The Director, The Staff, and Leadership in the Public Library - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Director, The Staff, and Leadership in the Public Library

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Use your honeymoon wisely. Relations with Staff. Challenge, encourage and reward ... Volunteers must have explicit work schedules, vacation times, and duties ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Director, The Staff, and Leadership in the Public Library


1
The Director, The Staff, and Leadership in the
Public Library
  • Managing and Surviving in an Effective and
    Democracy-Enhancing Workplace
  • LS 530 Dr. Weddle

2
Quality, Equity, and Access
  • Privatization vs. Outsourcing
  • Publics right to know trumps pure efficiency
    privatization issues
  • Public Law vs. Private, Contract, Tort and
    Property Law
  • First Amendment Freedom of Information
    Confidentiality
  • Sunshine Laws
  • Private sector business models dont translate
    well to public libraries, though skillful
    management is essential
  • Profit shouldnt be an issue, though fiscal
    responsibility must be
  • Good reads on library privatization
    http//www.cupe.ca/arp/09/7.asp
  • http//www.privatization.org/database/policyissue
    s/libraries_local.html2

3
Challenges Pressures
  • Change
  • Conflict
  • Inflation
  • Anti-tax movement
  • Others?

4
Information Flow
  • Directives from Municipality community board ?
    Director ? Staff
  • Messages from Staff ? Director ? Municipality
    community board
  • Director is Lynchpin and so much more

5
Many Hats of the Director
  • Visionary Leadership
  • Institutional Value Setter
  • Mentor
  • Bearer exerciser of authority and
    responsibility for the library
  • Focus on serving needs of library users

6
Career Patterns
  • Probably a majority of public libraries are
    directed by women but
  • The larger the library, the more likely it is to
    be directed by a man.

7
Career Patterns
  • More than half of directors of medium-size
    libraries are between ages 35-44.
  • For larger libraries, average age is about 52
    years, with 16-28 years of experience.
  • Women directors tend to be older than male
    counterparts, became directors later in life,
    remained single.

8
Career Patterns
  • Directors tend to find the work deeply
    satisfying, although
  • Directors of small and medium size libraries are
    more likely to feel underpaid and overworked.

9
Duties of the Public Library Director
  • Deliver best possible library service, consistent
    with pre-established policies, that can be
    purchased with available funds
  • The Board sets policy, not the director

10
Duties of the Public Library Director
  • Staff the library
  • Plan and carry out programs
  • Assess the librarys progress and success and
    report periodically to staff, board, and
    community
  • Market library services and programs to the
    community

11
Duties of the Public Library Director
  • Gauge librarys funding needs and articulate them
    through a budget
  • Assure adequate collection of materials to
    support community needs
  • Provide professional library leadership to the
    staff and the community
  • Manage and administer the operation of the library

12
Duties of the Public Library Director
  • External
  • Figurehead
  • Liaison
  • Monitor
  • Spokesperson
  • Negotiator
  • Internal
  • Leader
  • Disseminator
  • Entrepreneur
  • Disturbances Handler
  • Resource Allocator

13
Manager or Leader?
  • Manager
  • Vested with authority by organization
  • The best managers are also good leaders
  • Leader
  • Willingly accorded authority by group members
  • Leadership is integrity, courage, wise judgment,
    empathy, persuasion, planning, optimism, and
    flexibility

14
Values and Vision
  • Values Core Principles personal (Family,
    religion, etc.) and professional (Library Bill of
    Rights Freedom to Read Statement)
  • Beliefs flow from values
  • Attitudes are situational and based upon values
    and beliefs
  • Vision Clarity of Purpose derived from values,
    beliefs, attitudes, intelligence, imagination,
    knowledge and pragmatism
  • Effective directors clearly articulate vision
    both internally and externally
  • Vision helps directors stay focused on what is
    best for the library community both short-term
    and long-term

