<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
  <teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title>
        </title>
        <author>
        </author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
          <name>Digital Collections</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>
      <publicationStmt>
        <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
        <address>
          <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
          <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
          <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
        </address>
        <date>2012</date>
      </publicationStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <bibl>
        </bibl>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <samplingDecl>
        <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
        <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
        <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
      </samplingDecl>
      <classDecl>
        <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
          <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
        </taxonomy>
      </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
      <creation>
        <date>
        </date>
      </creation>
      <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
        <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
      </langUsage>
      <textClass>
        <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
          <list>
            <item>
            </item>
          </list>
        </keywords>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
  </teiHeader>
  <text>
    <body>
      <div type="other">
        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0001" />
        <p>North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />TABLE OF CONTENTS<lb /><lb />THEME ARTICLES: MARKETING LIBRARIES<lb /><lb />125 Foreword, Howard F. McGinn<lb /><lb />126 Libraries and Marketing: New Words"Old Worlds,<lb />Howard F. McGinn<lb /><lb />132 Marketing Fundamentals for Librarians, Diane Strauss<lb /><lb />136 oSell� Is Not a Four-Letter Word: Lessons Learned from the<lb />Competitive Marketplace, Helen Causey<lb /><lb />142 The Public Library at Crisis: Is Marketing the Answer?,<lb />Bernard Vavrek<lb /><lb />148 Marketing and Public Libraries: The Commitment, Charles<lb />F. Montouri<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />ISSN 0029-2540<lb /><lb />154 Marketing the Special Library: A Perspective, Barry K.<lb />Miller<lb /><lb />157 Promoting Services in North Carolina Community College<lb />LRCs, Nancy C. Rountree<lb /><lb />161 A Tool for Measuring Success, Carol Myers<lb /><lb />163 Serving Older Adults in North Carolina Public Libraries: A<lb />Survey, Diane G. Thompson<lb /><lb />181 Forsyth County Public Library and the ConstitutionTs<lb />Bicentennial: Building Relationships for Our Library,<lb />Barbara L. Anderson<lb /><lb />FEATURES<lb /><lb />122 From the President<lb />124 Over to You<lb /><lb />187 North Carolina Books LIBRARY og one<lb />195 About the Authors EAST CANOLIA UKIMERSIL<lb /><lb />Cover: Bernard Vavrek, oThe Public Library at Crisis: Is Market- Advertisers: Faxon, 151; H.W. Wilson, 141; SIRS, 123; UNC Press,<lb />ing the Answer?�, North Carolina Libraries 46 (Fall 1988): 142; inside front cover; Wakestone, 145.<lb />Helen Causey, o~SellT Is Not a Four-Letter Word: Lessons Learned<lb /><lb />from the Competitive Marketplace,� North Carolina Libraries 46<lb /><lb />(Fall 1988): 186; and Charles F. Montouri, oMarketing and Public<lb /><lb />Libraries: The Commitment,T North Carolina Libraries 46 (Fall<lb /><lb />1988): 148.<lb /><lb />Volume 46, Number 3 Fall 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0002" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Libraries ... Spread the<lb />News<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />From the President<lb /><lb />As of July 29, 1988, NCLA has its fifth round<lb />table. This one doesnTt have an official name yet,<lb />but it will be devoted to issues of concern to<lb />paraprofessionals who work in libraries. This<lb />doesnTt mean that only paraprofessionals will join<lb />this round table. It doesnTt mean that paraprofes-<lb />sionals will not continue to be active in other sec-<lb />tions and round tables. It does mean that some<lb />paraprofessionals who do not currently feel there<lb />is a place in NCLA for them will now find a place.<lb /><lb />In investigating the possibility of forming this<lb />round table, the Committee on Paraprofessional<lb />Participation sent a questionnaire to 292 libraries<lb />in the state. They received responses from 726<lb />people working in those libraries, and 481 of them<lb />indicated interest in joining such a round table if<lb />it were formed.