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Technical Services Efficiencies at Wesleyan University

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Examples of 'no' -- Stop: Inserting routine slips and flags ... preserve, especially in Special Collections/Archives and World Music Archives ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Technical Services Efficiencies at Wesleyan University


1
Technical Services Efficiencies at Wesleyan
University
  • Sally Grucan, Head of Cataloging
  • Cohabiting and Colliding Print and Electronic
    Resources
  • NETSL Spring Conference, April 4, 2008

2
Overview
  • Wesleyan
  • Guiding principles
  • Workflow evaluation/redesign
  • Efficiencies
  • Cataloging issues

3
Wesleyan overview
  • 2,700 undergraduates
  • 200 graduate students in the natural sciences,
    mathematics, and ethnomusicology
  • 400 students in the Graduate Liberal Studies
    Program
  • 300 faculty
  • 3 libraries with 39 FTE staff 15 FTE
    professional, 24 FTE paraprofessional

4
Library overview
  • 1 million titles CTW Library Consortium 2
    million
  • 400,000 nonbook items
  • 110,000 cataloged internet resources
  • Subscriptions 1,400 paper and 7,000 e-journal
    35,000 if you include aggregator access
  • 19,000 titles and 22,000 volumes added in FY07
  • 56 PromptCat and YBP shelfready
  • 38 inhouse copy cataloging
  • 4 inhouse original
  • 1 TechPro
  • 1 e-journals added to print record
  • GPO depository 30 selection
  • Voyager ILS

5
Lecture 1 Use staff appropriately
  • No librarian should do a job that a
    paraprofessional can do
  • No paraprofessional should do a job that a
    clerical staff member can do
  • No clerical staff member should do a job that a
    student or volunteer can do
  • No human being should do a job that a machine can
    do Michael Gormans drift down
    theory

6
Professional work
  • Production--difficult work only
  • Performance evaluation, supervision
  • Policies and procedures
  • Problem solving, workflow revision
  • Planning, budgeting
  • Project design, maybe management
  • Picture, Big

7
Lecture 2 Big picture
  • Plan and set goals top-down institution,
    library, units/departments, individual staff
  • Users (including other staff) are central
  • Budget, costs
  • Know what others are doing
  • The Web is our technology platform

Get to work. You arent being paid to believe in
the power of your dreams. http//www.despair.
com
8
Lecture 3 Just say no
  • There is nothing as useless as doing efficiently
  • that which should not be done at all. Peter
    Drucker
  • Staff cannot absorb new work indefinitely, no
    matter how efficient they are
  • Make a serious effort to stop doing or postpone
    some current tasks

9
Examples of no -- Stop
  • Inserting routine slips and flags
  • Making printouts, photocopies, paper records
  • Periodical checkin, binding, and claims
  • Manual tallies
  • Upgrading copy cataloging
  • Applying bookplates
  • New Book shelf
  • Ruth Fischer and Rick Lugg. Just Say
    No
  • Eliminating Low-Value Tasks.
    Against the Grain,
  • v.16, no. 6 (Jan. 2004), p. 84.

10
Wesleyan nos -- Stop
  • Using overly complex fund structures and small
    itemized endowments
  • Item-by-item book selection where appropriate
    move from slip approval plan to book approval
    plan
  • Item-by-item receipt/payment in favor of EDI
  • Accepting gifts which we cannot catalog/preserve,
    especially in Special Collections/Archives and
    World Music Archives
  • Having vendor bind paperbacks or pulling thick
    paperbacks from the shelves send for binding
    only after the first circulation
  • Unnecessary US government document selection and
    cataloging

11
Workflow evaluation/redesign
  • Create an environment conducive to change
  • Identify problems/opportunities
  • Make a game plan, implement, revise as needed

12
Create an environmentconducive to change
  • Institution/library priorities drive decisions
    (its not about job elimination)
  • Change is inevitable and desirable were all in
    this together
  • Structure for communicating, sharing ideas,
    decision-making, measuring results
  • No bad ideas, mistakes expected/accepted
  • Outside help
  • Build enthusiasm

13
The six stages of an integrated online system
project (Bad Old Days, ca. 1985)
  • Elation and exuberance
  • Confusion
  • Disaster
  • Search for the guilty
  • Punishment of the innocent
  • Distinction for the uninvolved

14
2a. Identify problems
  • Priorities not well defined
  • Difficulty meeting priorities
  • Backlogs
  • Bottlenecks, hubs
  • Disparities in workload and production
  • Redundancies, handoffs and multiple stages
  • Insufficient data for making decisions and
    evaluating effectiveness
  • Complaints, negative survey feedback

15
2b. Identify opportunities
  • Flexibility to address priorities
  • Optimal use of staff and budget
  • Apply expertise in new ways
  • Increased opportunities for learning
  • An exciting place to work good people stay,
    attract best candidates for jobs

16
3. Plan, implement, revise
  • Someone(s) need(s) to be in charge
  • Involve all stakeholders including your
    organizations administration
  • Formal or informal as suits your organization
  • Share planning documents/meeting notes with
    entire staff get feedback
  • Implement, revisit as needed

