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Web 2. Technologies for Libraries Dhanashree Date, Ph.D 21 July 2015 “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star”. 21 July 2015 Of the people For the people BY the people Web 1.0 Static pages Pull Information Updated by Webmasters only No user participation Own servers and applications Web 2.0 Dynamic pages Push Information Frequently updated User participation Outsourced Services 21 July 2015 Web 2.0 : Our Emerging Service Model • participative • collaborative • personalised • modular • mashups 21 July 2015 21 July 2015 23 ways to access NY Times !!! • Print (preferably with coffee and croissants) • Website • Mobile website (for phones and PDAs) • Archive (NYT and third party) • Online aggregators • Electronic (download) • NYT Reader (software platform) • Email • RSS • Blogs • Alerts • Podcasts • • • • • • • • • • • SMS texting Avantgo Chumby Opera Mini Twitter Vindigo iPhone app Kindle Facebook LinkedIn YouTube 21 July 2015 Look at Numbers USA top 50 magazines 48% RSS 46% Message Board 38% Publisher Blogs Online 38% Registrations USA top 100 newspapers 80 % Reporter Blogs 76% RSS 75% Section-wise RSS 64% Message Board 61% Videos 38% Online Registrations • 260 • 412.3 • 3,000,000 • 140 21 July 2015 Look at More Numbers……these are Indian Users • 63% of urban students spend over an hour online daily • 62% have a personal computer at home • 93% are aware of social networking • Orkut and Facebook are most popular online destinations • 46% use online sources to access news • 1 in 4 students own lap-tops in metros; 2 of 3 own music players It’s Time to Change Learning 21 July 2015 Expectations 2.0 ?? 21 July 2015 It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change. - Charles Darwin 21 July 2015 Extern al Benefit s Web 2.0 Interna l Benefit s 21 July 2015 Impact of Web 2.0 Collection Building Circulation Talent Search Marketing Web 2.0 User Training OPAC CAS / SDI Reference Services 21 July 2015 Web 2.0 21 July 2015 Blog Vs. Website Web-site Blog • Serious, business content, less dynamic content • More personal, fun, transient, work-inprogress nature of content • An official overview of library team, services and set-up • To communicate regularly with customers and clients about events, happenings. • User interaction is not the primary objective • Interactive customer feedback is the primary objective • Cannot gather user intelligence, opinions, trends • To gather competitive intelligence, perspectives, user opinions, trends & flaks • High learning curve • Low learning curve 21 July 2015 Blog Vs. Wiki Blog Wiki • Content is not editable, only commentable • Content is centrally located, organised and editable by anyone • The creator drives the content • Equal sense of ownership and commitment to all participants • Act as a mini web-site, news vehicle, events, discussions • Training tools, subject guides, resource catalogues, instructions 21 July 2015 Bloglines Vs. Google Alerts Bloglines Google Alerts • Need prior research on the web to seek sources providing relevant RSS feeds • No such research required. Captures news from unknown sources • Limited serendipity • High serendipity • Need regular visits • Comes to the inbox • Cannot forward links of registered sources. • Access to all sources listed in the alerts • You are always lucky • You are lucky 21 July 2015 IMs vs. SMS vs. Tweets IM Mobiles/ SMS Twitter • For Virtual Reference • Two-way real-time communication • 1 to 1 • Free IMs are available and can be embedded onto websites • No limit on characters • Can save transcripts and history • Can clock the connect time with the users. • RSS feeds, reminders, announcements, marketing • Library to many • Not always real-time communication • Not all users use Mobiles. • Limited characters. Not viable for queries • Can save only short messages. • Cannot clock the delivery time of a query • Reminders, announcements, marketing • Many to many • Not always real-time communication • Not all users use Twitter. • Limited characters. Not viable for queries • Can save only short messages. • Cannot clock the delivery time of a query 21 July 2015 Circulation Collection Building Photos Videos SNS Cataloguing RSS Marketing Widgets Reference Services IM CAS / SDI User Training Talent Search Wikis Blogs 21 July 2015 Web 2.0 Bubbles Play with caution Tame the Web 21 July 2015 Mapping Tools to Library Profiles Medium High • • • • • • • • • • • Blogs Wikis (wikipedia) RSS SNS (Facebook, Flickr YouTube, LibraryThing) Twitter Pod / Vod casting Mobile services Virtual World Instant Messaging Google tools Mashups • Special Academic Public • Blogs • Blogs • Wikis (wikipedia) • Wikis • RSS • RSS • SNS (delicious, CiteUlike, LibraryThing) • Google tools • Instant Messaging • Google tools • Mashups • Pod / Vod casting • Mobile services • SNS (delicious, CiteUlike, LibraryThing) • Twitter Low • Pod / Vod casting • Virtual World • Mobile services • Instant Messaging • Twitter • Mashups • Virtual World 21 July 2015 Don’t jump onto the bandwagon • Free, but deploy wisely • Avoid overuse and overload • Don’t expect a mad rush • Social networking sites alone wont help you to network socially • Perpetual beta 21 July 2015 21 July 2015 Extern al Benefit s Interna l Benefit s Measure Key Performance Indicators •Website viewership •Voluntary participation at events •Decrease in manually delivered services •Increase in circulation of low used books •Number of IM reference queries resolved •Views of tutorials •Increase in feedbacks / suggestions •Increase in acquisitions through Web 2.0 feedbacks •Downloads of pod / vod casts •Viewing duration per clip •Increase in comments / reviews / tags on OPAC •RSS subscription-base •Referrals •External collaborations •Number of user suggestions deployed •Contributors to the Wiki 21 July 2015 Manage Sustainability Clarity of • Why do I need it ?? Purpose • What is in it for me?? Clarity of • User-generated content, Aggregation, Single-Sign-On, Mashup Language Clarity of Participation Natural Extension $%^&*()_+@#$%^&*()$%^&*()^&*() • What can I access? What can I share? • What is not permissible? Who in the library to do what? • IM is the new reference desk, RSS feeds are a new form of library bulletins • Crisp, engaging, the feeling of What next?? Viral Content 21 July 2015 Cost of Web 2.0 Source : http://www.windowswatch.co.uk/2008/04/the-time-cost-o.html 21 July 2015 • • • • • • • • • • • • • Research and deployment Transaction cost (involved in finding, requesting, and actually taking possession of an item.) Education & Training of staff and users Re-work, re-testing Duplication of efforts Downgrading services Scrapping the service Processing user complaints Low participation, low followers Team meetings Surveys Longevity Data security (unauthorized use, data loss, ownership) 21 July 2015 4 21 July 2015 SWOT Strengths Opportunities Organisational skills Access to premium content Anytime Anywhere services ROI Integration of Web 2.0 Cross domain mingling E-Marketing of services Low learning curve High impact / visibility Web 2.0 Weaknesses Threats Convincing the management Lack of awareness on business models Disintegrated technologies Cost Disintermediation Invisibility of the e-resources Publisher dependencies 21 July 2015 Our Responsibility • Tame the Web 2.0 • Develop analytical skills on user generated content • Deploy optimally, integrate maximally • Provide unleashed services, ‘but’ with personal touch 21 July 2015 21 July 2015 Conclusion • ‘Consortia’ has attained a different meaning. Group work is an inevitable fact of organizational life. • We will now increasingly cater to User 2.0. • Discovery happens elsewhere. • Libraries need to be where its users are, and get in their flow. • Unified discovery and fragmented delivery. • Web analytics plays a crucial role in the measuring ROI of web services. . • Information is abundant; attention is scarce. It will get into the mainstream only if users see value and convenience. 4 21 July 2015 Thank You