Our conference venue - the beautiful Christ Church, Oxford |
It was great to be back at another HLF conference, having organised the previous year's! This one was especially pertinent to many of us, because who hasn't found themselves dealing with all sorts of things as part of a library job? Particular highlights for me included:
Ann Sylph (Zoological Society of London) on managing the many weird and wonderful items that make up their collections - as well as books and archives, this includes sculptures, paintings, pictures, slides, transparencies. She described how they had done a SWOT analysis, identified their USPs and a vision of where they would like to be in five years' time and then worked on this. They had begun by
- Spending an initial six months focussing on documentation and doing a strategic review, which then led the way forward.
- addressing storage issues by obtaining suitable boxes, monitoring the environment and for pests (all of which we do already in Special Collections) and developing a disaster plan. Evidence from the monitoring was then used to improve conditions.
- Celebrating outreach wins - eg produced bookmarks rather than leaflets as these are more likely to be kept, featuring in magazines and newspapers, putting on talks for staff enabling them to get to know the collections, using zoo events to attract a different audience, lending items to exhibitions external to the zoo. They also targeted historians to publish about their collections eg by targeting history of science departments.
- Did a monthly blog to highlight examples from their collections, rather like we did with Brunel 50 library objects
- Multi-task!
- Constantly promote and use to engage
- Have a disaster box
- Use volunteers to help in practical ways
- Be inventive/creative
- Read. Go on visits and to conferences
- Seek advice and talk to others in a similar boat
- Don't forget the bigger picture - the rest of your organisation and the world
- Take opportunities when they come up
- Have work-life balance
- Images couldn't go onto the existing server as they were too big and the cost of alternative storage hadn't been included in the bid.
- Adding subject keywords, whilst straightforward for trained library staff, wasn't a suitable task for many volunteers or work experience students.
- People delivering the project should have been involved from the start.
- Library staff needed improved knowledge of tech
- Get paperwork in place before recruiting staff, eg manuals and workflows
Oh and the conference lunch venue - Hogwarts!
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