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Trendspotting

Trendspotting IV: Searching for the Best Search Tools Harry Jack Gray Conference Center, University of Hartford Friday, January 9, 2009. Trendspotting. Current themes in Library automation. Marshall Breeding Director for Innovative Technologies and Research Vanderbilt University

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Trendspotting

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  1. Trendspotting IV: Searching for the Best Search Tools Harry Jack Gray Conference Center, University of Hartford Friday, January 9, 2009 Trendspotting Current themes in Library automation Marshall BreedingDirector for Innovative Technologies and Research Vanderbilt University http://staffweb.library.vanderbilt.edu/breeding http://www.librarytechnology.org/

  2. Summary • We are bringing back Marshall Breeding of Vanderbilt University, who will follow up on his November presentation in Middletown, sharing early returns from his Perceptions 2008 International Library Automation Survey. Check out Marshall's article in the November/December 2008 issue of Library Technology Reports on Open Source ILS.

  3. Perceptions Reports • First survey conducted in late 2007 • Perceptions 2007: an international survey of library automation • http://www.librarytechnology.org/perceptions2007.pl

  4. 2008 Survey • 1320 (so far) • 48 Countries

  5. ILS Product Satisfaction

  6. Company Satisfaction

  7. Support Satisfaction

  8. Company Loyalty

  9. Open Source Interest

  10. Marshall’s Trendspotting

  11. Libraries feeling the pain of the economy • Library funding cuts widespread • Many automation projects on hold • Pressure to accept lowest-cost alternatives rather than higher cost preferred options • Hope that open source software will provide savings • Economic pressure may necessitate innovation

  12. Open Source ILS • Increasing adoption in the United States and Canada • Koha, Evergreen, OPALS • Less interest in Asia, Europe, UK • India • NetGenLib, Koha • Strong interest in Latin America • Koha, ABCD

  13. Open Source Companies • US: LibLime, Equinox, MediaFlex • Aggressive marketing • Concept of open source • Promotion of specific products • Struggling to meet expectations • Satisfaction lower than many companies offering proprietary products • Some companies offering proprietary products score much lower than open source

  14. Proprietary Closed-source ILS • Some ILS products offered through traditional licensing continue to prosper • Some proprietary ILS products seeing significant numbers of library defections • Systems more mature and rich in features • Balance of power among ILS vendors shifting • Vigorous competition, especially with new breed of companies involved with open source ILS

  15. Many libraries Not automated / Under automated • Large portions of public libraries in the United States operate with no automation system, outdated systems, or products not suited for their type of library • Small rural libraries • Many public libraries run PC-based systems built for schools because the cannot afford more full-featured systems • Current automation options priced well above what libraries with limited resources can afford. • Cost of consortial participation can also exceed financial thresholds

  16. Academic Libraries • Strong interest in next-generation library automation • Increasing proportions of electronic content and complexity of operations push the limits of current system designs • Strong interest in discovery interfaces • Need for digital preservation strategies and products as these libraries build ever larger local digital collections

  17. Library automation in the Developing World • Widespread use of ISIS related software • Tens of thousands of libraries • Growing interest in Koha • Increasing interest in commercial systems from international vendors when economically possible

  18. Large-scale automation • Strong interest in regional and statewide implementations • Open Source and Commercial • Georgia: Evergreen • Indiana: Evergreen (Early Phases) • British Columbia: Evergreen • Wyoming: SirsiDynix Unicorn • Hawaii: Horizon

  19. Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) • Vendor hosted, Application Service Provider, Cloud computing • Increasing adoption by small and medium-sized libraries • Not a major trend for larger libraries • Promoted by companies: more profitable for them • Libraries generally see lower overall costs, more predictable budget model • Systems and data managed more responsibly

  20. Discovery Interfaces

  21. Social Networking Technologies • Strong interest in offering social features to library users • Expected functionality in Next-gen catalogs • Layer social features into legacy catalogs • LibraryThing for Libraries • ChiliFresh – shared engine for resource reviews

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