Marketing and service promotion practices in the LCAS Ju Wenhong Library of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People s Republic of China

Similar documents
A STUDY ON THE DOCUMENT INFORMATION SERVICE OF THE NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL LIBRARY FOR AGRICULTURAL SCI-TECH INNOVATION IN CHINA

TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR CONSULTANTS

STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK Updated August 2017

Evaluation Axis and Index in the Next Mid to Long-Term Objectives (draft)

WFEO STANDING COMMITTEE ON ENGINEERING FOR INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY (WFEO-CEIT) STRATEGIC PLAN ( )

University of Kansas. The University of Kansas Libraries

Research and Application of Agricultural Science and Technology Information Resources Sharing Technology Based on Cloud Computing

SERBIA. National Development Plan. November

A Brief Discussion on the Development of University Culture Promoted by Photo Archives Ying Zhang

Information & Communication Technology Strategy

Inclusion: All members of our community are welcome, and we will make changes, when necessary, to make sure all feel welcome.

European Nuclear Education Network Association

SUSTAINABILITY OF RESEARCH CENTRES IN RELATION TO GENERAL AND ACTUAL RISKS

Science Impact Enhancing the Use of USGS Science

DELIVERABLE SEPE Exploitation Plan

Over the 10-year span of this strategy, priorities will be identified under each area of focus through successive annual planning cycles.

Committee on Development and Intellectual Property (CDIP)

Selection and Acquisition of Materials for Digitization in Libraries 1

Technology Plan

Managing the process towards a new library building. Experiences from Utrecht University. Bas Savenije. Abstract

Oklahoma State University Policy and Procedures

Knowledge Exchange Strategy ( )

Library Special Collections Mission, Principles, and Directions. Introduction

Domestic Reform and Global Integration: The Evolution of China s Innovation System and Innovation Policies

FEASIBILITY STUDY OF NATIONAL INTEGRATED TRANSPORT PROGRAM

The Fifth Electronics Research Institute of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Guangzhou, China

STUDY OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LIBRARY

WHAT CLICKS? THE MUSEUM DIRECTORY

1. Context. 2. Vision

WORLD LIBRARY AND INFORMATION CONGRESS: 72ND IFLA GENERAL CONFERENCE AND COUNCIL August 2006, Seoul, Korea

What is a collection in digital libraries?

Feedback for the budget in 2010 and 2011

The Study on the Architecture of Public knowledge Service Platform Based on Collaborative Innovation

SCHOOL LIBRARIES IN THE INFORMATION AGE

The Evolving Roles of Libraries in the Digital Age. Maribor Sinikka Sipilä Past IFLA President

Museum Collections Manager. Job description

Priority Theme 1: Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) for the Post-2015 Agenda

PRESERVATION OF INFORMATION MANAGEMENT IN DIGITAL ERA

Combining scientometrics with patentmetrics for CTI service in R&D decisionmakings

Capacity Building for Promoting Gender Equality in Africa and West Asia Countries

Bold communication, responsible influence. Science communication recommendations

A New Platform for escience and data research into the European Ecosystem.

THE NUMBERS OPENING SEPTEMBER BE PART OF IT

2. What is Text Mining? There is no single definition of text mining. In general, text mining is a subdomain of data mining that primarily deals with

RECOMMENDATIONS. COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION (EU) 2018/790 of 25 April 2018 on access to and preservation of scientific information

A New Trend of Knowledge Management: A Study of Mobile Knowledge Management

An introduction to the concept of Science Shops and to the Science Shop at The Technical University of Denmark

GENEVA COMMITTEE ON DEVELOPMENT AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (CDIP) Fifth Session Geneva, April 26 to 30, 2010

COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION. of on access to and preservation of scientific information. {SWD(2012) 221 final} {SWD(2012) 222 final}

National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) 2003 Recognition Award Nomination

STRATEGIC ACTIVITIES AND PRIORITIES

MISSISSAUGA LIBRARY COLLECTION POLICY (Revised June 10, 2015, Approved by the Board June 17, 2015)

New Roles for Academic Libraries in Scientific Information

A Digitisation Strategy for the University of Edinburgh

UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION

INFS 326: COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT MRS. FLORENCE O. ENTSUA-MENSAH

Research on the Capability Maturity Model of Digital Library Knowledge. Management

Collaboration & Partnerships with Different Stakeholders to Strengthen Patent Information Literacy Programmes at NUS Libraries

Sixth Management Seminar for the Heads of National Statistical offices in Asia and the Pacific

HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY NATIONAL NUCLEAR ENERGY AGENCY INDONESIA For FNCA Human Resource Development 2003 Guritno Lokollo

Creative Informatics Research Fellow - Job Description Edinburgh Napier University

Development and Integration of Artificial Intelligence Technologies for Innovation Acceleration

Will the Chinese Dragon Strengthen Your Business or Eat You Alive?

