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Quantum2 Framework : Other Resources - Articles : Marketing
Marketing
Filling
the planning vacuum
Doug Church
Information Outlook February 1998
Focus on the library customer: revelation, revolution, or redundancy?
Diane Tobin
Johnson Library Trends 43(3) 318-25.
The library's product and excellence
Mary C. Bushing
Library Trends 43(3): 384-400.
The marketing audit: baseline for action
Laura Cram
Library Trends 43(3): 326-48.
Marketing in the special library environment
Janet E. Powers
Library Trends 43(3): 478-93.
Marketing
with a capital S: strategic planning for knowledge based services
Ulla de Stricker
Information Outlook February 1998
Practice as a marketing tool: four case studies
Duncan Smith
Library Trends 43(3): 450-62.
The search for new metaphors
Kathleen De La Pena
McCook Library Trends 46(1): 117-28.
Trends in marketing services
Linda M. Gorchels
Library Trends 43(3): 494-509.
Your attention please: marketing today's libraries
Beth Carpenter
Computers in Libraries 18(8): 62-66.
The End of the Road for a Corporate Library - Or Is It?
Doris Helfer
Searcher 6(1) January 1998: 14-16.
Comments on the closure of the Apple Library. Reports that the library
was closed because management thought that operating costs could be
reduced by forcing its business units to pay for information through
their own budgets. Says Apple's management failed to account for the
critical role of information and the waste of time and energy imposed
by searches not conducted by information professionals. Adds that Apple
employees will be forced to spend many unproductive hours trying to
find needed materials that a library could have obtained quickly and
efficiently. Remarks that the lack of critical information is certain
to impact on the quality of Apple's products and the productivity of
the entire company. - Information Today
Higher Ranked Fortune 500 Companies Significantly More Likely to
Have Libraries
Information Outlook, 4(3) March 2000: 12-13.
An SLA study reveals that corporations with a higher ranking on the
Fortune 500 list were significantly more likely than those ranked lower
to have a corporate library or information center. When examining the
Fortune 500 companies by groups of 100, it was found that 85% of those
in the top 100 had libraries or information centers. Among companies
ranked in the bottom 100, ranks 401 to 500, on the other hand, only
50% of the companies had libraries or information centers. -- SLA.COMmunicate
Fulfilling the Vision of the Virtual Library: The Cutting-Edge Web
Library at Compaq Computer Corporation
T. Pack
ONLINE, September 2000
"It's the kind of thing that could kill a library. Your organization
is acquired by another company. There's massive reorganization. Budgets
are slashed. Upper management decide the doors to the information centers
will be closed -- permanently. But when the library staff at Digital
Equipment Corporation faced that situation, they not only survived,
they thrived. Now known as WebLibrary at Compaq Computer Corporation
in Littleton, Massachusetts, the library is a virtual service that excels
in content integration, user-based system design, and the development
of a high degree of synergy between library and IT functions."
Information Services and Downstream Productivity
Michael E.D. Koenig
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology, Elsevier
Science Publishing, 1990: 55-86.
Market the Value of Your Competitive Intelligence: An Added Role
for the Information Center
Denise Chochrek
Information Outlook, 4(2) February 2000: 32-35.
The Value of the Special Library: Review and Analysis
Alison M. Keyes
Special Libraries, 86(3): 172-187, Summer 1995.
Keyes' excellent review of literature on determining the value of special
libraries should be required reading for any corporate librarian about
to embark on a project to value library services. She describes the
various evaluation approaches clearly and concisely, and the annotated
bibliography points the reader to many more useful works on the topic.
Keyes categorizes quantifying methods in these categories: monetary
value by time-saved methods, monetary value by productivity gains, and
cost-benefit analysis. Keyes concludes that all cost data for operating
corporate information centers that can be extracted, should be extracted
as a first priority. Other priority activities include collecting user
estimates of the value of library services, and recording positive instances
of library services' impact. After all these activities have been accomplished,
the library staff can determine cost-benefit ratios and how to present
the results to management. - Information Access Company, Valuing Library
Services
What is your Information Outlook?
Jane Dysart and Stephen Abram
Information Outlook, 1(1) January 1997: 34-36.
The word "outlook" can be viewed in many different ways. It
is the perfect word to describe the challenges and opportunities facing
special librarians and information professionals at the dawn of the
information era. As special librarians move into this new age, they
can be confident knowing they possess the core skills and talents necessary
for this advanced global network and its cross cultural context. Four
key skills that have positioned the librarian well for the future are:
advanced technology skills, advanced service professionalism, advanced
information literacy skills, and advanced people skills. Ultimately,
the librarian's challenge is to use and expand on these skills in order
to ensure that they are active participants in shaping the new age.
-- SLA
Valuing special libraries and information services - summary and
technical report of a project for the Special Libraries Association
Paul B. Kantor and Tefko Saracevic
Washington, DC: Special Libraries Association, 1999.
Kantor and Saracevic (TRB, 1997) developed a basis for documenting and
measuring libraries' value to their supporting organizations. They argued
that, although much is known about how top management views the special
library, these managers rarely use the library directly and thus have
an unclear understanding of its value. They focused on how actual users
of the library value its services and how they express that value. For
their interviews at 10 special libraries, Kantor and Saracevic developed
a detailed taxonomy of value of information services, which not only
considered fiscal savings, but also encompassed the new corporate concept
of the balanced scorecard. Through interviews with 218 users of these
libraries, they determined that individual users evaluate their library
in terms of its ability to provide what they need to meet some corporate
goal or objective. They concluded that "users of special libraries
discuss value in terms of whether, and to what extent, the library or
information service meets or does not meet their expectations of it"
(p.37). Users will have already internalized corporate goals and shaped
their own behavior to advance them. They then approach the library in
furtherance of these goals and judge it on how well it meets these expectations.
