Mobile technologies in libraries: information sharing event

Many thanks to those of you who attended the mobile technologies in libraries event in Birmingham earlier this week.

Over 50 attendees joined us for a keynote from James Clay, eight lightning talks from a variety of different libraries, and two workshop sessions (from a choice of eight). Myself and the organising team would like to thank everyone who got involved in delivering a talk or facilitating a breakout session.

Lots of materials are being added to the Lanyrd page from the event, and we’ll continue to add more resources from the day including presentations, blog posts and other useful links. We’ll also be blogging about the breakout sessions with a brief overview of the session and any relevant resources.

We’re conducting a feedback survey and so far the feedback is mainly positive, with lots of examples of ideas being taken back to workplaces to be taken forward in other libraries which is fantastic. There have also been some useful suggestions for ways the event could have been improved and other areas people would like to attend events on. There are a number of future events on mobile technologies that we know are being planned, so we’ll highlight relevant events on the blog that you may be interested in – subscribe via the links in the sidebar from the blog homepage to receive blog updates.

Please also keep an eye on the m-libraries community website and join in the discussions on there – we got some useful feedback on the day about this and we hope to be able to develop it further to support the community’s needs. What sort of information do you need in order to support mobile technology developments in your library? How would you like to receive it? Is there anything you’d like to contribute? There’s a feedback mechanism on the site so please do let us know what you think and if you have any suggestions for improvement.

Mobile technologies in libraries: information sharing event

The information sharing event organised by the project was fully booked in less than 24 hours and we’ll be welcoming 60 attendees to Birmingham on Tuesday 8th May – many apologies for those of you on the waitlist who didn’t manage to get a place.

In addition to our keynote speaker, James Clay, we have 17 other speakers and facilitators who will be providing us with lightning talks and breakout discussion sessions throughout the day. The full programme is as follows (attendees will receive printed copies on the day):

Tech toolbox

Thanks to the Open University who have kindly offered to provide the use of mobile devices, we’ll have a tech toolbox area with different gadgets to take a look at. This will be available during the breakout sessions as well as during breaks so that you can get hands on experience with different mobile devices and technologies (including apps) and consider how they could be utilised or supported in your library.

Resources from the day

Some of the resources are already available to view on the event Lanyrd page, and we encourage attendees to continue to add coverage to the page including photos, blog posts, presentations and notes.

Following from afar

If you’re unable to attend but would like to follow the event, we’ll be encouraging attendees to tweet using the #mlibs hashtag so please do set up a saved search to follow relevant tweets. We’ve also set up a Twitter list of attendees which you may wish to subscribe to. If you want to send in a question to the event during the day, please use the #mlibs hashtag and ideally include @joeyanne, @ostephens or @evidencebase in the tweet so one of the organisers can pick it up.

Arriving the day before?

If you’re arriving on Monday (or live in the local area) and would like to meet up the previous evening for food and/or drinks, we’ll be in All Bar One on Newhall Street from around 6.30pm. If you’re planning to join us, please email me so we have an idea of numbers to let the venue know.

Looking forward to seeing some of you next week! :)

Mobile Leeds Met Library – developing and promoting our mobile provision

This guest blog post is from Debbie Morris from Leeds Metropolitan University and discusses their research into user needs and their subsequent plans for supporting mobile technologies. Over to Debbie…

Increasingly, Library users at Leeds Metropolitan University are requesting all kinds of mobile access, from expecting that our e-books and digital readings can be viewed on a e-book reader (sounds obvious, opens a huge can of worms) to asking if their timetable is available to view on a smartphone (yes it is!).

What do users want via mobile?

Early in 2012 we conducted a short online survey about mobile access. Over 500 of our users responded.  They told us that the top 5 services they would like to access via a mobile device were:

  • Timetables
  • Emails
  • Virtual Learning Environment
  • University Portal
  • Library Catalogue / Account

Key findings of the survey found:

  • many students feel that an iPhone/Android app is necessary and that the university should already have this feature;
  • more focus needs to be put on advertising the mobile services we already have and how to use/access them (the majority of respondents said accessing timetables and emails would be of great benefit to them – these are services we already have available);
  • when creating any kind of mobile access, focus need to be placed on iPhone, Android and Blackberry;
  • there is an overwhelming feeling against charging for any type of mobile application.