Research Infrastructures in Tampere3: a Survey

Increased Visibility in the Social Sciences and the Humanities (SSH)

Committee on Development and Intellectual Property (CDIP)

Digitisation Plan

Higher Education for Science, Technology and Innovation. Accelerating Africa s Aspirations. Communique. Kigali, Rwanda.

COST FP9 Position Paper

Vice Chancellor s introduction

Will the Chinese Dragon Strengthen Your Business or Eat You Alive?

University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries. Digital Preservation Policy, Version 1.3

Brief to the. Senate Standing Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology. Dr. Eliot A. Phillipson President and CEO

Chapter 11 Cooperation, Promotion and Enhancement of Trade Relations

National Standard of the People s Republic of China

Deepening the Relationship between STI and Society

APSEC President s Report

Packaging Science Information Access Policy Clemson University Libraries

Liaison 2015 at Swinburne: definitely a work in progress. Derek Whitehead May 2010

United Nations Statistics Division Programme in Support of the 2020 Round of Population and Housing Censuses

UKRI research and innovation infrastructure roadmap: frequently asked questions

American Library Association - Center for the Future of Libraries

Buffalo & Erie County Public Library Strategic Plan

INFS 326: COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT

Research about Technological Innovation with Deep Civil-Military Integration

Towards an Arab Knowledge Society. Smart Village, Cairo, Egypt, 30 June 2009

Science with Arctic Attitude

Digital Preservation Analyst

SINCIERE. Sino-Norwegian Centre for Interdisciplinary Environmental Research. Rolf D. Vogt, UiO

Okavango Research Institute

Gardens, Libraries and Museums. Digital Strategy Termly Update, June 2018

LEADING DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION AND INNOVATION. Program by Hasso Plattner Institute and the Stanford Center for Professional Development

Twenty years of Ibero American Science and Education Consortium (ISTEC): Past, Present and Future of a Collaborative Work

ccess to Cultural Heritage Networks Across Europe

Thank you to Celia Bakke and San Jose State for organizing this forum.

Study on Relationship between Scientific and Technological Resource Sharing and Regional Economic Development. Ya Nie

ScienceDirect: Empowering researchers at every step. Presenter: Lionel New Account Manager, Elsevier Research Solutions

Selecting An Automated Library System for Finnish Research Libraries, Linnea2

KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT. IAEA Program and Activities on NKM. Keiko Hanamitsu, Nuclear Knowledge Management Section Department of Nuclear Energy, IAEA

Guidelines for the Professional Evaluation of Digital Scholarship by Historians

Transcription:

The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/0143-5124.htm LM 27,6/7 336 Marketing and service promotion practices in the LCAS Ju Wenhong Library of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People s Republic of China Received 29 May 2006 Revised 7 June 2006 Accepted 12 June 2006 Abstract Purpose The purpose of this paper is to call for the application of marketing in the library area, especially libraries supported by public budget. Draws directly on experiences within the Library of Chinese Academy of Sciences. Design/methodology/approach Gives a summary of the current situation, analyzes problems and suggests new methods and provides a case study. Findings Explores and evaluates the use of marketing tools, service promotion experiences and new techniques in a large library context and explores the boundaries between real and virtual libraries and service provision. Originality/value A case study of service provision promotion practices, discusses user-centered web site design, and how market-oriented problem solutions can help to enhance a library s customer relationships. Keywords Services marketing, Libraries, Internet, Service levels, China Paper type Case study Library Management Vol. 27 No. 6/7, 2006 pp. 336-343 q Emerald Group Publishing Limited 0143-5124 DOI 10.1108/01435120610702323 1. Introduction and definition The Library of Chinese Academy of Sciences (LCAS) plays two functional roles: first, it is the central library for CAS, the service organizer in the academy-wide library system of CAS, which consists of three branch libraries (Lanzhou, Chendu and Wuhan) and more than 90 institutional libraries. Secondly, it is the National Library of Sciences for China, an inaugural member of NSTL (National Science and Technology Library), and it will take a great part in the national scientific platform in the near future, together with its three branch libraries. The NSL (National Science Library) is a real library, whereas the NSTL (National Science and Technology Library) is a virtual one. NSL mainly serves researchers in CAS, while NSTL aims at serving researchers all over the country. In addition to NSL, NSTL consists of another eight member organizations, which include the Chinese Science & Technology Information Center, Chinese Academy of Agriculture, Chinese Academy of Medicine, National Institute of Metrology in the People s Republic of China. NSL gets financial support from CAS (Chinese Academy of Sciences), and tries also to get financial support from NSTL. NSTL gets money from the Chinese Ministry of Science & Technology. Figure 1 helps to clarify the complexity of the information usage environment within CAS. Before 2001 each library understood that its main purpose was to serve the users who came to the library building. After participation in the CAS knowledge innovation projects in October 2001, the library aimed to become number one in the library and

