Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation

‘Meeting the User’ is a programme committee under the Danish Electronic Research Library. As a development group at a national level we see our role as facilitating an innovative culture within academic libraries, focusing on users’ needs and the way libraries meet them. In collaboration with a cons...

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Main Authors: Karen Harbo, Thomas Vibjerg Hansen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: openjournals.nl 2012-04-01
Series:Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
Subjects:
Online Access:https://test.openjournals.nl/liberquarterly/article/view/10628
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spelling doaj-7cf3b661a92649619cdca76bf4245e352021-09-30T14:17:22Zengopenjournals.nlLiber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries2213-056X2012-04-01213-4Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library InnovationKaren HarboThomas Vibjerg Hansen‘Meeting the User’ is a programme committee under the Danish Electronic Research Library. As a development group at a national level we see our role as facilitating an innovative culture within academic libraries, focusing on users’ needs and the way libraries meet them. In collaboration with a consultancy firm, the committee organized a travelling workshop in four cities in 2010. The workshop introduced practical ways for library staff to get to know their users’ needs for services and was based on anthropological methods. The travelling workshop was part of a larger project called ‘A Journey of Discovery in Danish Library User Land’ (translated from Danish Brugerkaravanen), which also included a national thematic day, a blog and the publication of a method guide. There is an ongoing need for academic libraries to improve their services. One strategy is to become more aware of the users’ needs. On the one hand we have libraries which give access to a lot of information, offer courses in information literacy and strive to be a part of the learning environment. On the other hand we are not always certain of the needs of our users. If libraries want to improve the way they serve their users’ needs, they must innovate their services, facilities and courses by building upon what you could call ‘user logic’ and not upon classical ‘library logic’. ‘User logic’ is that which is meaningful for the user instead of what is traditionally meaningful for a library. Finding out what the users’ needs are, requires methods to study the users. In order to discover the shortest route from knowledge via idea to action, we looked for methods that can be employed by librarians or library information specialists. This article describes how 110 librarians and information specialists acquired such methods in four cities and in four days, by means of a workshop structured like a guided tour through the land of library users. The goal of the article is to give other libraries inspiration for ideas, concepts and concrete tools to study user behaviour and become more aware of the user’s needs for service. The article contains a description of the above-mentioned methods, valuable experiences from the workshop, a presentation of the concept and concrete tools, discussion of the concept of user logic and library services, and the seven principles for human-centred innovation in relation to libraries, a short list of studies carried out by librarians and discussion of further perspectives.https://test.openjournals.nl/liberquarterly/article/view/10628user-centered innovationuser needslibrary innovationanthropological methodsuser logicBrugerkaravanen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen Harbo
Thomas Vibjerg Hansen
spellingShingle Karen Harbo
Thomas Vibjerg Hansen
Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
user-centered innovation
user needs
library innovation
anthropological methods
user logic
Brugerkaravanen
author_facet Karen Harbo
Thomas Vibjerg Hansen
author_sort Karen Harbo
title Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
title_short Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
title_full Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
title_fullStr Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
title_full_unstemmed Getting to Know Library Users’ Needs — Experimental Ways to User-centred Library Innovation
title_sort getting to know library users’ needs — experimental ways to user-centred library innovation
publisher openjournals.nl
series Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
issn 2213-056X
publishDate 2012-04-01
description ‘Meeting the User’ is a programme committee under the Danish Electronic Research Library. As a development group at a national level we see our role as facilitating an innovative culture within academic libraries, focusing on users’ needs and the way libraries meet them. In collaboration with a consultancy firm, the committee organized a travelling workshop in four cities in 2010. The workshop introduced practical ways for library staff to get to know their users’ needs for services and was based on anthropological methods. The travelling workshop was part of a larger project called ‘A Journey of Discovery in Danish Library User Land’ (translated from Danish Brugerkaravanen), which also included a national thematic day, a blog and the publication of a method guide. There is an ongoing need for academic libraries to improve their services. One strategy is to become more aware of the users’ needs. On the one hand we have libraries which give access to a lot of information, offer courses in information literacy and strive to be a part of the learning environment. On the other hand we are not always certain of the needs of our users. If libraries want to improve the way they serve their users’ needs, they must innovate their services, facilities and courses by building upon what you could call ‘user logic’ and not upon classical ‘library logic’. ‘User logic’ is that which is meaningful for the user instead of what is traditionally meaningful for a library. Finding out what the users’ needs are, requires methods to study the users. In order to discover the shortest route from knowledge via idea to action, we looked for methods that can be employed by librarians or library information specialists. This article describes how 110 librarians and information specialists acquired such methods in four cities and in four days, by means of a workshop structured like a guided tour through the land of library users. The goal of the article is to give other libraries inspiration for ideas, concepts and concrete tools to study user behaviour and become more aware of the user’s needs for service. The article contains a description of the above-mentioned methods, valuable experiences from the workshop, a presentation of the concept and concrete tools, discussion of the concept of user logic and library services, and the seven principles for human-centred innovation in relation to libraries, a short list of studies carried out by librarians and discussion of further perspectives.
topic user-centered innovation
user needs
library innovation
anthropological methods
user logic
Brugerkaravanen
url https://test.openjournals.nl/liberquarterly/article/view/10628
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