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Missionstatements.com

http://www.missionstatements.com/company_mission_statements.html

Company

A company’s mission statement is a constant reminder to its employees of why the company exists and what the founders envisioned when they put their fame and fortune at risk to breathe life into their dreams. Woe to the company that loses sight of its Mission Statement for it has taken the first step on the slippery slope to failure.

Who Are Your Competitors?

Library Rentals?Who are your competitors? Umm … David … we don’t have competitors … we’re a public library. I think you DO indeed have competitors. You probably have more competitors than you ever did, for that matter.

Think about it for a sec.

If I want a book, where can I go? The public library… unless it’s a popular book. Then I’m put on a waiting list. Or, I could just visit Barnes & Noble or Amazon and buy the book. I could even hang out at a Barnes & Noble for awhile, and read it there without buying. And drink a latte while reading, for that matter.

How about movies? Well, some libraries don’t carry blockbuster hits, so there’s really no competition there – come get your old documentaries here!

But my library carries new popular movies. And we have competition. The local Blockbuster and Hollywood Video rental stores are certainly alternatives. Also those Redbox movie dealies that are installed a couple places around Topeka. And Netflix. Which delivers to your door for a small monthly fee. You can even rent a movie from iTunes. Why spend any money? I can simply visit Hulu or YouTube for a quick video fix.

Music? Same thing. iTunes, blip.fm, last.fm, Pandora. Etc.

Gaming – surely that’s something we have down better. Possibly. Unless you have a mega-church in town. They probably have a better gaming setup than you.

Hmm … reference. That’s what we do well. Unless you venture online (see previous posts). Here, we are usually the last resort – people go to friends, family, and online services before us (read the OCLC Perceptions report for more info on that).

OK – so libraries have competition. What can you do about that? Here are some thoughts – please add more:

  • What do you do better than everyone else? Focus on that. Prioritize that.
  • You’re a natural community gathering place. Focus on your community. Feed it. Grow it.
  • Ask people why they don’t use your library. Use that information to improve your services.
  • Find your largest population segment of “potential patrons” and focus on growing patrons there.
  • Don’t focus on yourself or your stuff – instead, turn your focus on your customers and their needs.
  • Maybe it’s something as simple as rearranging your stuff so normal people can actually find things. We can do better than LC or Dewey call number order. Really.
  • Work on improving the experience at your library – both in the library and digitally.

What are you doing to compete for your patrons’ attention? And … since it’s a competition – what can we do to win?

On Mission

toon

E N F P

E N F P

Seeing Your Mission Clearly with Wordle.net

Idea: Wordle to analyze text of statements of purpose: mission, core values, goals, interviews, – using the tool in analysis of missions of GREAT organizations – innovative libraries and entrepreneurial organizations.  How to great organizations see themselves?  Who do they wish to be?

Libraries have competitors in a marketplace.  Competition, not for the dollar, but for efficiencies of access and service.

Missions and Wordle … interesting mashups occur.

(Tasha Saecker, at “Sites and Soundbytes” – Carolyn Foote at School Library Journal – 07/01/2009 – Megan at Re:Generations – have had the same thought .. nothing is original .. Note to self: Get an Idea … Blog it Quick!)

Ken Haycock (SJSU) – Library Leadership: Learning from the Business Bestsellers

http://slisweb.sjsu.edu

Videocast

“Now Discover Your Strengths” - Marcus Buckingham

- Focus on strengths not remedying weaknesses
- We spend too much time and energy with bottom feeders.. focus on & support top performers
- Self-awareness of strengths

“Good to Great” - Jim Collins

- First Who? then What?.. hire for who first .. not specific job
- Right People on Right Bus in Right Seats
- What are key success factors for the organization .. need to decide upon, agree upon it
- Level 5 Leadership

“Good to Great and the Social Sector” – Jim Collins

- Replace Profit with Mission
- Culture of “niceness” inhibits candor about “brutal facts”
- Different metrics (Measuring Output .. not Input)

“Leading Change” - John Kotter

- Developing a sense of urgency
- Establish a guiding coallition
- Generate short-term wins
- Deal with issues – don’t ignore – teaches its not important