Marketing practices in the LCAS 337 Figure 1. LCAS s relationship with other libraries information service field all over the world, accompanying CAS s great aspirations in the world scientific field. Because the academy was only for graduate and research programs, more and more researchers, especially those who returned after finishing studies abroad, would not come to the library building for information services. They wanted libraries to provide them with full text electronic journals, seven days a week and 24 hours a day, anywhere they needed. We faced a great challenge, not only in electronic resources but also in providing a virtual service. We would have to undertake collaborative collection management, tell the researchers what had been acquired for them, design a new service program, and initiate new methods and tools to help them to use the information constructively. Accordingly, marketing would be used in order to ensure that the electronic resources and new services were being used as widely as possible. Marketing is a matching process: one side is what we have and what we can do for researchers, the other side is the researcher s ever-growing expectations, needs and wants. 2. Marketing the library 2.1 Publicizing activities Activities that establish the general outlook of our librarians. Great changes have taken place in our library fields, but this is only recognized in the library professional research community. General scientific citizens retained the old impression of the library and the daily work in the library building, where the service program mainly includes book circulation, reference reading, library loan and electronic information searching. Accordingly they gave the impression to our librarians of conservative ideas, inefficiency, and inability to catch up with social change. We needed to do something to improve this status throughout the whole institution.

LM 27,6/7 338 First, we showed our faculty s mental outlook. Twice a year we hold a ceremony to raise our national flag. Our uniforms also make a deep impression on the scientific community. Second, we publicize activities that enhance the relationship with our scientific citizens. In mid-may every year, we invite a library specialist to give lectures aimed at enhancing the scientific consciousness of the primary school students, who will be our main user community in the not so distant future. Boys and girls come to understand the information usage environment and learn how to utilize a public infrastructure such as a library. Third, a public leisure reading service has been added to the scientific library. It is a special reading room aimed at serving the scientific community with provision of leisure reading materials. There is a broader subject area than in the ordinary reading room, but a common information reading area. Readers can discuss, drink and watch videos in this reading area. Anybody can enter this area without any restriction. It gets the highest use rating in our library building. Science culture communication activities. We invite academics who have had great achievements in their scientific fields to give lectures to our users; providing precious experience and valuable suggestions and provoking deep discussion among the users. We hold huge not-for-profit activities, raising awareness of present endeavor in scientific research work. These activities set up a platform between the scientist and scientific citizens. Exhibitions of scientific achievements. There are activities in the institute each year that aim to publicize the great research achievements. As a whole scientific organization, there should be a platform in CAS to show what has been achieved. Our library is a public institution in CAS; we can organize the achievements objectively and present the great achievements in the science and technology field. In fact, we hold a great exhibition of achievements conducted in the CAS administrative territory. President Hu Jingtao was fascinated to inspect the exhibition on 29 December 2004. 2.2 Publicize the resource information to researchers Redesign the organization portal, which highlights the resources in our library. In traditional conditions, we show the wealth of the collections by opening the reading areas in the physical building. Under virtual circumstances, the digital portal is as important as the lobby in the library building. We began our institution portal redesign in October 2003 by highlighting the electronic resources and service program (see Figure 2). Most importantly, we devised the portal renewing mechanism, which changes the institution portal every two years by involving the main faculty in the design process. We hope to spot trends, implement the services that respond to the users changing needs and anticipate users needs almost before they are expressed. Open new column promoting open access resources. We navigate on the internet to find high quality internet resources, especially free web resources such as DOAJ, HighWire, FreeFullText. Construct discipline-based scientific subject portals. We organize these construction projects by investing in our digital library project. We redirect our collection building

