLBI
10Customer Segmentation continued
- Less use by smaller groups and ICs whose work is
administrative or a support service, ex., OD,
ORS, FIC, CIT - The Library serves not only NIH but also FDA/CBER
on the Bethesda campus and provides document
delivery services to the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST), Centers for
Disease Control (CDC), and NIEHS - Customer segmentation data for self-service
photocopy, translations, and custom services may
be found in the Appendix
11Customer Segmentation for Provide Copies of
Publications
12Customer Perspective
13Customer Satisfaction
- The 2002 Telephone Survey revealed that 97 of
NIH staff give a positive rating to Library
services overall - Customer satisfaction levels increased slightly
in two years in FY00 94 of surveyed staff gave
a positive rating to Library services overall - All services surveyed received a very positive
rating
14Percentage of NIH Staff Who Gave a Positive
Rating to the Quality of Library Services in FY02
15Customer Satisfaction for Provide Translations
- Thirty-three percent response rate for
evaluations - Both product and customer service ratings
exceeded the ORS average ratings - Many customers commented that the translation
service is excellent - Timeliness was more important to the customers
than cost - Customers were given realistic expectations with
regard to turnaround time but some would like
documents more quickly
16Customer Satisfaction for Translation Product
17Customer Satisfaction for Translation Customer
Service
18Unique Customer Measures Maintain Customer
Satisfaction for Seminars
- Seminars are provided to teach NIH staff how to
effectively use electronic resources and
bibliographic management software - 77 of attendees (417/544) completed an
evaluation form designed to assess satisfaction
with the training classes - Choices were 5excellent, 4very good, 3good,
2fair, 1poor - Control charts indicate no signals (Control
charts may be found in the appendix)
19Seminar Evaluation Results for FY02
20Internal Business Process Perspective
21Conclusions from Discrete Services Deployment
Flowcharts
- Our Service Group completed deployment flowcharts
for all five discrete services (which may be
found in the appendix) - Most discrete services are complex so very little
detail could be indicated on the flowcharts - Nothing new was learned from completing the
flowcharts
22Internal Business Process
- --Measures for each Discrete Service
23DS1 Custom Services
- Objective Increase number of custom service
projects - Measure Percent increase in number of contracts
established each year - Results Baseline data for FY02 17 projects
24DS2 Provide Copies of Publications
- Objective Maintain or reduce turn around time
for filling document requests - Measure Percent of requests filled in 3 business
days - Goal Fill 96 of requests in 3 business days
- Results Average fill rate of 97 for FY02 is
above the goal. Goal was not met in August due to
two staff members on maternity leave and other
staff on vacation - Control chart may be found in the Appendix
25DS3 Translate Documents
- Objective Maintain or decrease the turn around
time for translating documents - Measure Percent of documents translated in 3
business days, protocols in 10 business days,
articles in 30 business days - Results On average 55 of documents, 52 of
protocols, and 47 of articles were translated in
the required time period - Priority is given to translating documents which
include diplomas, transcripts, and personal
documents which the FIC needs for appointments of
research fellows. Protocols are primarily from
English to another language and must be
contracted out and reviewed in-house. - The following control chart for document
translations shows a signal for July when the
translators were on vacation. - Other control charts are in the Appendix
26Translation Requests Control Chart for Documents
Note Percentage of documents translated within
goal of 3 business days is depicted by month
27However Translation Requests Are Increasing
- The number of words translated has increased 35
over the past year - Translations for languages outside translators
areas have always been contracted out. To keep up
with demand, increasingly translations for
in-house language capability are contracted out - Contracted out translations take more time. Next
year, the time it takes to complete a translation
by in-house staff versus a contractor will be
tracked separately - If enough translation requests for one or several
related languages are consistently received, this
would justify hiring another translator
28DS4 Provide Primary Library Services
- Objective Provide 100 of current journals in
electronic format - Measure Percent of current journals subscribed
to electronically - Once almost all (93) of the most used 350
journals were in electronic format, we changed
out goal to have all journals in e-format.