Quick wins

I’m sure we are not alone in needing to look at cost-effective ways of delivering mobile provision.  With this in mind, we have started to work on some quick wins that will make improvements at low/no cost and will only take a short time to develop:

  • produce some custom Library webpages suitable for mobile access/install an open source CMS for mobile access and use this as a portal to all other Library Mobile enabled services;
  • install and configure a low-cost library system API to utilise free Library mobile apps;
  • list journals/databases with mobile access on the new Library mobile site, begin to build each subject area a mobile page;
  • increase the promotion of current services which already provide mobile access.

Long term plans

For the longer term, we are now connecting with colleagues across the University to ensure that our mobile plans complement the direction of the pan-University mobile strategy.

For further information please contact the Project Manager – Adam Watson (@adlab/a.a.watson@leedsmet.ac.uk) or Debbie Morris (@debbiemn/d.morris@leedsmet.ac.uk).

I’ll leave you with a word-cloud summary of responses from our users, when asked, ‘What could we do to improve access from mobile devices for you?’ (my favourite is –buymeaniphone!)

Tag cloud

What could we do to improve access from mobile devices for you? tag cloud

Registration for m-libraries international conference now open

M-libraries conference logo

M-libraries conference logo

The registration for the m-libraries international conference on 24-26th September at The Open University is now open and the early bird rate applies until 10th June 2012.

Fees

Early bird fees – 18th April 2012 – 10th June 2012
Pre-conference workshop – £75
full conference – £325
Conference day 1 only – £155
Conference day 2 only – £155

Ordinary fees – 11th June 2012 – 7th September 2012
Pre-conference workshop – £75
full conference – £375
Conference day 1 only – £180
Conference day 2 only – £180

More details and booking information is available from the conference registration page.

Invitation to join m-libraries online community

As part of the JISC m-library community support project and based on the feedback provided from our survey at the beginning of the project, we have created an online community for anyone interested in mobile technologies in libraries. This is an experimental development and we would like to invite you to join the community and try it out, and leave us feedback on what you think – whether or not you think it is useful, how it could be improved, or alternative ideas.

The community website is available at: http://www.m-libraries.info/community

Community website screenshot

Community website screenshot (click image to go to community)

You can view information in the community without logging in, though to contribute you’ll need to set up an account which only takes a couple of minutes. Once you have logged in you can join any groups that interest you and choose to receive updates if you wish, either by RSS or by email.

Please feel free to jump straight in – comment on existing content or create your own discussion topics in the forums. Maybe you’d like to share innovative ideas you have been trying at your library, or you have a specific problem or issue that you’d like to discuss with others, or perhaps you’d just like advice on where to start with implementing mobile technologies in your library.

We would really welcome your feedback on the community site and what you would like for the future. There is a feedback option on the left hand side of the site – please do use it to leave ideas, problems, questions or praise. There is also a feedback discussion topic in the General group which you may wish to use.

We’re looking forward to welcoming you to the site!

Using SMS to reach students at Birmingham City University Library

This guest post is written by Chris Langham, Deputy Systems Librarian at Birmingham City University. It is also published on the BCU eLibrary blog.

In May 2008, we started sending out Library SMS Notifications at Birmingham City University. Initially this was just for library material that was 18 days overdue, but has since been extended to include a range of other notifications. The types of notifications which we now send by SMS include:

1. Items 8 days overdue
2. Items 18 days overdue
3. Reserved material ready to be collected
4. Physical Inter Library Loan ready to be collected.

SMS gets through to students

While this service was primarily targeted at students, any borrower with a mobile number in their library record can be sent these notifications.