Marketing practices in the LCAS 339 Figure 2. Organization portal costs to the creation of portal construction serving the international community of researchers in the definite subject field. There are eight portals at present in our library portal: (1) Physic-Mathematic Subject Portal. (2) The Chemical Information Network. (3) The Resources and Environment Science Information Portal. (4) The Life Sciences Subject Information Portal. (5) Library Information Gateway. (6) Microbiology Subject Information Portal. (7) Tibetan Plateau Research Information Portal. (8) Natural Medicine Information Portal. Keep the electronic resource information alive. In this area, the resource information is the newest. Users, especially the graduate students are eager to use the new resources. We upload electronic resource information to our institution portal no more than 24 hours from the database provider giving official authorization; and we collect all the electronic resources information together to inform the users periodically. 2.3 Service promotion Disseminating training service to over 100 institutions geographically dispersed all over the country. Since April 2003 our director has led our backbone faculty, going to the institute every year to get feedback on our service from the researchers. When we

LM 27,6/7 340 asked them what they knew about the electronic resources that we made efforts to collect, they astonishingly knew little about it in 2003. We made up our mind to train the researchers, especially the graduate students, to improve this status. We initiated the service promotion activity in August 2003. From then on, we have disseminated the training service to the institute once every year. It is difficult for us to negotiate with an institute that is geographically dispersed all over the country to have a proper chance to give training. Even so, we have had periodic success. In the limited training sessions, we told the users how many resources we had collected to support their study and research. Until December 2005, few researchers knew about our electronic resources and the library portal. They became familiar with what they needed and expressed what they wished. Train the trainer. After 2003, we explored new methods of making the training service available more conveniently. As institute librarians work beside the researchers, they can understand the researchers needs more thoroughly, and they have more opportunity to give training. Training was not systematic because there is only one librarian in most institutes, and there is a lack of communication and collaboration. Since 2004 we have cooperated with the institute librarians. Librarians in the central library provide the skeleton training service, while institute librarians train the researchers whenever they want to know something about the library. We decided to train the institute librarians first, even if they could do the daily service work very well under their own institutional circumstances. In 2005, we trained 100 librarians (trainer) academy-wide. Besides training services aimed at actively resolving the usage problem, we constructed a digital reference desk, which has involved the participation of 33 institutes in answering questions from users. It can be an efficient way for our users to explore new methods in the research process. Information literacy education. As there are about 25,000 graduate students in the CAS graduate school, information literacy teaching levels will impact the usage efficiency of the electronic resources when the graduate students become researchers. We have made great efforts since 2003 to persuade the graduate school authority to provide the opportunity to make an information literacy course publicly available. In 2006 we began to offer an information literacy course within the curriculum of the graduate school to support and enhance the students general ability in research. Electronic document delivery promotion. Since 2002 we have undertaken the electronic document delivery work and have held summarizing conferences once a year. In the conferences, we commend our excellent collaborative service partner, publicize our working plan for the next year, and promote our service program. 2.4 Exhibition of faculty s ability Lead the research in the National Digital Library Standards Development Project (http://cdls.nstl.gov.cn/cdls2/w3c/). This is a huge research project in the library and information science field in China. It is divided into more than ten branch projects, each being collaborative research, and we have encouraged main libraries all over the

