What%20is%20beyond%20books%20and%20journals?%20Pointers%20from%20CIBER - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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What%20is%20beyond%20books%20and%20journals?%20Pointers%20from%20CIBER

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Title: What%20is%20beyond%20books%20and%20journals?%20Pointers%20from%20CIBER


1
What is beyond books and journals?Pointers
from CIBERs Virtual Scholar programme
  • David Nicholas
  • CIBER
  • UCL Centre for Publishing,
  • Department of Information Studies
  • University College London
  • http//www.ucl.ac.uk/infostudies/research/ciber/

2
Two bits of information to get you thinking
  • An internet year is only 7 weeks
  • The biggest users of the House of Commons
    intranet are robots - by miles, and there are
    pages that only robots ever go to
  • What is the significance of this? By the end of
    the talk you will be able to answer this!

3
Pointers come from the straight from the horses
mouth, millions of horses
  • 8 years of collecting digital fingerprints of
    millions of scholars (students, kids, academic
    researchers, lecturers, general public) from all
    over the world and every field under the sun
  • Users of following ScienceDirect, Oxford
    Journals, Synergy, BL Learn, Intute, OhioLink,
    Oxford Scholarship Online, MyiLibrary, Wiley
    Interscience, IoP Journals, NHS Direct Online,
    Times Online, Independent Online etc
  • Be a mug to ignore this evidencethere are plenty
    of mugs
  • The evidence is that the what lies beyond books
    and journals has to be (user-facing and informed)
    e-book and journal services!
  • The pointers are

4
Pointer 1 E-journals books are VERY popular
dont forget this
  • Hugely popular and escalating demand
  • Everything offered used
  • Vast amounts of use millions millions of
    pages viewed and millions of visits made. Numbers
    astonishing.
  • Double digit levels of growth - despite
    wall-gardened systems
  • Plenty of growth in system (millions of people
    still like to use but cannot) and products can be
    improved (more later)
  • Good for you high consumption levels lead to
    very positive outcomes.
  • Watch fireworks with e-books - will lead to new
    and closer relationship between books and
    journals which will power both to new heights
    (OUP)

5
Pointer 2 big growth from e-books dont forget
have only seen phase 1 of the digital transition
  • Offer condensed, distilled knowledge big
    demand inappropriate use of journals
  • Textbook access particular big issue with
    students - unblock the blockage!
  • Under-utilised resource because contents not
    digitally visible, now accessible, roads and
    motorways built, suitable for power browsing
  • Bait of abstract and keyword, raises to the
    prominence (digital visibility) enjoyed by
    e-journals
  • Students, humanities scholars and general public
    can join the e-revolution, enter the virtual
    scholarly space.

6
Pointer 3 there are other attractionsthink
reliability, quality and brand
  • Journals and books have a high degree of
    visibility and recognition
  • People know what they are shopping for and
    getting
  • Links nicely and strongly to brand and authority
    (quality products)
  • Business class product
  • In an anonymous, confused and crowded environment
    pretty important to recognise this

7
Pointer 4 twin pillars of scholarly
communication doing well, thanks to digital
transition
  • Where the dangers and opportunities lie exist not
    in new systems, social networking etc but
    understanding what has happened to scholars as
    being fast forwarded into the virtual scholarly
    space
  • We now know more about how people use and seek
    for books and journals than we ever did and need
    to make this work for us and we dont!
  • Each new system, new diversion risks further
    disconnecting from the customer base they have
    become anonymous
  • The most important things we need to understand,
    stick on the back of the door follow

8
Pointer 5 Information seeking is fast,
directand highly pragmaticforget notions of
quiet contemplation, disciplined reading
  • Most users visit for only a few minutes, and view
    only a couple of pages.
  • Opposite of fast-bag drop, fast-bag pick-up
  • The dont want to hang around! In and out
  • Help them speed through the site, save time.
  • There is nothing wrong with that

9
Pointer 6 they like it short
  • Shorter it is the more likely it is to be read
    online
  • If its long, either read the abstract or squirrel
    it away for a day when it might not be read
    (digital osmosis)
  • People actually prefer abstracts much of the
    time, even when given the choice
  • Go online to avoid reading

10
Pointer 7 they like it simple but publishers
and librarians seem to think otherwise!
  • Users by-pass carefully-crafted discovery
    systems. Killer stats (1) 4 months after SD
    content was opened to Google, a third of traffic
    to physics journals came that way. Effect is
    particularly notable since physics richly endowed
    with information systems and services (2)
    Historians biggest users of Google, together with
    young people
  • While Google searching hugely popular, once users
    enter a site browse rather than search again
    using internal search engine (dont trust it, too
    complicated).
  • Advanced search used rarely, and hardly at all by
    users in highly-rated research institutions.Add-on
    s and innovations distinctly a minority sport
    email alerts, VLEs, blogs

11
Pointer 8 they do it all the time this is a
solid and undisputable outcome
  • Logs fantastic for discovering exactly when
    scholars search
  • Use well into the night and over the weekend
  • Quarter of use occurs outside the traditional
    working day and weekends account for around 15
    of use (another working day!)
  • Some things never change - Lunch time still the
    busiest time and Monday lunchtimes the busiest of
    all (e-shopping)
  • October the busiest month
  • Government researchers dont search weekends or
    in the evenings!
  • Economists most likely to work out of hours and
    life scientists the least

12
Pointer 9 want immersive social information
environments but few people listening!
  • Said something which threw us all initially -
    they could not understand why they had to do all
    the work in getting something from the website.
    At first this was attributed to laziness but it
    turned out not to be that. They felt the content
    was locked, submerged and they had to dig a lot
    to see it, when maybe the service could make some
    things available automatically the data coming
    to them, rather than having to chase it.
  • Returned book trolley! Come on guys wake up, stop
    chasing FaceBook the lessons to be learnt are in
    your own backyard

13
Pointer 10 Diversity rules OK!
  • Subject Life Scientists insatiable
  • Type of organisation government labs and
    universities in same subject exhibit very
    different information behaviour.
  • Research-intensive universities behave very
    differently
  • Per capita use is highest in most
    research-intensive institutions
  • Users spend much less time on visit
  • Forsake most of the online facilities provided
  • More likely to enter via gateway sites
  • Searching Germans most successful searchers
    most active information seekers.
  • Age older users more likely to come back, and
    view abstracts. Young people use Google more,
    spend more time online viewing. Staff v student
    use

14
Pointer 11 need to relate/information seeking to
establish outcomes
  • Lets use the data for purposes other than
    measuring activity
  • Public good does not wash anymore (those warm
    feelings)
  • Access no longer an outcome
  • Better students, degrees, researchers, more
    funding etc
  • Cost-effectiveness the car park question
  • Which leads us to our RIN research

15
Lessons
  • Business class services
  • It works but could work better more immersive,
    more community, more outcomes
  • Dont complicate things, dont get hung up on
    models, just watch and react to the consumer.
    Turn that information seeking data to gold
  • Identify best practice, benchmark (digital
    literacy)
  • Fast food
  • The only new thing I think will work is data
  • Back to the initial questionsanswers, please!

16
More
  • http//www.facetpublishing.co.uk/index.shtml
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