In February 2009, we started sending SMS notifications for library material which was 8 days overdue. Following this change, we saw a drop in the number of 18 day overdue emails of between 25% and 50%. Library material was getting back into circulation sooner and students were paying less in Library fines. After we started sending out SMS informing borrowers that their reservation was ready to be collected, we found that there were fewer uncollected reservations and reservations were spending less time on the shelf waiting to be collected.

The service has been almost universally popular among students and there have been very few drawbacks to sending SMS. Although, the cost of sending SMS inhibits us using it for sending other reminders, such as sending an SMS reminder on the date that the item is due. Another concern is the accuracy of student mobile phone numbers. Students give mobile numbers at the start of their course or on course application, and they don’t always inform their Faculty when they get a new mobile number.

Is anyone else using SMS in this way? Any feedback to share?

Booking now open for Mobile technologies in libraries: information sharing event

The booking is now open for this free information sharing event on Tuesday 8th May 2012 in central Birmingham organised by the JISC m-library community support project for all library practitioners interested in how mobile technologies can be utilised by libraries.

Further details available below and at the event registration page: http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/event/3016555599


Purpose of event
To encourage skills transfer and knowledge exchange across library and technology practitioners interested in developing m-library initiatives.

Target audience
Library practitioners (e.g. librarians, developers, managers, IT staff, e-learning staff) currently working with mobile devices/technologies or interested in doing so in future.

Overview
This information sharing event organised by the JISC m-libraries community support project will include speakers (including keynote speaker James Clay), workshops, discussions, networking opportunities and a chance for hands-on experience of mobile devices and technologies.

The event will be relatively informal, with a selection of morning and afternoon workshops to be decided by attendees. Please be prepared to talk to other attendees about your activities or plans for m-libraries – you’ll even be given the opportunity to present a lightning talk or facilitate a session if you like.

Learning outcomes
By attending this event you will:

  • learn more about the different ways libraries can utilise mobile technologies
  • have the opportunity to examine for yourself some of the different mobile devices and technologies your library may want to use
  • be able to contribute to the event by sharing your own library’s initiatives and plans for m-library development
  • take away ideas of how to progress m-library development in your library whatever your budget
  • network, build connections with and learn from others interested in utilising mobile technologies in libraries

Date
Tuesday 8th May 2012

Venue
Maple House (central Birmingham)

Getting to Maple House
The Maple House venue is located in the Birmingham City Centre location of Corporation Street overlooking Old Square. Just minutes from New Street, Snow Hill and Moor Street stations it is also conveniently located for a number of major bus routes. Parking is also available at a number of NCP car parks locally. For more information see Maple House directions guide.

Booking
Places are limited, please book your place on the event registration website: http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/event/3016555599

Cambridge Judge Business School mobile app

Meg Westbury

Meg Westbury

This post is a guest blog post from Meg Westbury, Projects Officer for Cambridge Judge Business School Information and Library Services. She tweets at @meg_librarian and blogs at Library Pie.

Founded in 1990, the Cambridge Judge Business School is a world-class business school offering a wide-range of graduate and undergraduate degrees in business and finance. Information & Library Services seek to support the mission of the school by offering a wide variety of electronic and print resources, along with regular workshops in new and social media and experimenting with innovative ways of marketing its services. Over to Meg…

We want a mobile app – library specific or wider organisation app?

In the summer of 2011, we decided to make a library app.  We had just revamped our blog/website, but were not happy with how the site looked on mobile devices.  We thought that an app would be the best way to deliver mobile content, as we reflected that we personally didn’t do much on our smart phones if there wasn’t an app for it!

We planned to develop the app separately from the business school at large, as we thought it would be done quicker that way, but political and collaborative pressures led us in the autumn to team up with other departments to create a school-wide app, one component of which would be for library services.  The app committee that was formed consisted of people from IT, Information & Library Services and staff from the school’s various programmes.

Who is our audience?