15
Power and Delegation
  • Authority is different from power
  • Power is earned over time and conferred by
    library constituency
  • Staff support of director and library policy is
    essential
  • Successful delegation means the right person is
    chosen and is properly trained for the job
  • Delegate those tasks which you are overpaid to do
  • The delegated buck still stops with the director

16
Work Patterns
  • Directors tend to have poor time management skill
  • The Public Service route to the directors chair
  • Insecure and overwhelmed
  • Too many meetings
  • Library work is never done
  • Procrastination

17
Relations with the Board
  • Performance Evaluation for the Director
  • Administration
  • Leadership
  • Budget Finance
  • Communication
  • Decision-Making Problem-Solving
  • Public Relations
  • Development of Human Resources
  • Professional Development

18
Termination of a Director
  • Consistent negative evaluation
  • Written documentation, gathered over time
  • Termination hearing
  • Lack of due process can leave a library
    vulnerable to a lawsuit

19
Recruitment of New Director
  • Board must
  • Establish a search schedule, including timeline
    and budget
  • Clarify for itself what qualities are sought, in
    order to find best fit for library
  • Decide who will participate in search, usually
    not including the former director
  • Perhaps hire a consultant

20
Recruitment of New Director
  • Define the job and/or update the job description
  • Develop the search strategy
  • Conduct the search
  • Narrow the field to 3-5 candidates
  • Decide if the search will be local, regional or
    nationwide
  • Decide on remuneration
  • Decide on necessary qualifications (degrees and
    experience)

21
Soliciting Applications
  • Recruitment Ads in
  • Nearest metropolitan newspaper
  • One or two the following Library Journal,
    American Libraries, Wilson Library Bulletin,
    Library Hot Line
  • Also National Conferences

22
Soliciting Applications
  • Advertising for the position is also advertising
    the library
  • Send candidates full information packets annual
    reports, long-range and master plans, other
    statistical and narrative in-house and external
    documents
  • Narrow the list, check references, and conduct
    interviews

23
The New Director
  • Two most important objectives
  • 1. Put the staff at ease
  • 2. Learn everything about the organization and
    how it functions

24
The First Year
  • Hold periodic meetings with top and middle
    managers
  • Meet both formally and informally with the board
  • Get to know both elected and appointed local
    officials
  • Establish a presence with schools, cultural, and
    social groups and institutions
  • Get to know people in the media
  • Make friends with the Friends

25
The First Year
  • Get to know other directors in the area and the
    state
  • Become familiar with relevant data concerning
    your library and community
  • Spend time in all library departments
  • Take staff on retreat and work on team building

26
The First Year
  • Attend community events
  • Evaluate library programming begin bragging to
    community about strengths
  • Take your time and LISTEN before you make any
    changes which affect individuals and/or programs
  • Plan a vacation and take it

27
The First Year
  • Thank people as you go
  • Strengthen staff development programs
  • Use library, board, and community colleagues as
    mentors, friends, resources, stimulators and
    sounding boards
  • Use your honeymoon wisely

28
Relations with Staff
  • Challenge, encourage and reward
  • Constructive criticism when needed
  • Be the staffs voice to the Board (compensation
    and professional opportunities)
  • Inform and encourage participation

29
Recruiting New Librarians
  • Make the library dynamic and exciting
  • Assign professional responsibilitiesincluding
    planning evaluation to professional
    librarians
  • Mentor

30
Professional Librarians
  • Professional Librarians hold MLS or equivalent,
    sometimes additional graduate degrees
  • Serve in leadership positions, direct
    departments, plan and develop programs, oversee
    non-professional staff

31
Professional Librarians
  • Seek autonomy, variety, innovation and
    flexibility in a quality work environment
  • The Compleat Librarian

32
Support Staff
  • Para-professionals, technical specialists,
    library assistants clerks
  • Wide range of educational backgrounds High
    School to Graduate School
  • Highly educated support staff can become
    frustrated doing clerical work