<lb /><lb />' Ann Thigpen of Clinton, Meralyn Meadows<lb />from Albemarle, and JacksonvilleTs Judith Stod-<lb />dard worked on the questionnaire and the peti-<lb />tion for establishment of the round table. I believe<lb />that their efforts to establish this round table will<lb />benefit North CarolinaTs paraprofessionals, pro-<lb />fessionals and the libraries they work in for years<lb />to come.<lb /><lb />At the July 29 executive board meeting we<lb />also heard the first report from the Task Force on<lb />Ethical Issues, chaired by DukeTs Jerry Campbell.<lb />The task force recommends that NCLA join forty-<lb />four other state library associations in endorsing<lb />the ALA Code of Ethics. The board agreed that<lb />this should be presented to the membership at<lb />the 1989 conference in Charlotte.<lb /><lb />Last bienniumTs executive board voted to re-<lb />structure NCLATs finances so that membersT dues<lb />would support the operating budget and any pro-<lb />ceeds from the conference would be reinvested in<lb />the conference as well as other special programs<lb />and projects initiated by the sections, round<lb />tables and committees. Finance Committee Chair<lb />Rebecca Taylor presented a plan for implement-<lb />ing this structure at the July executive board<lb />meeting. For the first time, all sections and round<lb /><lb />122"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />tables will receive from NCLA $600 for use on<lb />their 1989 conference programs. Further, sec-<lb />tions, round tables and committees will be able to<lb />develop proposals for special projects and pro-<lb />grams to be funded from the remaining 1987 con-<lb />ference proceeds. NCLA has traditionally been a<lb />pretty frugal organization, and it will continue to<lb />be so, but this fund will give groups within NCLA a<lb />felxibility in planning programs and projects that<lb />will be welcome, indeed. The membership will be<lb />reaping the benefits of these activities beginning<lb />in 1989.<lb /><lb />President-elect Barbara Baker has an-<lb />nounced the theme of the 1989 conference:<lb />oLibraries: Designing for the Nineties.� The confer-<lb />ence committee is busily making plans for the<lb />conference, which will benefit from NCLATs new<lb />financial structure at the same time that it will<lb />lose LSCA funding for special conference pro-<lb />grams. State Librarian Jane Williams has an-<lb />nounced that the State Library will no longer<lb />offer LSCA grants for conference programs,<lb />although funding will still be available for other<lb />continuing education activities of NCLA during<lb />the biennium. We are all aware that LSCA has<lb />plenty of very important priorities for funding,<lb />and we were not surprised that it was time for<lb />some reordering of the use of those funds. Fortu- ©<lb />nately, this change comes at a time when NCLA<lb />should be able to fund an excellent conference on<lb />its own. We would like to thank the State Library<lb />for its LSCA funding of conference programs in<lb />the past. That aid has helped NCLA establish a<lb />standard for excellence in conference program-<lb />ming that we should now be able to continue.<lb /><lb />Patsy J. Hansel, President a<lb /><lb />go for it!<lb />use your library<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0003" />
        <p>| SsirS<lb />structures the<lb />information explosion<lb /><lb />Thousands of landmark articles on social issues are<lb />reprinted, indexed and cross-referenced in SIRS volumes.<lb /><lb />INComE ! DEA<lb /><lb />WHO GETs WHAT FROM WHERE<lb /><lb />(m Paal Ronnie SS,<lb /><lb />FOR CATALOG CALL:<lb />Ais Social Issues Resources Series, Inc.<lb />P.O. Box 2348, Boca Raton, FL 33427<lb />Rip, ge Telephone: 407-994-0079<lb />ee� | _4 Toll Free 1-800-327-0513 (Except AK &amp; FL)<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 123<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0004" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Over to You<lb /><lb />Letters to the Editor<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARIES invites your comments.<lb />Please address and sign with your name and position all cor-<lb />respondence to: Frances B. Bradburn, Editor, NORTH CARO-<lb />LINA LIBRARIES, Joyner Library, East Carolina University,<lb />Greenville, N.C. 27858. We reserve the right to edit all letters for<lb />length and clarity. Whenever time permits, persons most closely<lb />related to the issue under discussion will be given an opportu-<lb />nity to respond to points made in the letter. Deadline dates will<lb />be the copy deadlines for the journal: February 10, May 10,<lb />August 10, and November 10.<lb /><lb />To: Frances Bradburn, Editor, North Carolina<lb />Libraries<lb /><lb />From: Gerald Hodges, President-Elect, YASD<lb /><lb />The Young Adult Services Division (Y.A.S.D.)