This information is important for anyone who seeks to express the value
of the library to senior managers, whose focus is the bottom line. -
U.S. Dept. of Transportation, Value of Information and Information Services
The Value of Corporate Libraries: Findings from a 1995 Survey of
Senior Management
James Matarazzo and Laurence Prusak
Washington, DC: Special Libraries Association, 1995.
Matarazzo and Prusak interviewed the managers charged with overseeing
libraries at more than 160 of America's largest corporations, including
both business and scientific/technical libraries. The researchers inquired
about library size, funding, staffing, user groups, mission, and services,
as well as the managers' opinions concerning the relative value of library
services and the future of the libraries they managed. Matarazzo highlighted
some notable results. Fifty-five percent of the libraries surveyed in
1990 had five staff members or fewer. At that point, managers rated
access to electronic databases as the most valuable library service,
and access to journals as the second. Managers generally rated librarians
highly, but 66% did not respond to a question about the value of library
services to the company. Matarazzo blamed the managers' inability to
pinpoint the contribution of corporate librarians on a lack of self-evaluation
in those libraries. He noted that many of the libraries were founded
decades ago, and existed only because they always had. He emphasized
that librarians must make the impact of their services known to their
managers. "This is the 90s," he said, asking, "Would
you rather be liked? Or valued?" - FLICC Newsletter
Valuing Information Intangibles
F. Portugal
Special Libraries Association, 2000
A detailed examination of four methods for attaching a value to information
activities: ROI and Cost Benefit Analysis; Knowledge Value Added; Intranet
Team Forums; and Intellectual Capital Valuations, this handbook is useful
in settings where rigorous calculations are appreciated. Chapter two,
dealing with the Knowledge Value-Added method, is available for preview
at www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m0FEW/10_4/66276587/print.jhtml: "The
basic idea is to find some surrogate measure for determining how much
of an intangible asset - knowledge - is embedded in each subprocess
that leads to a specific product or service."
Making the Case for Your Library: A How-To-Do-It Manual
S.G. Reed
Neal Schuman (2000) ISBN 1555703992
Reed, director of the Norfolk Public Library, VA, and coauthor of Speaking
Out: Voices in Celebration of Intellectual Freedom (ALA, 1999), presents
an excellent collection of handy tips and tricks librarians can use
to assure success in promoting, defending, and assuring funding for
their libraries. In a step-by-step discussion, she explains various
public relations and marketing materials for creating, developing, and
sharing the messages librarians want to get out to the public. These
include fundraising techniques, negotiating with the media, writing
editorials and op-ed columns, and preparing public service announcements
and presentations. The text is replete with practical examples of the
various public communication tools that have been used by other public
libraries nationwide. Although geared primarily for use by library directors,
staff, trustees, and Friends in public libraries, Reed's book outlines
the basic principles of public relations that can be adapted in any
situation. This is a nice supplement to Lisa Wolfe's Library Public
Relations, Promotions, and Communications (Professional Media, LJ 9/1/97)
as it focuses more on the politically sensitive aspects of these communication
tools. Highly recommended for public libraries. - Library Journal
Communicating resource needs for successful library services
Carol Ann Hughes, Ilene Rockman, and Lizabeth A. Wilson
Bottom Line 13 (1) 2000: 10-15.
"Library professionals spend much of their budgeting time focused
inward, allocating scarce resources among worthy competing priorities.
Considerable time and skill is focused on the acquisition of the best
print and electronic resources and in planning for computing infrastructure.
And librarians are generous in sharing with others best practices for
making budgetary decisions through articles in the library literature.
However, less attention has been given in the literature on advice for
those who wish to increase budgets for the services and programmatic
offerings that are equally important for library clientele. This article
attempts to address that gap. Summarizes the sage advice given in a
presentation to a gathering of academic librarians during the June 1999
ALA to those who would better understand the budget process at research
universities. Although the advice pertains primarily to budgeting practice
in the USA, there are several nuggets of wisdom applicable in any situation."
Winning resources
Mike Heery
Bottom Line 12 (2) 1999: 57-67.
"An exploration of how librarians can win financial resources from
their parent organisations. It maintains that securing funding is essential
at a time of change and goes on to advocate practical techniques for
improving the acquisition and management of financial resources. The
paper examines the financial environment of many libraries, covering
financial cuts, organisational changes, contracting out, service level
agreements and income generation. The importance of the integration
of libraries and information units within their parent bodies is considered.
The paper stresses the importance of political skills in winning resources
and explores what this means in practice for public, academic and special
librarians. Finally, the paper looks at some aspects of austerity management."
Marketing:
Making a Case for Your Library
Barbara Weiner
"One of the strongest marketing tools a library can use is the
ability to put a dollar value on the resources and services a library
provides to its organization. Value is added when library users are
"changed" for having used library services and resources,
allowing them to become more knowledgeable and empowered in decision
making. Management and organizational culture need to realize this is
the kind of value libraries can provide. A library may be under pressure
to "prove" its value to the organization. Such value should
be presented in dollar figures, so the library competes fairly with
other divisions in the eyes of financial controllers and executive management.
Extensive statistics of library use and activities do not reflect a
dollar value of worth, the quality of service, or if library activities
met organizational needs. A dollar value is difficult to assign to a
piece of information shared - but not impossible!" [Quote taken
from the segment entitled Finding a dollar value for library services
and resources.]

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