Andrew K. Pace: September 2009 Archives

Getting it right

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Since announcing OCLC's web-scale management services strategy, it seems that the term "web-scale" (or "webscale" depending on your editing preferences) has been catching on a bit.  

At first, some users diluted the meaning that Lorcan Dempsey had labored to establish in the library space.  And I will continue to argue that web-scale in the context of library automation--especially management systems--is a major sea-change.  5000 transactions per second may be no great shakes for Google, Amazon, and Twitter, but in library automation, we've never seen anything like this before.

Then web-scale began to catch on a bit, and I thought the library technology lexicon was beginning to change, but the more I saw and heard it used, the more I feared that we might be getting away from it's original meaning.  

Then I see that Mark Dahl has articulated so clearly what my colleagues and I have been discussing...what the library community in general has been discussing in many forums.   While experimenting with metaphors, trying to explain a major initiative in one sentence, and living in powerpoint (all while simultaneously keeping up with a massive product development effort), I was struck by one simple turn of phase:

 "it gets better the more people use it"

What a great way to sum things up.  While I've been grappling with analogies, cloud computing, the web-scale landscape, and library sea-changes (that's four metaphors in one sentence for those of you keeping track), Mark, I think, gets it right.  The only extension that I would add to Mark's distinctions about Web-scale is that they apply equally to library management systems and not just discovery-to-delivery.

We've begun testing of the web-scale circulation component.  Print and licensed acquisitions and license management are soon to follow.  I can't wait for more people to start using these services because I know they will only get better. 

What is our ROI?

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Welcome back guest-blogger, Matt Goldner.  

goldner_matt.jpg

ROI (Return on Investment) is not commonly used among librarians while it is a key issue for commercial business. This is somewhat natural given our different missions, libraries typically serve the public and businesses serve their shareholders. I have been wondering about a possible application of this same measure to libraries and where it might be applied.

Commercial businesses have over the last half a decade moved more and more of their business processes up to the cloud, e.g. as Web delivered applications. Areas that might have been unthinkable to have stored and maintained offsite are now routinely placed on external platforms. Examples are a business's customer relationship management system, HR systems, payroll systems. Why are they doing this, because it allows them to reduce their costs for these systems and re-allocate time and effort to moving their business forward thus enhancing the opportunity for a better ROI.

Why should this matter to libraries? On what would a library ROI be based? To answer the second question I would say it is how well we have served our constituency. Are they delighted and amazed with our service? Or are we the last ditch resort when they can't find what they need elsewhere.

As to why it should matter if we are spending too much of our financial resources on maintaining infrastructure we are reducing our opportunity to increase the value of our services to our constituency. So perhaps we have something to learn here from commercial businesses who have found value in reducing local infrastructure and moving it to the cloud. It could give libraries the opportunity to increase a good measure of return on investment, delighting and amazing our constituencies.

About the Author

Andrew K. Pace

I am Executive Director for Networked Library Services at OCLC. I am also a past President of LITA. On occasion, I am known for pontificating "on stage, in writing, and via the web" on a variety of issues important to libraries.

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