17
1. Create an environment conducive to
changeWesleyan environment
  • Even a few cheerleaders build enthusiasm
  • Director/AUL support change, provide training
    funds, reward those who facilitate change
  • Consultants reviewed Tech Servicestask-based
    approachand we decided to implement almost
    everything in their report
  • Important to involve university administration
  • Allocated Tech Services staff to align more
    closely with how funds are actually spent
  • Will apply consultant techniques to review Public
    Services

18
2. Identify problems/opportunities Wesleyan
problems (1)
  • Out of space in all libraries
  • Collection development focused on print,
    insufficient cooperation among CTW Consortium
    libraries
  • Never had a designated systems librarian
  • Loss of foreign language expertise in Cataloging
  • Online catalog incomplete insufficient
    cataloging support for rare/unique materials

19
2. Identify problems/opportunities Wesleyan
problems (2)
  • Several information silos, no unified retrieval
    mechanism
  • Sub-par relationship w/ ITS
  • E-resources management too centralized,
    understaffed
  • Insufficient groupthink in Tech Services
  • Preservation challenges
  • Collections need inventory

20
3. Plan, implement, revise Wesleyan changes (1)
  • Space Create better spaces by reducing/storing
    some of the print collection
  • Collection development All librarians select,
    Mellon grant for CTW cooperation, continuous
    review of e-resources, new budgeting model
  • Systems librarian Used retiree funds to hire a
    Systems/Discovery Librarian
  • Cataloging expertise Paraprofessional
    cataloging vacancy upgraded to entry-level
    cataloging librarian position

21
3. Plan, implement, revise Wesleyan changes (2)
  • Recon/hidden Formal commitment to recon,
    priority recon trumps some new acquisitions,
    paraprofessionals trained. New cataloging
    librarian part-time in Special Collections.
  • Better user interfaces New Systems/Discovery
    Librarian focusing on web-based services and
    providing staff support

22
3. Plan, implement, revise Wesleyan changes (3)
  • ITS cooperation Academic Technology Round
    Table lunches, Media Database, Departmental
    Collections Catalog, digital repository,
    sound/video streaming, datasets
  • Tech Services Reorganized under two heads
    Acquisitions Electronic Resources and
    Cataloging. Better communication. Will revamp
    physical space.
  • Preservation Preservation Librarian supervises
    physical processing, trained catalogers to spot
    potential problems, is involved in gift review
    and weeding projects

23
3. Plan, implement, revise Wesleyan changes (4)
  • E-resources Acquisitions Electronic Resources
    head delegates work among 5.5 FTE
    paraprofessionals including 2 high-level
    administrative staff planning ERMS
  • Statistics Better understand and meet user needs
    through usage statistics/logs, focus groups,
    anthropological studies, etc.
  • Not yet addressed inventory, digitization funds,
    campus metadata standards

24
Tech Services overview
  • Two departments
  • Acquisitions Electronic Resources (6.5 FTE)
  • Acquisitions Electronic Resources Librarian (1
    FTE)
  • Monographic Acquisitions (2 FTE)
  • Serials/Electronic Resources/Binding (3.5 FTE)
  • Cataloging (4.3 FTE)
  • Head of Cataloging (1 FTE)
  • Cataloging Librarian (1 FTE)
  • Paraprofessional catalogers (2.3 FTE)
  • The professionals do collection development but
    not reference/liaison

25
Efficiencies in Selection
  • New approach to selection incorporating faculty
    liaison structure
  • Collaborative collection development (and
    weeding) within CTW Consortium
  • 3-year Mellon grant to assess CTW collections and
    establish consortial collection development
  • Move away from title-by-title selection using
    GOBI slips and publisher catalogs in favor of
    online selection and approval plans
  • Will better utilize technology, statistics and
    cost figures
  • Did not replace retiring Collection
    Development Librarian in favor of a
    Systems/Discovery Librarian, etc. will
    re-examine in 3 years

26
Efficiencies in Acquisitions Electronic
Resources (1)
  • Consolidated Monographic Acquisitions with
    Serials/Electronic Resources
  • Have used YBP GOBI for monographs for many years
  • Will eliminate some title-by-title ordering
    initially and implement EDI
  • Access over ownership more collaborative
    collection development, more e-resources, more
    and more efficient ILL, monographic funds cover
    access-related costs (cataloging, shelving,
    circulation, preservation)
  • But, cheaper to purchase than do ILL sometimes

27
Efficiencies in Acquisitions Electronic
Resources (2)
  • Ongoing serials review avoid multiple formats
  • SFX for linking, will replace
  • current Serials Solutions A-Z
  • list that populates Journal Locator
  • (few e-journals in catalog)
  • EDI for Ebsco, add Harrassowitz
  • Reduced serials binding (but monographic binding
    is growing due to preservation efforts)
  • Paraprofessionals catalog most e-resources
  • Significant student help
  • All staff contribute to wiki-based manual