33
Pages
  • Shelve books and periodicals
  • Traditionally high school students
  • More recent Senior citizens

34
Successful Volunteer Program
  • Well-organized
  • Staff included in the organization of the program
  • Volunteers assigned meaningful tasks
  • Library expresses gratitude to volunteers
  • Someone must be in charge staff member, board
    member, other volunteer

35
Successful Volunteer Program
  • Volunteers must have explicit work schedules,
    vacation times, and duties
  • Volunteer contract arrangements can be used to
    keep things running smoothly
  • Library may offer letter of recommendation in
    lieu of pay
  • Heavy staff involvement is crucial
  • Volunteer programs arent right for all libraries

36
Potential Volunteer Problems
  • Political hot potato
  • May jeopardize funding and support
  • May jeopardize publics perception of
    librarianship as a profession

37
Conditions of Employment
  • Salaries should be seen as being fair
  • Internal Equity
  • External Equity
  • Systematic approach to salary administration
  • Support staff wages based on local market

38
Pay Equity and Comparable Worth
  • Equal work for equal pay is required by law
  • Librarianship is a feminized profession, but men
    tend to hold the higher paying jobs
  • Low market value in general for public librarians

39
Fringe Benefits
  • Fringe benefits can be as much as 35 of a salary
    package
  • Health Insurance
  • Retirement
  • Personal Days
  • Sick Leave
  • Life Insurance
  • Disability
  • Other (tuition remission leaves of absence)

40
Working Conditions
  • Hours 35-40 hours per week, including weekends
    and evenings for public service staff
  • Flextime and job-sharing tend to increase staff
    morale, though neither is easy to implement
    uniformly
  • Physical Facilities Lack of comfort equals
    unhappy employees, though the reverse of this is
    not necessarily true

41
Staff Recruitment
  • Excessive Turnover vs. Lack of Turnover
  • Filling a vacancy is a complex activity
  • Position analysis job description
  • Recruitment from within and without (advertising,
    interviewing, checking references)
  • Hiring, orienting and training the new employee

42
Performance Appraisal
  • Provides constructive assistance to staff
  • Assists with decisions about promotions and
    salaries
  • Creates a paper trail
  • Is difficult, disliked and mistrusted
  • Is complicated, time-consuming, sometimes
    confrontational, which may lead to inflated
    evaluations
  • Is necessary

43
Performance Appraisal
  • Generally supervisor-generated using objective
    scales
  • Self-Appraisal places most responsibility on
    employees
  • Peer Appraisal is collegial review
  • Subordinate Appraisals review supervisors

44
Grievance Procedures
  • May be mandated by civil service law
  • May be stipulated in union service contract
  • May simply be suggested by need to comply fairly
    with state and federal labor law

45
Termination of Employment
  • Budget shortfall
  • Soft money
  • Inadequate job performance
  • Periodic performance appraisals for staff
  • Written summation of discussions regarding
    performance given to employee AND placed in
    his/her file shows good faith
  • Handle termination with respect and care

46
Burnout
  • Begins with stress
  • Overload
  • Feelings of inadequacy
  • Underload
  • Unsatisfactory interpersonal relationships with
    co-workers, the public, etc.
  • Lack of positive feedback
  • Lack of effective supervision
  • Career concerns

47
Burnout
  • Middle Managers very susceptible
  • Vulnerable personality types
  • Workaholics
  • Impatient and competitive people
  • Unassertive people who cant say no
  • Perfectionists
  • Young singles
  • People with alternative lifestyles

48
Prevention Strategies
  • Job redesign
  • Job rotation (e.g. CEO program in AZ)
  • Good for plateaued staff
  • Learning curve can temporarily lower productivity
  • Requires detailed planning and preparation
  • Improving inter-personal relations by more
    effective communication strategies
  • Support and counseling

49
Encouraging Staff
  • Continuing Education Staff Development
  • Supervision Mentoring
  • Meetings Retreats
  • Ethical Conduct in Personnel Matters

50
Summary
  • Visionary, ethical, supportive director
  • Engaged, motivated, supported staff
  • Satisfied municipality, community, board
  • Democracy well-served
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