“Five Dysfunctions of A Team” - Patrick Lencioni

“Launching a Leadership Revolution” - Chris Brady, Orrin Woodward

- Succession planning
- Leaders who create leaders

“Influencer: The Power to Change Anything” – Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, David Maxfield, Ron McMillan, Al Switzler

- Talking influences no one
- Don’t try to influence everyone .. focus on direct reports and opinion leaders

“The Tipping Point” – Malcom Gladwell

“Made to Stick” – Chip & Dan Heath

- Communication and the art of making things unforgettable

“Know-How: the 8 Skills That Separate People Who Perform from Those Who Don’t” – Ram Charan

“The Four Obsessions of an Extraordinary Executive” – Patrick Lencioni

“Seven Habits of Highly Effective People” – Stephen Covey

“A Class with Drucker: The Lost Lessons” - Peter Drucker

- “What everybody knows is frequently wrong”

“Emotional Intelligence at Work” – Hendrie Weisinger

“Forces for Good: The Six Practices of High Impact Non-profits” - Leslie Crutchfield & Heather McLeod-Grant

“The Future of Management” – Gary Hamel

“Five Minds for  the Future” - Howard Gardner

“The Speed of Trust” – Stephen Covey

“Microtrends” – Mark Penn

“Getting Things Done” – David Allen

“The 4-Hour Workweek” – Timothy Ferriss

Tina Seelig ; The Art of Teaching Entrepreneurship and Innovation – Podcast

Tina Seelig ; Stanford Technology Ventures Program – Podcast

What I Wish I Knew When I Was Twenty” – her book

Every problem is an opportunity. The bigger the problem the opportunity

Entrepreneurship Competition

It was my idea first. Ever get…

It was my idea first. Ever get a brilliant idea and before publishing it, someone gets the same brilliant idea. Answer .. blog it quick!

Sabbatical Pod and Video Cast – Resources

(these references are incomplete)

Video Casts

Clayton Christiensen – Disruptive Innovation and The Way We Learning (“Disrupting Class. 2009) – WGBH Boston

Jim Collins – Charlie Rose – “Good to Great”

Columbia U – Scholarly Comm – Harvard Open Access Initiatives – Jim Neal (Columbia) / Stuart Scheiber (Harvard)

John Willinsky: The Quality of Open Scholarship: What Follows from Open? – Recording of Presentation at ELPUB2008. Open Scholarship: Authority, Community, and Sustainability in the Age of Web 2.0 – 12th International Conference on Electronic Publishing held in Toronto, Canada 25-27 June 2008. http://connect.scholarsportal.info/p75467897/

San Jose State Lib. School Colloquia

  • Ken Haycock – Library Leadership – Examining Pop Bus. Lit.
  • David Tyckoson – The Future of the Library

Borgman – Scholarship in the Digital Age (Columbia Univ.)

Open Access: the Future of scientific publishing, BioMed Central
Series:

  • Digital Campus
  • Harvard Business IdeaCasts

Podcasts:

Interview: Karla Hahn – Director of Office Scholalry Communication @ ARL (Interviewed at CNI 2008 Spring Taskforce Meeting) – w/Gerry Bayne

Interview: Sarah Thomas – formerly Cornell University Librarian – now Director of Oxford University Library Services – Bodelian Library, Oxford UK.  (Nelinet Meeting, Southborough, MA, March 28, 2007)

With a Little Help from Our Freinds: Building Collaborative Leadership fromt eh Ground Up – Series: “A World of Possibilities”

Taking Account: Recount – Ideas

Taking Account:

Mission Comments from:

Books: OMM; GTG; GTG Social; True North; Leadership Ensemble  + those to come

Conferences/Projects:

  1. ACRL
  2. Greensboro
  3. CIT
  4. David Lewis
  5. SUNYLA
  6. NYLINK: Implementing and Managing Change …
  7. 2.0 Tools
  8. Bergren
  9. Publishing

Management / Leadership / Entrepreneurship / Thoughts

  • Mission, Vision, Goals
  • MBTI
  • Flatten Orgs
  • GTG
  • Authentic Leadership
  • Competition

