Internet Librarian 2006: Monterey Awaits!

IL2006

The advance information for IL2006 is up! Don’t miss these useful sites:

www.infotoday.com/il2006
http://il2006.pbwiki.com/

Note that there is going to be a podcast studio as well!

And, for public librarians and others interested folks (because this stuff translates well to almost any library!), don’t miss our PL Futures track on Monday, October 23, 2006:

Track B: Public Libraries’ Futures

This track focuses on planning, people, and participation. It explores the shift toward patron involvement, librarians building resources for collaboration and communication, and how public libraries (PLs) are changing to meet the needs of the plugged-in, socially networked user.
Organized and moderated by Jenny Levine, The Shifted Librarian, & Michael Stephens, Dominican University

Public Library 2.0: Emerging Technologies & Changing Roles

Michael Casey, Gwinnett County Public Library
Jenny Levine, The Shifted Librarian
Michael Stephens, Dominican University

The panel examines Library 2.0 thinking, the traits of Librarian 2.0. and describes concrete examples of 2.0 libraries in action. Get lots of takeaways you can implement in your environment!

Delighting PL Users: Personas in Action

Stephen Abram, VP Innovation, SirsiDynix

User-centered planning begins here! Developing a deeper understanding of users is essential, particularly in terms of their needs, preferences, and desires; their goals and aspirations; expectations and assumptions; values and beliefs; and their tolerance for risk and change. Based on a project that collected the stories of library users, this session shares the results, personas, learnings, and strategies for delighting public library users.

Reaching Patrons: Online Outreach for PLs

Sarah Houghton, San Mateo Public Library

This session discusses practical ways for libraries to delve into online outreach: getting the library “out there,” where the patrons are online. Issues addressed include: the need for online outreach, how to determine where your users spend their time online, making your library findable on the Web in useful ways to your users, and a list of places on which to make sure your library has a presence, such as Wikipedia, Craigslist, social networking sites (i.e., MySpace or Facebook), community calendars, library directories, Open WorldCat, IM, and other local sites. The session provides tools, ideas, and a step-by-step checklist to take back to your library.

Web-Based Experience Planning: Creating User-Centered Experience

David King, Kansas City Public Library

Depending on their training, the Web design community is talking about “user experience,” “interaction design,” or “experience planning”—all phrases that focus on the overall impression that the visitor has of your site. Experience planning puts the customer first, focusing on the visitor’s experience when they visit a store, buy a product, or visit a Web site. King explores the concept of experience planning for libraries, describes what works for the Web, and provides library examples of how to transform a Web site from transaction- and information-based to experience-based.

Session B105 — OPAC Tips & Tricks for Improving User Experiences

Glenn Peterson, Web Administrator, Hennepin County Library
Nanette Donohue, Technical Services Manager, Champaign Public Library

For many of us, our library’s catalog and Web site seem to exist in parallel universes. Peterson offers examples, both simple and complex, of libraries making these two play well together so their Web presence is richer and more user-friendly by enabling the following: allowing patrons to move easily between the two while staying “logged in,” linking your booklists into your catalog, linking back to your Web site for patron reviews and other community-building content. Donohue discusses a major Web site renovation, including an improved, customized user interface for their Sirsi Dynix Horizon Internet Portal (HIP) OPAC. By surveying patrons and library staff and examining other libraries’ OPACs, the library staff, in conjunction with a Web development team, developed the OPAC of their patrons’ dreams.

Synergy for Better Services: IT & Library Cultures

Kathryn Deiss, Metropolitan Library System
Matt Gullett, Imageon, Charlotte Mecklenburg Public Library

IT and library cultures differ in some significant ways. This session focuses on how IT and library people think and talk together. It begins by defining organizational culture and applies this definition to the cultures of IT and libraries in order to better discuss how these two different cultures can improve how they think and communicate with each other.

I am very pleased with this lineup of speakers, the experience they bring AND the range of topics! Hope to see you in Monterey!