Currently, 75 of all journals are in electronic
format
29Additional Internal Business Measures for Provide
Library Service located in the Appendix
- --E-license agreements to include all of NIH
- --Ready access to training
- --Quick response to requests for tutorials
30DS5 Provide Self-Service Copiers
- Objective Provide adequate number of photocopy
machines for users - Measure Ratio of photocopy machines to visits
- Six copy machines were made available for
customer throughout FY02. There is no waiting
for a machine, therefore, the number of copiers
is adequate
31However Self-Service Use is Declining
- Use of self-service copying continues to decline
as the Library obtains additional e-resources - Hours of service were reduced in FY01 due to
declining use - The number of copiers and hours of service will
be evaluated periodically and reduced as
warranted
32Learning and Growth Perspective
33Conclusions from Turnover, Sick Leave, Awards,
EEO/ER/ADR Data
- An average of 4.5 days sick leave per employee is
above average for ORS and reflects the three
staff who were on maternity leave in FY02 - Eight awards for every 10 employees is slightly
below average for ORS. Two factors limit the
number of awards given per person - The AFGE Union contract mandates that 70 of our
award pool be given as performance awards - As a team-based organization, we have chosen to
use the other 30 of the award pool to reward
teams. - The turnover and EEO/ER/ADR data appear fairly
average for ORS
34Analysis of Readiness - Conclusions
- The way in which information is being provided
and accessed by customers is changing - Customers are increasingly using e-resources that
they access from their desktop computers - Customers are answering many of their own easier
information questions - Customers are increasingly accessing our services
through our web site - The services that aid customers in information
identification, acquisition, and management are
changing - Library staff need to provide services
electronically such as the digital reference
service - Library staff need to reach out to customers in
their offices and labs as the Informationists do - Services that make it possible for users to
search across a number of e-resources and link
directly to online journals are needed such as
MetaLib and SFX - The Librarys web site continues to grow and be
essential to service provision. The content
needs to be dynamic and up-to-date
35Analysis of Readiness Conclusions -continued
- Library staff need to be retrained to engage in
new tasks - Librarians need to learn in-depth searching
techniques for animal alternatives and
evidence-based medicine. They need biomedical
subject expertise to offer customized services to
researcher and clinicians in their offices and
labs - Library Technicians must learn new skills sets as
the old work diminishes and new work is created - The Library is identifying training programs
and/or developing in-house programs to address
the new skills that are needed by staff - We are very aware of the changes in information
resources and services and are well poised to
take advantage of these changes - A more thorough analysis of the Librarys
readiness may be found in the Appendix
36Financial Perspective
37Unit Cost
- The average unit cost has decreased over the past
two years for - Copies of publications (-2/yr)
- Self-service copiers (-14/yr)
- As many users are accessing information through
the Librarys e-resources, these services have
declined in use and we anticipate that they will
continue to decline in use - The cost of these services is primarily based on
salaries, supplies and equipment. As the use of
the service declines, the unit cost of the
service will decline also
38Unit Cost continued
- The average unit cost has increased over the past
two years for - Translate documents (13/yr) Primary library
services (7/yr) - Custom research assistance (15/yr)
- These services are growing. Costs are primarily
based on salaries and purchase of print and
electronic resources - The cost of print and electronic resources rises
10-20 each year. The Library is increasing the
amount spent on e-resources by 20 each year
39Financial Perspective
- --Asset Utilization Measures
40Asset Utilization for Discrete Services
- DS1 Provide Custom Research Assistance no data
- DS2 Provide Copies of Publications 98
- DS3 Translate Documents 74
- DS4 Provide Primary Library Services
Instruction Program 74 - DS5 Provide Self-Service Copiers 63
- Descriptions of how the asset utilization
percentages were calculated may be found in the
Appendix and on the following slide
41DS4 Provide Primary Library Services
- Primary library services are composed of
instruction, reference, mediated searching, and
the print and electronic collection - Asset utilization data for part of the
instruction program, seminars held in the Library
on Thursdays, was gathered - The maximum number of potential class attendees
were compared to the actual number of attendees - 74 asset utilization No. of actual class
attendees (544)/No. of potential attendees (741)
X 100 - Promotion of the seminars early in the year
increased attendance and we increased the number
of workstations from six to 20 during the summer
42Instruction Program Asset Utilization
43Unique Financial Measures
- --Unit Cost of Information
- --Percent of Library Budget Devoted to
E-resources - --Minimize Training Costs
44Units of Information
- Use of information units has increased 26 in two
years - A unit of information may be a search, a document
supplied, a customer trained, an article
downloaded, or a visit to our web site - Because e-resources are heavily used, more
information is available to customers at a
reduced cost per unit of information
45Unit Cost of Information
- Objective Maintain or reduce the cost of
information provide to NIH staff - Measure Change in unit cost of information
- The need to include rent and overhead in the FY01
budget increased the unit cost of information - E-resources are more expensive than print
resources however, they are used more heavily.