<lb />of the American Library Association would� like<lb />to invite all librarians who work with teenagers<lb />in school, community college, and public librar-<lb /><lb />ies to join our association. We would particularly<lb />like to extend an invitation to library school stu-<lb />dents to take advantage of reduced membership<lb />rates. Many North Carolinians, including Gayle<lb />Kersey, Jane Chandra, and Rebecca Taylor, have<lb />assumed leadership roles in YASD, an associa-<lb />tion which identifies the best books and other<lb />materials for the college-bound, for the reluctant<lb />reader, for young adults with special needs, and<lb />for all young adults in the areas of health. YASD<lb />has also been a major advocate for the intellec-<lb />tual freedom rights of minors. For membership<lb />applications, write: Evelyn Shaevel, YASD, 50 E.<lb />Huron Street, Chicago, IL 60611. I would particu-<lb />larly like to appoint North Carolinians to YASD<lb />Committees, so look through the ALA Handbook<lb />and let me know your Committee choices: 3067<lb />Library, University of Iowa, lowa City, [A 52242. ]<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Book Week<lb /><lb />November 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb />Honorary and Life Membership<lb />in NCLA<lb /><lb />The 1988-1989 Honorary and Life Member-<lb />ship Committee requests your recommendations<lb />for persons you consider worthy to be honorary<lb />or life members of NCLA. Suggestions should be<lb />accompanied by a biographical sketch, including<lb />contributions to libraries or librarianship. These<lb />suggestions should be sent to the Committee<lb />Chairperson by January 31, 1989.<lb /><lb />The NCLA by-laws provide for the Honorary<lb />and Life Membership Committee to seek sugges-<lb />tions from all members and to recommend names<lb />for these honors to the Executive Board at the<lb />Spring Workshop prior to the Conference.<lb /><lb />Criteria for selection are as follows:<lb /><lb />1. Honorary memberships may be given to non-<lb />librarians in the State who have rendered impor-<lb /><lb />124" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />tant services to the library interests of North<lb />Carolina. Honorary memberships should be given<lb />at a time considered appropriate in relation to<lb />the contribution made.<lb /><lb />2. Life memberships may be given to librarians<lb />who have served as members of the North Caro-<lb />lina Library Association and who have made<lb />noteworthy contributions to librarianship in the<lb />State. These memberships are limited to librar-<lb />ians who have retired.<lb /><lb />3. Contributions of both groups should have been<lb />beyond the local level.<lb /><lb />Please send your recommendations to:<lb /><lb />Waltrene Canada, Chair<lb /><lb />Honorary and Life Membership Committee<lb />F. D. Bluford Library<lb /><lb />NC A&amp;T State University<lb /><lb />1601 E. Market Street<lb /><lb />Greensboro, NC 27411 ie<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0005" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Foreword<lb /><lb />Howard F. McGinn, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Americans are natural marketers. How could<lb />they not be? American culture, with its peculiar<lb />intermingling of capitalism, religion, patriotism,<lb />and optimism, makes most citizens boosters of<lb />one thing or another. Moreover, Americans<lb />receive regular instruction in marketing functions<lb />like advertising, product development, and selling<lb />every time they turn on the television or radio.<lb />The drive to promote towns, institutions, and<lb />ourselves is strong in most of us. The drive has<lb />manifested itself in disparate events that range<lb />from Benjamin FranklinTs promotion of the turkey<lb />as the national bird to the endless array of North<lb />Carolina State University red Wolfpack attire.<lb /><lb />Librarians have always promoted their pro-<lb />grams and services. It is only within the past few<lb />years that the profession has begun to explore<lb />business school marketing techniques and theory<lb />as ways to serve the customers better. But the<lb />fact is, librarians have been successfully market-<lb />ing services despite the severe financial con-<lb />straints commonly experienced by libraries. If<lb />Proctor and Gamble had to work with the typical<lb />library marketing budget, it would still be ped-<lb />dling one brand of soap in Cincinnati.<lb /><lb />This issue of North Carolina Libraries is<lb />intended to supplement the marketing efforts<lb />libraries of all types in North Carolina perform<lb />daily. It is intended to demystify some of the more<lb />peculiar business school language commonly<lb />used. It will give practical examples of various<lb />types of marketing programs that take place in<lb />our libraries every day.