Visits and Biblioteca

  • Visted: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek – Bavarian State Library: Munich Bavarian State Library: Located in Munich, this large library was named Germany’s library of the year last year. It’s part of a nationwide program called Libraries-Link which serves as an access portal to all of Germany’s libraries making it easy to find information on any library. Additionally, it has partnered with Google to scan and make public many works that are public domain. The library is home to many rare books, numerous online databases and journals and a fast and nationwide resource search program. The library is working to digitize much of the rarer elements of its huge collection so that those within Germany and around the world can enjoy them from anywhere.
  • Larry Nash White: Flat World Libraries – see Biblioteca de Santiago Biblioteca de Santiago
    Santiago Times
    (2004)
    Part of Larry Nash White’s – Competition Presentation
    Libraries and Life Blog Post

10 Days in Germany/Austria .. …

10 Days in Germany/Austria .. on my way home .. hope i left a clean house

In Munich .. didnt sleep on th…

In Munich .. didnt sleep on the plane .. but only here for a day … Hofbrauhaus or sleep? Yikes

Trip to Bavarian State Library – Bayerische Staatsbibliothek

Traditionally innovative – 450 Years of the Bavarian State Library

Fassade der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek von rechts; Copyright: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Munich celebrates. In the Bavarian capital the year 2008 – at least within the city’s thriving library network – marks a very special birthday. The Bavarian State Library (Bayerische Staatsbibliothek) is celebrating 450th anniversary.

The history of the present-day Bavarian State Library (Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek, BSB) began in 1558 – as the court library of the Wittelsbach Duke Albrecht V. “The newly founded library was far more than a mere expression of royal grandeur and self-promotion; together with the Antikensammlung (Collection of Antiques) and the Kunstkammer (Cabinet of Arts and Curios), Duke Albrecht wanted it to provide a cultural cosmos of that era,” explains Rolf Giebel, the General Director of the BSB.

In the “Cultural Cosmos of the Renaissance”

The foundation stone for this project was laid by the purchase of the valuable Oriental library of Johann Albrecht Widmanstetter. In 1571, as the next big step towards creating a cultural cosmos, Duke Albrecht acquired Johann Jakob Fugger’s library, comprising over 10,000 volumes, which was one of the largest collections of that time.

On the occasion of its 450th anniversary, the Bavarian State Library is now displaying the impressive stock from its founding era. In the jubilee exhibition “Cultural Cosmos of the Renaissance” it shows Ethiopian and Armenian manuscripts, Italian incunabula, early prints from France and Spain, illuminated Korans, exquisitely illustrated books on tournaments and works on the techniques of war, architectural tracts as well as books on coins and heraldry.

Giovanni Boccaccio, Des cas des nobles hommes et femmes, Aubervilliers/Tours, 1458-1465, (Cod.gall. 6, fol. 2v): The trial at Vendôme; from the exhibition The Cultural Cosmos of Renaissance. The Foundation of the Bavarian State Library; Bavarian State Library from  7.3. to 1.6.2008; Copyright: Bayerische StaatsbibliothekHeinrich Arboreus, celestial globe, Munich, 1575, painted by Hans Donauer the Elder, frame made by Hans Aernhofer, mechanics and reinforcement by Ulrich Schniep; Detail showing the Pisces and Aries signs of the zodiac, and also the constellations Pegasus, Andromeda, Cetus, Triangulum, Perseus and Cassiopeia; from the exhibition The Cultural Cosmos of Renaissance. The Foundation of the Bavarian State Library; Bavarian State Library from  7.3. to 1.6.2008; Copyright: Bayerische StaatsbibliothekArmenian Tetraevangelium, Grner, Cilicia, 1278; (Cod.armen. 1, Bl. 226r): Decorative page at the beginning of the Gospel of John; from the exhibition The Cultural Cosmos of Renaissance. The Foundation of the Bavarian State Library; Bavarian State Library from  7.3. to 1.6.2008; Copyright: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
TV SymbolSlide Show: 450 Years of the Bavarian State Library


A glimpse into the treasure chamber

Impressive as these gems from the first acquisition years are, they almost disappear in the abundance of treasures which the library acquired in the following decades. Some 92,000 manuscripts are currently stored only in the depots within the Library itself. Moreover, with over 20,000 titles it boasts the world’s largest collection of incunabula.