From day one, the app has been thought of as being for current students enrolled at the school.  Another approach could have been to make an app for external audiences, which largely presented information about the school’s programmes.  But we wanted to make the app super useful – a Swiss army knife of sorts – that would help students get to information and services they needed quickly.

What do they want?

Initial focus groups

To understand students’ needs, we set up two focus groups to have discussions about what ideally students would want out of an app.  We asked for volunteers for these groups, and we gave them lunch: an approach which yielded two focus groups of about 5 students each, with representation across the school’s programmes.

At the focus groups, we tried to make questions open ended, concentrating on asking about what information students regularly needed to find and what they currently found difficult about the process.  The results were helpful though predictable.  Students mainly felt frustrated about all the different places they needed to go for information (e.g., the school intranet, the library portal, their course VLE, etc.).  With an app – i.e., with a single press of a button – they wanted all their most important information at their fingertips, especially information about timetables, library services, school events and room bookings.

The focus groups were helpful and gave us a starting point for discussions about what the app should do overall, but we still didn’t feel we had a strong sense of what to prioritise and put into the first release.  The focus groups generated a lot of ideas – too many really for the first version of the app –  and we weren’t sure how the larger student body would rank those ideas.

Wider survey

So in January 2012, we developed a general survey for students about what ideally they’d like in an app.  After asking about what programme they were in and about their usage of mobile devices, we asked them to brainstorm how an app could help them and then, in the next question, listed all the suggestions from the focus groups and had the students rank them using a point system.  (We offered 3-£20 vouchers to Amazon as an incentive to complete the survey.)

137 students completed the survey, representing 23% of the students.  53% of the respondents were from the MBA and EMBA programmes, with the remainder from the various Masters, MPhil and PhD programmes.

In terms of mobile device usage, 60% said they use Apple iPhones or iPads, and another 18% use Androids.  12% use Blackberries and 1% use Windows phones.  The remaining respondents use other devices such as the Nokia Symbian.

Not surprisingly, up-to-date information about time tables was first in both the suggestion- and ranking-portions of the survey.  Not-so-predictably, however, was how high library services ranked.  In the free-suggestion part of the survey, library services were the second-most frequently requested feature for the app (tied with information about school news and events).  In the ranking part of the survey, 4 of the top 10 features prioritised by students were aspects of library services.  Wow.

What library services did students ask for?  The top requests were the ability to

  • Access ebooks the library offers, especially those on reading lists
  • Access mobile-friendly research databases
  • Request and renew books
  • Ask a librarian a question

We at Information & Library Services were pleased (ok, chuffed!) with the results, not least because they showed the school that we are not an antiquated little department, quietly guarding our dusty collection of books (which is how we seem to be perceived by some parts of the school).  The students clearly said that along with other crucial information they regularly need, library services were an absolute necessity for their success as students.

So what now?

We are now working intently to have a version of the app ready for the new students in September 2012.  We are proud that the first release will feature library services so prominently.  It feels like a nice reward for all of the outreach, marketing and good public service we’ve done over the past years.  The students very clearly value our resources.

Report on current m-library activity

The report based on the findings of the fact finding survey we ran at the end of last year is now available. You can view it embedded below (or in full screen mode using the bottom right icon), or you can visit the report on Slideshare to download a copy.

 

The executive summary gives an overview of the findings:

In order to gain a clearer overview of the current landscape with regards to mobile technology in libraries, Evidence Base undertook an online survey as part of the M-Library Community Support Project1. The survey was live from November 2011 until January 2012 and open to all. It was promoted on numerous library listservs, blogs and on Twitter.

There were 188 responses to the survey, primarily from the academic library sector (64%). The majority of respondents were from the UK (66%), with other responses from the USA (22%), Australia (6%), Canada (4%), Europe, Africa, Ireland, South America and Asia.

Many of the respondents’ libraries either already have m-library initiatives (63%) or are planning them in future (90%). Common uses at present included:

  • Mobile catalogue
  • Mobile website
  • QR codes
  • Supporting use of mobile services/apps
  • Mobile app for library
  • Institutional mobile app
  • Mobile devices to support roving reference/staff demonstrations
  • Loaning mobile devices
  • SMS communication about borrower record (due dates etc.)

