I gave a webinar for PLA last week on digital branches – fun stuff! Here are my slides… if a recorded version appears, I’ll link to it here!
My #ideadrop presentation During SXSWi
While I was at SXSW in Austin, TX last week, I had the pleasure of giving a presentation/interview/livestream at the #ideadrop house. The video is embedded in this post.
What’s the ideadrop house? From the livestream text:
“On 3/8, DLF brings you a live stream of the ER&L + ProQuest #ideadrop house in Austin, TX. The #ideadrop house is a space dedicated to library and information professionals to experience the diversity of SXSW speakers in the context of libraries and library-related technologies and topics.
Influencers, thought leaders, artists, hacktivists, academics and creators join the #ideadrop library house during March 8-12 at SXSW Interactive to discuss many topics including: SOPA/PIPA, free speech, privacy, open access, archives, values, humanity, civic start up efforts, civil liberty, liberty, network freedom, information access, open data, museums, community engagement, ux, social media, digitization and open source technologies.
Live streaming made possible by the Digital Library Federation (DLF)”
So – Lisa Carlucci and I talked about online conversations and community in the library world – fun talk! Make sure to watch and listen … then leave a comment here!
Greatest Hits from Pew Internet’s Library Research – from ALAMW13
One more set of sketchy notes from ALAMW13 – this time from Lee Rainie, director, Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project @lrainie, libraries.pewinternet.org
Pew has done three phases of research on libraries:
- econtent
- library services
- library user segmentation typology – essentially market research for libraries. Nice.
Phase 1: econtent
- Ebooks are being read more. 16% in 2011, 23% in 2012. At the same time, reading of printed books is declining a bit – 72% in 2011, 67% in 2012.
- 40% of Americans have either a tablet or an ebook reader. 31% have a tablet, 26% have an ebook reader
- Readers of ebooks: currently under age 50, college educated, making 50k+, and love reading. They buy their ebooks.
- Approximately 50% of American adults own smartphones.
- Ebook borrowing – late 2012, a whopping 5% of Americans 16+ have borrowed ebooks from libraries in the last year.
- Growing awareness of this service – 31% of the public
- Yet, 57% don’t know whether this is a service they can use, including many library users.
- Problems with borrowing process include:
- not compatible with an ereader
- there was a waiting list
- Over 50% are open to library coaching/tech support with ebooks.
Phase 2: library services
- Mega takeaway #1: people love their libraries even more for what they say about their communities than for how libraries meet personal needs
- 91% say libraries are important to their communities
- 6% say libraries are important to them and their families
- People appreciate their librarians
- Mega takeaway #2: libraries have rebranded themselves as tech hubs
- 77% say free access to computers and the Internet is a very important service
- Mega takeaway #3: the public wants everything equally, so library leadership will matter in setting priorities
- African-Americans and Latinos are especially enthusiastic about library services.
- Mega takeaway #4: the public invites you to be more Engard in knotty problems.
- Things like involvement in iocal schools, literacy in the community, comfortable spaces, move most library services online, etc. cool.
- Lib services online – 42% should definitely do, 34% should maybe do. Wow. That’s 76% of people wanting the library to do a whole lot more online. As in most library services. Think about that for a minute… Definitely a blog post here!
- Mega takeaway #5: libraries have a PR problem / opportunity.
- Mega takeaway #6 – target audiences for engagement outreach are not hard to ID
- And there’s a large chunk of the population that simply doesn’t use the library or read books.
image by Elon University
Makerbot – Bre Pettis interview at CES 2013
Just posting something from fellow library geek Jason Griffey. Did you know he’s like the ONLY librarian who goes to CES (i.e., Consumer Electronics Show)? This show is apparently HUGE, and there’s a lot of innovation that gets announced there.
This year – actually, the last couple of years – Jason has attended CES, and reported on what he found. One thing he found was the Makerbot booth and Bre Pettis, one of Makerbot’s founders.
In this video, Jason interviews Bre about what’s new for Makerbot, and what it might mean for libraries. Jason also has an accompanying blog post talking about new stuff for Makerbot.
Bre also mentions two books we should read before starting a hackerspace:
- Hacker Space Designs Patterns – a free, online resource that provides lots of different models, or “designs”, for creating hackerspaces.
- Bre’s new book, Getting Started with MakerBot
So – watch the video, read Jason’s post, read the books mentioned above … and make sure to subscribe to Jason’s blog, if you haven’t yet done that!
update – for some reason, the video disappeared. So I added it back in. Oops!
Reinventing Spaces & Places – Internet Librarian 2012
This was the closing keynote, and had some really cool ideas on reinventing libraries.
Speakers – Erik Boekesteijn, Jaap Van De Geer, Paul Pival, and Jeff Wisniewski
Grand pronouncement:Â We cannot save libraries by doing more of what we have done before, because the outcome will be the same.
Simple observation – media consumption is very obviously shifting. So we need to shift, too.
Opening random thoughts (random because of me, the notetaker, anyway):
- Jaap and Erik wanted to have the best library in the world. So they toured the US and collected best practices in libraries.
- Libraries need a new business model. Don’t focus on books – focus on stories.
- Showing pictures of a beautiful library … With no people in it. Versus a new Apple Store that is full of people.
Where to start?
Viewsy – tracks people’s cell phones to measure foot traffic in a building. More info from their website:
“We provide a way to digitise an analogue world, turning visitor foot traffic into measurable insights that can be analysed and acted upon. We do this by measuring anonymous phone data from each customer walking past and through your store, data which is then analysed and presented for you on an easy to use online dashboard.”
What are successful spaces doing?
- Library of 100 Talents – the teens designed their own youth department. Looks like a really fun place
- Creation spaces – Â TFDL digital media commons as example
- 12 Mac pros with full a/v editing suites
- 4 soundproof editing suites
- DJ mixing board
- Etc.
- Fountaindale Public Library -Â 7000 square foot of digital media creation studio
- Westport CT Public Library’s maker space -Â Placed in the middle of the library, in the stacks
Learning outside the classroom
- Providing spaces where students an share ideas in public locations – promotes peer learning
- Can also serve as formal learning spaces
- Collaborative spaces can be in wide open areas and should have multiple uses
Renting out spaces
- Assen public library in the Netherlands
- They have a television studio
- They make their own programs, but also rent out the space to professionals to use
Keys to success:
- Involve the community
- DOK library as an example
- UrbanMedia Space Arhus Denmark – another example
What do the users say?
Paul played a video of students talking about the library. They want to collaborate, and want to have quiet study spaces. Go figure.
But the point here? Actually go ask your patrons what they want the library to be, then try to build that.
We don’t know what the future holds….
So create/design with flexibility in mind.
- Flexible libraries/spaces
- Flexible teams
- Flexible furniture
- Flexible infrastructure (add more wifi than you possibly imagine you’d need)
- Raised floors – so you can put data and networking in the floor.
- Me – that’s huge, considering in some parts of my library we have to drill to install more wiring. And that’s pricey.
- Agile walls (you can move them easily)
- Flexible technology – iPads replace desktop computers at north shore public library
- No mediation required – there are check out stations / kiosk that will dispense iPads…
- Interactive walls and flexible content
- Marketing your space
What if you don’t have any space?
- Reclaim that space – kill the large reference desk
- Get rid of things that aren’t used (ie., 75% of your collection, perhaps)
- Share space (airport library in Amsterdam)
- Crossover with museum
Bucharest Metro Digital Library – poster walls of books with QR Codes. Scan and immediately download the book. Nice.
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