<lb /><lb />Diane Strauss and Howard McGinn discuss<lb />some basic marketing concepts and their library<lb />equivalents; Helen Causey discusses that most<lb />unloved of marketing terms, selling, from her<lb />perspective as a former sales representative<lb />turned public library director. Bernard Vavrek,<lb />Director of the Center for the Study of Rural<lb />Librarianship at Clarion State University of Pen-<lb />nsylvaniaTs Library School examines the role trus-<lb />tees might play in helping the public library<lb />market its services, and Charles Montouri talks<lb />about the need for the public library director to<lb />commit institutional resources to the marketing<lb />effort. Several authors explore marketing in spe-<lb /><lb />cific settings or to specific library market seg-<lb />ments. Barry Miller, librarian at R.J. Reynolds<lb />Tobacco Company, writes about marketing in the<lb />special library setting; Nancy Rountree analyzes<lb />the effectiveness of community college learning<lb />resource centersT marketing efforts; Carol Myers<lb />describes a community-wide attitude/use study<lb />of the Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklen-<lb />burg County; Diane Thompson reports on a study<lb />of library service to the elderly in North Carolina;<lb />and Barbara Anderson presents a case study that<lb />describes how the Forsyth County Public Library<lb />System created and marketed an extensive series<lb />of programs to celebrate the Biecentennial of the<lb />United States Constitution.<lb /><lb />This issue does not pretend to provide a pri-<lb />mer on marketing for librarians. Attainment of<lb />marketing proficiency is the duty of the individual<lb />and is possible only through training and expe-<lb />rience. Yet, it is beneficial for librarians to acquire<lb />a rudimentary understanding of marketing con-<lb />cepts and terms. Such an understanding helps us<lb />in our daily duties and begins to break down the<lb />mistrust of business terms displayed by many in<lb />our profession. I hope this issue will provide a<lb />springboard for an increase in the understanding<lb />of marketing and will tempt readers to formally<lb />study and apply marketing theory. After all, itTs<lb />the American thing to do. a]<lb /><lb />iS<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "125<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0006" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Libraries and Marketing:<lb />New Words"Old Worlds<lb /><lb />Howard F. McGinn<lb /><lb />The non-profit community has discovered<lb />marketing. Publications ranging from the Wall<lb />Street Journal to American Libraries regularly<lb />publish articles about non-profit sector market-<lb />ing programs. The library community, of course,<lb />has. shown considerable interest in the applica-<lb />tion of standard business marketing practices to<lb />daily library operations. Many in the profession,<lb />however, are alienated by the thought of market-<lb />ing practices invading the library domain. Market-<lb />ing to many is too commercial, too crass. Yet<lb />librarians have been using standard marketing<lb />practices for decades. They just have not regu-<lb />larly applied standard business school terminol-<lb />ogy to the. marketing work that is done. This<lb />article will attempt to soften the alien notion of<lb />marketing. It will discuss some standard market-<lb />ing topics, examine their library parallels, and<lb />suggest areas of marketing practice that libraries<lb />may wish to strengthen or investigate for the first<lb />time. All marketing definitions used are from the<lb />glossary in Philip KotlerTs Principles of Marketing,<lb />a standard business school marketing text. I have<lb />deliberately used business terminology as much<lb />as possible, and I ask your patience in working<lb />with terms that may be new or irritating.<lb /><lb />Marketing: What It IsnTt and What It Is.<lb /><lb />Marketing is not public relations. Marketing is<lb />not selling or sales promotion, or advertising. It is<lb />not. surveys, brochures, product. development or<lb />billboards, not customer service or convention<lb />exhibits, not direct mail, junk mail or bills in the<lb />mail. It is all of the above and much more.<lb /><lb />Kotler, in the opening chapter in his text-<lb />book, defines marketing as the ohuman activity<lb />directed at satisfying needs and wants through<lb />exchange processes.�! For the purposes of this<lb />article, however, a definition of marketing given<lb />by Kotler in the Preface to the text is much more<lb />useful. oMarketing,� he writes, oconsists of a set of<lb />principles for choosing target markets, identifying<lb />customer needs, developing want-satisfying prod-<lb /><lb />Howard F. McGinn is Assistant State Librarian for the State<lb />Library of North Carolina, Raleigh.