Many commented that their library was interested in further developing their support for mobile technologies and are either in the planning stage at present or evaluating the potential that such developments could offer. There were also a number watching developments closely but adopting a wait and see approach.

Analysis of the survey highlighted the fact that at present there are a number of barriers and challenges facing libraries which are prohibiting or delaying implementation of m-library initiatives. Some of these are specific to individual institutions, whilst some are common across a number of libraries. The most common barriers/challenges were lack of technical support, not knowing enough about how to utilise mobile technologies, and it not being a priority for the library or wider organisation.

Respondents would like more information and case studies sharing experiences from libraries who have already implemented m-library initiatives, reviews and how to guidance, and a central hub for m-library information. Suggestions for an m-library community included a place to find and share experience and best practice, technical advice and support (including open source software support), and general help and guidance.

The information from the survey has informed the m-library community support project greatly; it has provided information for potential case studies and helped shape development of the community website. Ongoing consultation is an important element of the project; please subscribe to the m-library community mailing list to receive updates on how you can be involved.

Fourth International M-Libraries Conference: call for papers now open

This post is a guest blog post written by Gill Needham, one of the organising team for the m-libraries conference at The Open University on 24th-26th September.

Gill is Associate Director, Information Management & Innovation at The Open University. She provides leadership for the teams in the Library which are responsible for acquiring and managing content, for the development of skills and services and for research and innovation. She is interested in digital libraries, learning technologies, digital and information literacies, evidence based practice and strategic planning. She has a particular research interest in the delivery of library content and services to mobile devices. Over to Gill…

M-libraries conference logo

M-libraries conference logo

I would like to draw the attention of followers of this blog to the Call for Papers for the forthcoming Fourth International M-Libraries Conference which is being hosted at the Open University from 24–26 September 2012.

Just to give you a bit of background – the M-Libraries conferences started here in 2007 as a partnership between the OU Library service and Athabasca University in Canada. We were both experimenting with mobile services and it was all very new. We had no idea how much interest there would be, but in the event we attracted delegates from 25 countries and it was very exciting indeed. Since then we have held conferences in Vancouver and Brisbane and the interest and number of papers submitted has grown exponentially.

One of the most interesting aspects of this movement (and I do think of it as a movement) is the fact that in many aspects it is colleagues in developing countries who are leading the way. The ubiquitous nature of mobile telephony in regions where internet access is patchy and unreliable has led to some of the most exciting and innovative developments in mobile delivery. So m-libraries are truly international – the papers from the Brisbane conference (the book has just been published by Facet ….) include stories from China, South Africa, Fiji, India, Japan, US, Australia, Canada, UK, Spain, Ireland, New Zealand and Germany.

This year we are planning to experiment a little with the format of the conference. As well as selecting some challenging speakers, we are allocating substantial amounts of time for discussion, reflection and hands-on experimentation. The world has moved on apace since the first conference in 2007 – what was once new and experimental is now the day to day – hence the Conference strapline ‘From margin to mainstream: how mobile technologies are transforming lives and libraries’. As we say on our website, it is now time for us, as an international community, ‘to review achievements to date and consider the creative challenges and opportunities ahead’. Please do visit our site and respond to the Call for papers. Contact us for details at m-libraries-conference@open.ac.uk.


Further information on the Call for Papers

We are seeking lively contributions on the following broad themes:

  • Transformation – of services, learners or providers
  • Inspiration – innovative projects which challenge current thinking and practice
  • Implementation – the experience of implementing new mobile technologies

Papers will be short – 15 minutes for the presentation plus time for discussion/questions.

Please submit your abstracts (up to 300 words) by 15th of March 2012 to m-libraries-conference@open.ac.uk

These will be subject to peer review and authors will be notified by 26th of April 2012.