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Thrifty Ideas for Adult Programming

Thrifty Ideas for Adult Programming. Katrina Evans, Assistant Director Columbia County Public Library. How to Start or Grow Your Adult Library Programs Without Breaking the Bank. Who Am I? . By day, I’m Katrina Evans, Assistant Director at Columbia County Public Library for 15+ years

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Thrifty Ideas for Adult Programming

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  1. Thrifty Ideas for Adult Programming Katrina Evans, Assistant Director Columbia County Public Library How to Start or Grow Your Adult Library Programs Without Breaking the Bank

  2. Who Am I? • By day, I’m Katrina Evans, Assistant Director at Columbia County Public Library for 15+ years • By night, I’m KatrinaEvans, Chef, Laundress, Homework Checker, Bedtime Story Reader, Word Game Player, Netflix Viewer, Leisure Reader, and Would-Be Napper

  3. What About My Library? Columbia County Public Library, with 2 locations in Lake City and 1 location in the Town of Fort White, has been serving Columbia County for over 50 years.

  4. How Did I Get Here? The Perfect Storm

  5. Once Upon a Time… Then: Now:

  6. Local Authors • Start with your most local authors: friends, neighbors, Library patrons from your own community and from the communities right next door • Find them by looking in your own collection, talking to Library staff, asking around your community (writers’ groups, historical societies, local book stores, community colleges), and searching the Internet • When you really start looking, you’ll be amazed by the pool of local talent that you have available

  7. Benefits of Local Authors • Local authors are local talent. Support them. • Local authors draw a local crowd. • Often, local authors will come to you. • Local authors are eager to get exposure for their work. • Local authors are very often willing to come for free.

  8. Regional Authors • Next, look at authors in your region, those that are close enough to come to your Library and go home in the same day • Find them by looking in your own collection, talking to Library staff, asking around your region (writers’ groups, historical societies, local book stores, colleges and universities, other libraries), and searching the Internet • Regional authors are often very affordable or even free.

  9. Beyond Local and Regional Authors • Authors from farther afield are sometimes willing to come, also. Ask. The worst they can do is say no, but they might surprise you and say yes. • Skype! Your patrons can hear and see authors from anywhere in the world, and the author never has to leave his or her home. All you need is a laptop, a webcam, a projector, a Skype account, and a willing author. If you can make this work, you’re no longer bound by geography.

  10. Finding Authors • Look everywhere! • Florida (or Georgia or Alabama) book festivals • Florida Book Award winners • Other Libraries’ program calendars • University Press of Florida, Pineapple Press, and other publisher catalogs • McNaughton monthly list • Books that you happen across • Newspaper and magazine articles • Ask the authors that come • Keep a list or a folder with names

  11. Beyond Author Programs • Author programs aren’t the only game in town. Branch out: • Educational Programs • How-To/Demonstration Programs • Music Programs • Dramatic Programs • Film Screenings

  12. No Budget? No Problem! • Start with local authors • Try local organizations • Ask college/university faculty in your town • Look into state and local government programs and organizations • Skype programs

  13. Tiny Budget, BIG Schedule • Start by scheduling free programs • Use your budget to supplement free programs • Add paid programs as your budget allows • Save it for special occasions or use it to fill in your schedule as needed OR • Start by spending your budget to book the programs that are most appealing or the most important • Then fill in the rest of your schedule with free programs

  14. The Sky’s the Limit • Schedule whatever programs yourlarger budget allows • More programs • Pricier programs • Special programs • Bigger names • Be a good steward • Continue to fill in with free programs • Don’t blow your whole budget on one program • Pay more for programs that will draw a bigger crowd • Add extras to make things nicer • Refreshments • Decorations

  15. Parting Thoughts • Keep your expectations realistic • Know in advance that this is something that you’re going to have to grow • Attendance depends on a lot of different things: interest in the author/topic, publicity, what else is going on in town at the same time, the weather, etc. • The state average for adult program attendance is lower than you might think, about 15.5 (1,235,650 people in attendance at 79,639 programs per FY2010 Public Library Statistics, Table 11) • Don’t expect a winning program without putting something into it, and don’t be crushed if, after putting a lot into it, you don’t have as many people as you hoped

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