<lb /><lb />126"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />ucts and services, and delivering value to custo-<lb />mers and profits to the company.� Let us look at<lb />three of these areas separately: target markets,<lb />customer need identification, and product devel-<lb />opment.<lb /><lb />Target Markets and Market Segmentation<lb /><lb />Marketing practice is a creature of the econ-<lb />omy. Marketing, like more human endeavors,<lb />must use finite resources efficiently to produce<lb />the maximum results from the investment. Put<lb />yourself in the place of the marketing manager for<lb />a consumer product manufacturer. The product<lb />that you want to market is soap. Everyone uses<lb />soap at one time or another, even the most<lb />intransigent fifth grader. Soap should be easy to<lb />market. But it isnTt. Why? Well, to start, there is a<lb />lot of product and price competition. Walk<lb />through the supermarket and count the number<lb />of soap products being offered to the consumer.<lb />Most soap products work the same: add water,<lb />make suds, scrub, and dirt is removed. What will<lb />you have to do to make a person buy your brand<lb />and reject the competitor's brand? You can create<lb />packaging that will make your soap bar noticed,<lb />or you can fabricate your soap in an odd size. You<lb />can sell your soap for less than the competition or<lb />you can sell the oBMW� of soap and charge more.<lb /><lb />In effect, every effort you make will be<lb />designed to make your product stand out among<lb />the competition. But your competitors are also<lb />doing this. They are also advertising heavily on<lb />television, in the newspapers, on radio. What do<lb />you do? You become creative. You figure out a<lb />way to make your advertised message so unique,<lb />so creative, that people will want to listen to your<lb />message. But you still have a problem. Since every-<lb />one uses soap and you have to sell large quantities<lb />to cover development, marketing, and other costs<lb />to make a profit, how do you reach all of these<lb />potential customers without going bankrupt? One<lb />solution to this question is market segmentation<lb />and the development of target markets. In effect<lb />you divide and conquer, you slice up the market<lb /><lb />pie.<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0007" />
        <p>A market segment is made up of customers<lb />who respond in a similar way to a given set of<lb />marketing stimuli. Market segmentation is the<lb />dividing of a market into distinct groups of buyers<lb />who might require separate products. Market<lb />targeting is evaluating each segmentTs attract-<lb />iveness and selecting one or more of the market<lb />segments to enter.T<lb /><lb />Markets may be segmented in many ways.<lb />The most common divisions are: 1. geographic<lb />(state, region, county, city), 2. demographic (age,<lb />sex, income, occupation, nationality, race, reli-<lb />gion, education, etc.), 3. psychographic (social<lb />class, lifestyle"remember the yuppies?), and 4.<lb />behavioristic (birthdays, usage rate, attitude<lb />toward product, and so forth). In reality, most<lb />companies segment a market according to several<lb />of these designations. They may choose to market<lb />products to black college graduates living in the<lb />counties in South Carolina that are closest to<lb />Charlotte, North Carolina. They may choose to<lb />attempt to openetrate� a market made up of Viet-<lb />nam veterans over forty years of age with incomes<lb />between $20,000 and $50,000.<lb /><lb />Market segments are created based on these<lb />assumptions: 1. the persons in a segment have<lb />similar needs to be filled; 2. the persons in the<lb />segment will respond to marketing efforts in a<lb />similar manner; 3. the market segments created<lb />can be contacted or reached efficiently and eco-<lb />nomically; 4. the persons in the segment have the<lb />resources to purchase the product or service; and<lb />5. the product being marketed will fill the needs of<lb />the persons in the segment.<lb /><lb />Because of the many ways a market can be<lb />segmented, a company usually must limit the<lb />number of market segments it may choose to<lb />attack. It must select target markets that provide<lb />the best opportunity, that most clearly seem to<lb />need its product, and that can most efficiently<lb />and cost-effectively be reached through standard<lb />promotional and advertising methods. In effect,<lb />the company must select a target market that will<lb />give the highest return on the marketing invest-<lb />ment. Once it chooses, the company can then<lb />concentrate its marketing efforts on the target. If<lb />it is successful in penetrating that market, it<lb />maintains its marketing effort so that it does not<lb />lose the market segment to a competitor, and it<lb />begins to plan to attack a second target market,<lb />then a third and so on. By dividing the whole of a<lb />market and concentrating the investment of<lb />resources on one or a few segments at a time, the<lb />entire market potentially can be conquered.