Thus the unit cost of information for FY02 is the
same as for FY00 - See the Appendix for the definition of how the
unit cost is determined -
46Percent of Library Budget Devoted to E-resources
- Objective Increase availability of highly used
e-resources - Measure Percent of library budget devoted to
electronic versus print resources - Result The percent of the library budget devoted
to electronic resources has increased 1,600 in
the past six years. Percent of budget devoted to
e-resources has risen 21 in the past year
47Percent of Library Collection Budget Devoted to
Electronic Resources
48Electronic vs. Print Journals
- The percentage of journals in electronic format
has increased 29 - However, many resources are received as print
electronic and these resources are still
reflected in the print budget
49Minimize Training Costs
- Objective Minimize training costs by providing
users with alternate means of training - Measure Percent of people trained in seminars or
via tutorials versus the number of people using
web-based training - Result Customers have clearly indicated their
preference for web-based training which is
available at any time
50Conclusions and Recommendations
51Conclusions from FY02 ASA
- Our customers are very satisfied with the
Librarys resources, services, and staff - Internal business processes are for the most part
efficient and cost effective - There will be a growing number of electronic
resources and services and more customized
services in the future and there need to be
concomitant changes in staff skill sets - Use of resources and services, particularly
e-resources, continues to grow. We will continue
to convert from a primarily print to an
electronic library. While electronic resources
are expensive, they are utilized much more
heavily than the print collection thereby keeping
the unit cost of information reasonable
52Recommendations - Specific
- Develop means to determine utilization of assets
for Provide Custom Research Assistance by March
2003 - Develop an evaluation form for Provide Custom
Research Assistance projects by February 2003.
Work with National Library of Medicine staff to
evaluate Informationist program in 2003 and 2004 - Continue to collect data for Internal Business
Measures for Provide Self-Service Copiers and
construct a control chart for the ASA in November
2004 - Separately collect data for the time it takes to
complete translations by in-house staff versus
contractors to determine how service speed can be
improved
53Recommendations - Broad
- Continue with the redesign of the web site as
recommended in last years ASA. Projected date
for roll out January 15, 2003. - Implement content management software for web
site to ensure up-to-date and dynamic content.
Build the databases needed to provide content.
Projected date for completion January 15, 2003. - Incorporate software called MetaLib and SFX into
our web site This software will enable users to
search across e-resources and link directly from
databases to online journals. This recommendation
partially replaces a similar one from last years
ASA. Implementation began September 2002.
Completion of initial phase of implementation
March 2003. - Develop an in-house training curriculum to ensure
all staff are knowledgeable about Library
services and to retrain staff for new work.
Development will begin in January 2003. Full
implementation will take two years.
54Appendix
55ASA Template Page 2
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58Customer Segmentation Graphs
- --Provide Self-Service Photocopy
- --Translate Documents
- ---Provide Custom Services
59Provide Self-Service Photocopy
60Translate Documents
61Custom Services FY02
62Customer Satisfaction Graphs
- --Translate Documents
- -- Seminar Evaluation Control Charts for FY02
no signals - --Unique Customer Measure Acquire Electronic
and Print Resources Need by Users
63Translate Documents Scatter Diagram
64Seminar Evaluation Control Chart - Clarity of
instructors presentation
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
65Seminar Evaluation Control Chart Instructors
knowledge of subject
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
66Seminar Evaluation Control Chart Instructors
responsiveness to questions
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
67Seminar Evaluation Control Chart Quality of
Handouts
m
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
68Seminar Evaluation Control Chart Level to which
course objectives were met
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
69Seminar Evaluation Control Chart Quality of
classroom arrangements
Note Monthly mean ratings are depicted based on
a rating scale ranging from (1) Poor to (5)
Excellent.