28
Efficiencies in Cataloging Staffing
  • Paraprofessionals do most of
  • the cataloging, including original
  • uploaded to OCLC
  • Cataloging activity and database management
    occurs in other library departments Head of
    Cataloging creates record templates as needed.
    Special Collections employs students and Scores
    Recordings has graduate students
  • Head of Cataloging free to concentrate on
    problems, policy, planning (all those P things)

29
Efficiencies in Cataloging Outsourcing
  • PromptCat for more than half of acquisitions
  • TechPro for non-roman scripts (for now)
  • Daily electronic batchloading of holding symbols
    to OCLC
  • Daily Bib Notification updates book records and
    TOCs, no review, nonoverlays reported
  • Acquire records sets WorldCat Collection Sets,
    EEBO, NAXOS, etc.
  • Authority work done by LTI no cleanup from
    reports

30
Efficiencies in Cataloging PromptCat and YBP
shelfready
  • Long-time users
  • Acquisitions receives, then
  • goes to lower-level Cataloging staff member
  • Full/Core-level records not checked volumes
    eyeballed for problems which are referred to
    higher-level Cataloging staff
  • Items out of Tech Services in 1-2 days
  • OPAC tracks On Order, Received, In Process, etc.
    including date

31
Efficiencies in Cataloging Inhouse current
cataloging
  • Streamlined copy cataloging checklist, reviewed
    regularly
  • Full/Core-level almost never edited
  • Sampling vs. checking most records?
  • Reduce US gov docs receipts, cataloging
  • Tiny backlog

32
Efficiencies in Cataloging Recon and hidden
collections
  • Recon done at the title level from shelflist with
    little running into the stacks future inventory
    must address discrepancies
  • Items barcoded/circulated on-the-fly
    automatically come to Cataloging for followup
  • 40 of new Cataloging Librarian devoted to
    Special Collections
  • Cataloging Librarian working with Scores and
    Recordings/World Music Archives on cataloging
    workflow

33
Efficiencies in Cataloging Other
  • Follow national standards and LC practice
    including series
  • Searchable Web-based Wesleyan Cataloging Manual
    http//www.wesleyan.edu/libr/cataloging/CAT_MANUAL
    / and tools like Classification Web and
    Catalogers Desktop
  • Macro Express macros insert codes in bib records
    system pulls records for updating OCLC holdings
    and LTI processing, also provides stats for
    tracking productivity and making decisions
  • Database cleanup timesavers Access reports,
    batch location changer, etc.
  • Automatic record enrichment, e.g. Amazon links,
    Google Book Search

34
Cataloging issues (1)
  • What belongs in local library catalogs?
  • How to better share cataloging? How much
    updating of copy can/should we do in OCLC?
    Should we catalog in OCLC and import into the
    local system instead of the other way around?
    What is the future of authority control?
  • Can/should we further streamline copy cataloging?
    Utilize sampling? Do more access- or
    collection-level cataloging?

35
Cataloging issues (2)
  • How might our next-gen catalog affect how we
    catalog now?
  • When do non-MARC metadata/ databases work better
    than MARC?
  • How can we engage authors/creators in providing
    metadata?
  • We are metadata experts and savvy about
    databaseshow can we insert ourselves more into
    ITS and other campus efforts?

36
Suggested resources (1)
  • Against the Grain. Charleston SC, Katina Strauch.
    Links publishers, vendors, and librarians. Six
    theme issues a year, paper format. TOCs at
    http//www.against-the-grain.com/d/TableOfContents
  • Banush, David and Jim LeBlanc, "Utility, Library
    Priorities, and Cataloging Policies," Library
    Collections, Acquisitions, and Technical
    Services, v. 31, issue 2 (2007), pp. 96-109.
    Pre-pub at http//ecommons.library.cornell.edu/bit
    stream/1813/8424/2/UtilitarianCatalogingLCATSFinal
    forpublication.doc. Provides a philosophical
    framework for choices made about library
    priorities and cataloging policy, the contexts in
    which they are made, and the consequences they
    have for users
  • Buschman, John and F. William Chickering. A
    Rough Measure of Copy Cataloging Productivity in
    the Academic Library. Library Philosophy and
    Practice, 2007 http//libr.unl.edu2000/LPP/buschm
    an-chickering.htm

37
Suggested resources (2)
  • Grucan, Sally. Catalog of the Future, Apr. 3,
    2007. PowerPoint presentation to CTW of ideas
    for making library catalogs and library webpages
    more like Web 2.0 and for doing cataloging of the
    future http//www.slideshare.net/sgrucan/catalog-o
    f-the-future/
  • Hillmann, Diane I. Adding New Skills to Our
    Skillset, July 2007. The thinking behind her
    Metadata Standards and Applications workshops
    http//ecommons.library.cornell.edu/bitstream/1813
    /7900/1/AddingNewSkillstoOurSkillset.pdf
  • Liu, Shu. Engaging Users The Future of Academic
    Library Websites. College Research Libraries,
    v.69, no. 1 (Jan 2008), p. 6-27. Argues against
    simply recreating library functions online.
  • R2 Consulting homepage, with links to articles by
    Ruth Fischer and Rick Lugg http//www.ebookmap.net
    /

38
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