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Creating (Library) Value in the Age of the Amazoogles University of British Columbia 2006 September 18 Stuart L. Weibel Senior Research Scientist, OCLC.

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Presentation on theme: "Creating (Library) Value in the Age of the Amazoogles University of British Columbia 2006 September 18 Stuart L. Weibel Senior Research Scientist, OCLC."— Presentation transcript:

1 Creating (Library) Value in the Age of the Amazoogles University of British Columbia 2006 September 18 Stuart L. Weibel Senior Research Scientist, OCLC Research Visiting Scholar, University of Washington iSchool

2 OCLC Research  Research and standardization: OCLC services Membership Library evangelism to the Web community  Metadata management  Knowledge organization  Content management  Interoperability  Systems & interaction design  ~30 employees

3 What do we mean by value?  The Library Business Model Make information look free to end users Aggregation of public resources for management, organization, and curation of public content  The SCOAP (of the) Mission Selection Collection Organization Access Preservation  Return on investment  Return of Patrons

4 Value Domains  Societal Long term, authoritative curation of the cultural, technical, and scientific assets of a society Information Neutrality Public Trust  Technical Systems for supporting SCOAP activities Bookshelves Cataloging (and catalogs) Electronic systems

5 Value Domains (continued)  Social: So-called Library 2.0 approaches Policies and services to promote community engagement Recommender Services (reader advisories) Ala Nancy Pearl? People who bought X, also bought Y LibraryThing Tagging – folksonomies: what value? Public Bibliography What is more important for discovery? A book review or a MARC record? Linking structure among first class objects is a central feature of the Web

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8 Extract (and exploit) value in structured data  Holdings are key  Enrich the data Amazon-like reviews Cover Art  Controlled vocabularies Terminology services Classification systems Folksonomies?  Authority control

9 Increase integration across boundaries  Make the OPAC irrelevant Solution of last resort The Green Screen of Boredom (or is that envy?)  “Weave libraries into the Web”

10 WorldCat in the Open Web  On these sites:  Include either of the following with your search terms:  Google "find in a library" (include phrasing quote marks) Google  Yahoo! site:worldcatlibraries.org (no space after colon) Yahoo!

11 Other WorldCat Partner Sites:  Abebooks (abebooks.com)abebooks.com  Alibris (alibris.com)alibris.com  Amazon.com (amazon.com)amazon.com  Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America (abaa.com)abaa.com  Biblio (biblio.com)biblio.com  BookPage (bookpage.com)bookpage.com  DirectTextbook (directtextbook.com)directtextbook.com  Google Scholar and Google Books (scholar.google.com, books.google.com)scholar.google.com books.google.com  Greenwood Publishing Group (greenwood.com)greenwood.com  HCI Bibliography (hcibib.org)hcibib.org  Windows Live Academic (academic.live.com)academic.live.com

12 Some general principles for technical value creation in a network environment  Reduce impediments to search  Increase integration across boundaries  Build Network Effect value  Extract (and exploit) value in structured data  Increase the efficiency of metadata creation  Promote participation Book reviews Linking Recommender systems

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18 Public Bibliography: The Tom Sawyer Strategy  Metadata is expensive  Cataloging data is important, costly, and ill-suited to public use (at least for some aspects of public use)  Mobilizing users to be participants in the creation of metadata (in the form of book reviews, recommender services, and linking, either explicit or inferred) is a potentially rich source of metadata and linking currency  Amazon is effective at this  LibraryThing has a strong and growing approach  Libraries and large cooperative cataloging agencies are thus far not doing so well.

19 Book Reviews: Desirable Characteristics of First Class Objects  Book Reviews are (should be) stand-alone First Class Objects: Harvestable Attributable Linked appropriately Permanently identified Curated

20 Link Currency  Linkages are an important currency on the Web: Who links to you Who do you link to  To rise in relevance rankings, library-managed links should be persistent and of one form: http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26160663&referer=brief_results http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=083890596X&qt=owc_search http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=083890596X http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26160663 Multiple identifiers are confusing, reduce ‘hackability’, and dilute link currency.

21 Libraries must compare favorably with related information experiences that our patrons expect:  Discovery and recommender services  Web 2.0 social network capabilities  Experiences of comparable commercial service providers  Last-mile delivery capability  Bookstore social experience Coffee-shop salons People to help us navigate the intricacies of a complicated knowledge space  We are offering an experience as well as a service

22 Stuart L. Weibel Visit me at: http://weibel-lines.typepad.com Contact me at: Stuart.Weibel@gmail.com Thank you for your attention


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