70Unique Customer Measure Acquire Electronic and
Print Resources Needed by Users
- Acquired 42 of print and electronic resources
requested by customers in FY02 - Reasons for not acquiring resources are
- Low usage
- Cost
- Unavailable in electronic format
- Lack of suitable license agreement
71Internal Business Performance Measures
- --Block diagram and process charts
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78Internal Business Performance Measures
- --Provide Copies of Publications -Control Chart
79Provide Copies of Publications -Control Chart
Note Percentage of requests filled within goal
of 3 business days is depicted by month. Goal
96
80Additional Internal Business Performance Measures
- Following are three additional Internal Business
Performance Measures for DS4 Provide Primary
Library Services - --Negotiate e-license agreements that include all
of NIH - --Balance need for web-based training with
hands- on training - --Respond to tutorial requests in one business
day -
81DS4 E-Resource License Agreements
- Objective Negotiate e-license agreements that
include all of NIH - Measure Percent of license agreements that
include all of NIH - Results At the end of FY02, 53 of e-resource
license agreements included all of NIH an
increase in 8 over last year
82DS4 Web-based Training
- Objective Balance need for web-based training
with hands-on classes - Measure Percent of courses that are web-based
- Results 37 of the 51 classes offered are
web-based - 61 of customers prefer web-based training but we
will continue to provide hands-on classes as long
as attendance indicates that customers want this
type of training
83DS4 Tutorial Request Response
- Objective Respond to tutorial requests within
one business day - Measure Percent of requestors contacted within
one business day - Results 100 of requestors contacted within one
business day in FY02
84Internal Business Perspective
- --Control charts for Translate Documents
showing percentage of protocols translated in
10 business days and articles in 30 business
days no signals
85Translate Protocols in 10 Business Days
Note Percentage of protocols translated within
goal of 10 business days is depicted by month
86Translate Articles in 30 Business Days
Note Percentage of articles translated within
goal of 30 business days is depicted by month
87Internal Business Perspective
- --Provide Self-Service Copiers
88DS5 Provide Self-Service Copiers
- Ratio of photocopy machines to visits is shown on
the accompanying chart - There were six copiers available in FY02
- Customers do not have to wait for a copy machine,
therefore, the number of copiers is adequate
89Learning and Growth Perspective
- --Learning and Growth Data Table
90Learning and Growth Data Table
1 ADR case out of 50 employees
1 ER case out of 50 employees
About eight awards for every 10 employees
About 4.5 days sick leave per employee
5 employee turnover
91Learning and Growth Perspective
- --Analysis of Readiness Information
92Several changes in service and resources in the
Library will require staff with a different mix
of skills
- Fewer document requests will be received as more
e-resources are made available and there will be
less work for the document delivery staff - Implementation of NED results in less work for
circulation staff - More books and journals will be obtained in
e-format which will require less clerical support - Customers are answering many of their reference
questions using e-resources and the types of
reference questions we receive at the reference
desk are less difficult and can be answered by a
well trained paraprofessional. Information
services need to be customized to users specific
needs. Staff need to be trained to fully use
e-resources effectively.