country to participate in the research activity. There are 20 libraries or library consortia involved in this project. Our library is one of the leading organizations in this project. Our faculty played a core role in the research work. Convene the international conference (forum). We held the international conference on topics such as cooperative electronic resources management, long-term digital resources preservation and Sino-American digital library workshop. Convened the organization academic forum annually from 2003-2005. From 2003 until 2005 we held the organization s academic annual conference and almost every member of staff submitted one paper. We encouraged our faculty and staff to analyze problems in the working process, to explore new methods to solve them and to summarize the best practices. As in the conferences, we invited the leaders of our main partner organizations such as the National Library of China, Peking University Library, and Tsinghua University Library, and also the directors from our branch libraries that became administratively sole organizations in 2004. Marketing practices in the LCAS 341 3. Tools and methods used in marketing Many libraries now use the internet to promote their services. Since library web pages have become more important than ever they play the same role in the virtual environment as the building does in the real world. They have to compete with everything else on the web. Library webmasters must learn the latest techniques in web design in order to make distinctive web sites, and learn how to promote their web sites in order to get prospective users. They describe online resources to help make online library marketing efforts more successful. Our webmaster promotes our web site by using these techniques: 3.1 Circulation expire alert (loan period alert) Three days before the loan expires, our circulation system will alert the user to return the book. This technology shows our efficiency in daily circulation work, and avoids disputes over expiry fines. 3.2 Live digital reference desk In our library building, there is a reference desk, but it is only for answering short and easy questions. If it is a professional question, such as how to search systematically for information for a research topic, we should answer these seriously. Even more important, if we can receive a question over the internet, we can enlarge the territory of our users, and at an operational level, we can invite volunteers to help us answer these questions. By experimenting with the offline reference service for two years, we put out the live reference service in 2006, which has involved 37 institutes in the Chinese Academy. 3.3 Cross search On our organization portal, users can search the database one by one. If you want to search the definite subject information in a broad area, you can use the cross search technology. Buy choosing certain databases, you can enter a keyword to search for the

LM 27,6/7 342 related subject resources in all the databases. There are 50 databases in the cross searching service program. 3.4 Institute library portals We are exploring mechanisms for cooperation in the library system. Some institute libraries have a portal, and some of them still have no sole web site. We designed a uniform front page for the institute library. With the same structure, we can upload the common data into it, and embed it in the institute s portal. The institute librarian can then do the maintenance work by adding or deleting the required resources. By using ever-emerging new technology, and embracing innovative service methods, we should be able to provide new service programs that are based on the users expectations. 4. Pros and cons 4.1 No marketing strategies but activities We lack a complete marketing strategy at the organizational level, even though we have lots of activities. We should have a marketing policy in our organization, which includes the library s governing policy, acquisition policy, service policy, mission statement, user definitions. 4.2 No sustainable plan to do the marketing At the operational level, there is no marketing plan in our library. Sometimes we duplicate things in different departments and at other times things are overlooked completely. 4.3 Challenge of ever-changing expectations from researchers We are facing the challenge of ever-changing expectations from our researchers. From the ordinary library service to the scientific tendency to analyze, we must not give up on the expectations of our users. We are trying to take a great part in the E-science platform. That is to say, even if we hadn t finished our definite information service goal, we will still have to face new expectations based on automatic information processing technology. Which one should be abandoned, and which one should be sustained? It should be a decision-making process based on analysis of users needs, which is also the marketing strategy making process. It becomes more complex and difficult as user needs change more rapidly. 4.4 Recruit more people who are market-oriented The library is a public organization and so there is less pressure to promote itself to the public. Most of our faculty s characters are more academic and service like elegant, leisurely, carefree, calm and unhurried. As analyzed above, different situations form our impressions of the library. It faces the same challenges as any other organization in the current era. We should have to compete with other organizations, even commercial ones, in the Chinese information service market.

Personnel are the most important factor. The library should recruit new people with market-oriented experience, while sustaining those who have kept the library profession sacrosanct. Further reading Collins, K. (2003), Patrons, processes, and the profession: comparing the academic art library and the art museum library, Journal of Library Administration, Vol. 39 No. 1, pp. 77-89. Genevieves, O. (Ed.) (1996), Electronic Resources: Implications for Collection Management, Haworth Information Press, Binghampton, NY. Lee, S.H. (Ed.) (2002), Electronic Resources and Collection Development, Haworth Information Press, Binghampton, NY. Neuhaus, C. and Snowden, K. (2003), Public relations for a university library: a marketing programme is born, Library Management, Vol. 24 Nos 4/5, pp. 193-203. Zhangxiaolin (2003), Welcome, paper presented at TWAS (Third World Academy of Sciences), 19 October. Marketing practices in the LCAS 343 About the author Ju Wenhong is Electronic Resource Development Liaison at the Library of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, People s Republic of China. She can be contacted at: juwh@mail.las.ac.cn To purchase reprints of this article please e-mail: reprints@emeraldinsight.com Or visit our web site for further details: www.emeraldinsight.com/reprints