Ten years ago, Professor Davenport and Professor Beck in their book “Attention Economy” posited that users suffer from information overload and attention deficit due to the explosive growth of online content. With so much information easily accessible from the user‘s computer, the relevance and usefulness of the library and its services has been called into question.
Professors Davenport and Beck, identified several factors to capture the attention of users – relevance, community, engagement and convenience. Drawing on these ideas, this paper examines how NTU Library has sought to create new avenues of collaboration with faculty and students of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, in order to foster a “sticky” relationship between the library and the community that it serves.
Central to the development of the relationship is the library‘s active role in creating a more interactive and collaborative learning environment. To do this, the library has undertaken a number of initiatives including integrating library resources into the users‘ online learning platform (Blackboard) and setting up online subject rooms and course blogs. The library also promotes the works of the NTU academic community by archiving scholarly academic papers in the NTU digital repository (DR-NTU) and highlighting outstanding student papers in the Outstanding Academic Papers by Students (OAPS) project.
In developing stickiness in the relationship between the library and the academic community, it is important that the library not only meets current information needs but also anticipates future ones. New media is being used actively by the library both to promote and enrich information seeking. For example, QR codes have been embedded in library print materials to link to ebooks and online resources.
While instructional and reference services continue to be a core part of library services, it is hoped that these new linkages will further the partnership between the library and the academic community which it serves.
#p232 #iatul2012 growth areas for stickiness-enhance relevance and convenience
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 relevance,engagement, community and convenience help with “stickyness”
— Tina Hohmann (@guacamole37) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 set up project websites, promoting users’ work
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 enhancing content and service through qr codes
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 “Subject Rooms”, provided by subject librarians at NTU
— Tina Hohmann (@guacamole37) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 providing relevance with e-customisation of subject
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 Boutique Library concept – personalised services
— Tina Hohmann (@guacamole37) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 the principles include convenience, relevance, community and engagement
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 intuitive search experience, also using virtual shelf
— Tina Hohmann (@guacamole37) June 5, 2012
#iatul2012 #p232 how to gain and regain attention with users
— Tina Hohmann (@guacamole37) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 “molasses principle of stickiness”
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012
#p232 #iatul2012 what’s in short supply, the human attention
— IATUL 2012 (@iatul2012) June 5, 2012