93Several changes in service and resources in the
Library will require staff with a different mix
of skills - continued
- Customers are using the Librarys resources
through their computers instead of walking into
the Library. Library staff need to offer services
that reach out to NIH staff in their labs and
offices as the Informationist service does - Librarians will be performing more custom
services which will require more knowledge of
biomedicine. Librarians will be asked to conduct
more complicated database searches for animal
alternatives and evidence-based medicine - More translations are being requested
- Systems office staff will be needed to develop
and program databases to track and make
e-resources available and accessible
94Changes in the way information is accessed will
require a change in the way information is
provided
- Customers are using the Librarys resources
through their computers instead of walking into
the Library. More services, such as reference
service and instruction, need to be offered to
staff electronically - The growth in the number of e-resources requires
the acquisition of software and systems that link
databases to online journals and that enable
customers to search efficiently across resources - Users are requesting additional e-resources which
are often more costly than print resources - Specialized databases need to be created to
organize and track e-resources and to populate
the web site
95Changes in service and resources will require
that
- Library technicians working in document delivery,
circulation, and collection organization
maintenance will have less work and will need to
develop new skill sets in order to remain
employed in the Library - Library technicians trained to respond to
customer requests at the information desk will
free the professional librarians to provide
custom services - The Library develop training programs to ensure
that staff develop needed skills - Librarians take classes from outside sources to
develop more in-depth skills in database
searching and knowledge of biomedicine - Systems Office staff take training in database
management and programming - Content management software be implemented for
the web site. This software will make it easier
to update and maintain web site and free
librarians for other activities
96To ensure that staff are ready to take on new
assignments, the Library is
- Continuing to develop as a Learning
Organization - Developing in-house programs such as the
Reference Assistants training program which is
designed to train document delivery and
circulation staff to work at the information desk - Developing a training program for Informationists
who will reach out to NIH researchers and
clinicians to supply customized information
assistance - Appointing a Training Coordinator to organize
training programs and develop ways to evaluate
effectiveness of training - Identifying courses and training programs that
will prepare staff for new work - Using COTAs as appropriate to develop in-house
talent - Continuing to use cross-functional teams to
enable staff to learn new skills and take on new
assignments - Monitoring translation requests and hiring more
staff with the appropriate language skills as the
situation warrants
97Implications of Not Obtaining Right Mix of Skills
or Materials
- The way in which information is being delivered
has changed. If the Library is not able to
provide e-resources to customers, the customers
will be impeded in their work and ultimately will
go elsewhere for the needed information - Library technician work is decreasing, staff who
are not retrained for new work will no longer be
employed by the Library - Custom services that reach out to customers to
solve their unique information needs will be in
demand. Professional librarians need to be
trained to provide these services and need to be
freed from lower level tasks so that they have
time to provide them. If the Library does not
provide these new services, customers will hire
contractors to do the work. - If professional librarians continue to provide
services that can be transferred to well trained
library technicians, the Library will not be
operating in a cost efficient manner
98Financial Perspective
- Asset Utilization
- --Provide Custom Research Assistance
- --Provide Copies of Publications
- --Translate Documents
- --Provide Self-Service Copiers
99DS1 Provide Custom Research Assistance
- Asset utilization data has not been collected for
this service - We will research how to collect this data for
next year
100DS2 Provide Copies of Publications
- The maximum number of hours that could have been
spent providing publications was compared to the
actual number of hours spent on this service in
FY02 - Included are government and contract staff hours
- 98 asset utilization 37,435 actual
hours/38,215 potential X 100 - In FY03 we plan to keep a log to sample the
amount of time government and contract staff
spend on this discrete service
101DS3 Translate Documents
- The maximum number of hours that the translators
could ideally devote to translating were compared
to the number of hours they actually spent
translating - 74 asset utilization translators spent 2,723
hours translating/3,680 hours that ideally could
be spent translating X 100 - Hours not spent translating are spent attending
meetings, contracting out translations, doing
clerical work, and developing an ORS/ASA report - In June, the Librarys labor contract was used to
assume much of the clerical work and reduce the
clerical work burden on the translators - An asset utilization chart follows
102Translation Asset Utilization Graph
103DS5 Provide Self-Service Copiers
- The actual number of copies made on the six
copies in the self-service copy center were
compared to the number of copies that could have
been made, based on the normal rate at which
customers make photocopies and the total hours
the center is open - 63 asset utilization 1,498,192/2,384,100 X 100
- As shown in the internal business perspective,
use of the self-service copy center is declining
as customers use the e-resources - Use of the self-service copy center will be
monitored and hours reduced or the number of copy
machines reduced as warranted
104Financial Perspective
- --Unit Cost of Information Data
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106The End