Spread over the entire anniversary year, the Library, affectionately referred to as “Stabi” by its users, will be inviting the public to smaller exhibitions in which more precious gems from its treasure chamber can be admired: splendid illuminated choir books, atlases of the “Mannheimer Palatina”, books by painters and artists, illustrated artist-autographs and the Ottheinrich Bible, the most spectacular new acquisition.

Multimedia Services

Yet even in this anniversary year the Bavarian State Library is by no means presenting itself merely as the judicious preserver of a cultural heritage that dates back thousands of years. As one of the most important international research libraries it is also the multimedia information service provider for the sciences and an innovative force in the field of digital services.

At the beginning of April 2008 the Centre for Electronic Publishing (Zentrum für Elektronisches Publizieren, ZEP) was opened here, which combines the activities of the Bavarian State Library in the field of genuine electronic publications. “With this,” says Rolf Griebel, “we are supporting the creation of a sustainable infrastructure for the operation and permanent accessibility of open-access publications in the sphere of humanities.”

Reading room of the Bavarian State Library with gallery; Copyright: Bayerische StaatsbibliothekStockroom of the Bavarian State Library; Copyright: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek

Robots at work

When it comes to the retro-digitisation of holdings, the Munich Library has long been one of the trailblazers in Germany. Last autumn the first project in the sphere of mass digitisation was launched under the auspices of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft). By the end of 2009 almost 37,000 German-language print works from the years 1518 to 1600 are to be digitised and, in a second step, to be made accessible, free of charge, via the internet – a total of over 7.5 million pages.

Anyone wishing to gain insight into how the BSB copes with such masses of sensitive books should go to one of the Scan-Robot Days that are taking place in the anniversary year. In the Library’s Fürstensaal leading manufacturers will present live their latest cutting-edge devices and demonstrate the various methods of automated scanning. This companies’ presentation will be accompanied by a series of lectures.

An imposing setting

The fact that the guided tour “Behind the Scenes of the Bavarian State Library”, which i.a. allows visitors a glimpse of the book conveyor system and of the “digitisation street”, is booked out many months in advance shows how great the general interest is in the innovative achievements of the State Library. There was also a very lively interest in the Day of the Open Door (on 11th October) when the staff, comprising some 700 employees, granted insight into the operation of a modern-day library.

The jubilee year will end on a spectacular note with a concert by the Tölz Boys’ Choir. For the evening concert will take place in the magnificent stairwell of the Library building in Ludwigstraße. Anyone entering the Library for the first time is inevitably awestruck by the 60 huge, broad marble steps of the main stairwell. Equally awe-inspiring is the success story of the Bavarian State Library, which has been accommodated here since the mid-19th century – and which, with its now over 9.25 million volumes, has developed in the course of the last 450 years into one of the most important European universal libraries.

Dagmar Giersberg
works as a freelance journalist in Bonn

Translation: Heather Moers
Copyright: Goethe-Institut, Online-Redaktion

Any questions about this article? Please write to us!
online-redaktion@goethe.de
May 2008

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SUNYLA 2009: Using Strategic Planning & User Feedback to Reestablish Your Library

(New) Clarkson University Library Director (Michelle L. Young)

Director .. dont offer tenure for that position .. she has an “Evergreen contract”

Director Goal: To set in motion the University Libraries’ transformation towards excelling academic excellence through the implementation of programs, policies and strategies geared towards the innovative vision of libraries in the 20th century.

Notes:

  • Risk Tolerant
  • Solicit feedback .. Expose and deal with the issues
  • Change .. librarians not longer work evenings and weekends – grads for ref.
  • User survey – also used for Middle States
  1. What did users expect from an outstanding academic library?
  2. What were their experiences ant Clarkson University

Handout has vision values and mission statements

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SUNYLA 2009: Using Resources Wisely

Using Resources Wisely – Rich Dreifuss (Geneseo)

OCLC Report on Online Catalogs
 
Catalog Reconstruction (Aleph 500 Cat)

  • large team
  • good management support
  • took 6 months (met every 3 or weeks) – subcommittees did work
  • used U Albany usability study
  • book “Benchmarking for Best Practices”
  • borrowed from U Albany (search options)
  • Notre Dame (search forms)
  • Duke (tabs)
  • MIT (two-way sortable columns)
  • used a wiki .. collecting ideas, ranking priority, process notes, changes, collect documents