<lb />Though the soap product may be able to be used<lb />by everyone, target marketing allows the com-<lb /><lb />pany to spread the investment of finite marketing<lb />funds over a longer period of time; it allows the<lb />concentration of dollars on a defined group; and<lb />it produces sales income that can then be turned<lb />around and used to market to other target<lb />market segments.<lb /><lb />The same processes that drive<lb />the marketing of consumer<lb />products and services also<lb />drive the marketing of library<lb />products and services.<lb /><lb />Product Development<lb /><lb />Successful target market penetration, of<lb />course, assumes that the product being offered<lb />fills consumer needs. A product that does not fill<lb />a need is rejected. Product development is diffi-<lb />cult, no matter how simple the product may be.<lb /><lb />There are very few onatural� products or products<lb />necessary to maintain life. Most products must be<lb />created as a result of a perceived need, developed,<lb />tested, and then redesigned, developed more and<lb />retested until that product appears capable of<lb />successfully filling a consumer need. Product<lb />development is expensive, it is time-consuming, it<lb />is information dependent. Usually many types of<lb />surveys are conducted to try to ascertain consu-<lb />mer needs; then, when needs are identified, prod-<lb />uct concepts are developed and tested. Compe-<lb />titorsT products are considered and analyzed,<lb />pricing strategies are developed, packaging is de-<lb />signed, distribution channels are developed and<lb />various types of advertising campaigns are con-<lb />cocted. But because all this activity demands the<lb />investment of finite financial and human resour-<lb />ces, the development process must be tightly con-<lb />trolled and the product development time must<lb />be reasonable. Product developers, too, must not be<lb />afraid to kill a product idea that does not work. In<lb />the end, the soap being developed must work: it<lb />must clean. It needs to be different from the soap<lb />offered by the competition. My soap must clean<lb />better than the competitorTs soap, or at least it<lb />must offer more benefits than the competition,<lb />such as a better fragrance, lower price, or a sense<lb />of status.<lb /><lb />Customer Needs<lb /><lb />All of this development activity assumes that<lb />needs of the consumer have been correctly identi-<lb />fied. Why do people buy things? What makes a<lb />person choose one product or service over<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 127<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0008" />
        <p>another? People buy to fill needs. They may want<lb />to cure unhappiness, achieve social status, be<lb />entertained, stop hunger. Needs are often camou-<lb />flaged; they sometimes come in bundles. On the<lb />surface level, soap fills the need to be clean. But it<lb />also can be designed and purchased to give fra-<lb />grance, stop perspiration, or give a perception of<lb />an attained higher social status. A key to effective<lb />product development is the accurate identifica-<lb />tion of the needs of the marketplace. This identifi-<lb />cation is also essential if an effective advertising<lb />and selling campaign is to be mounted. Constant<lb />contact with the consumer is necessary to help<lb />identify these needs. This contact can be through<lb />verbal or written surveys, through regular profes-<lb />sional and home interviews, through the analysis<lb />of competitorsT products. Consumer needs, prop-<lb />erly identified, can lead to good products. Good<lb />product development, when done as part of an<lb />overall marketing stragegy, will lead to sales in<lb />those target markets. Sales, controlled costs, and<lb />proper pricing lead to profits.<lb /><lb />Libraries and Marketing<lb /><lb />The same processes that drive the marketing<lb />of consumer products and services also drive the<lb />marketing of library products and services. It is<lb />helpful, in fact, to look at library products and<lb />services as consumer products and services. The<lb />fact that libraries tend to have been legally es-<lb />tablished as non-profit organizations does not<lb />change the nature of the standard buyer-supplier<lb />relationship that exists between the library and<lb />its patrons. If libraries had developed as for-profit<lb />operations, it would be essential that the libraryTs<lb />patrons be normally regarded as customers and<lb />the libraryTs services and products thought of as<lb />consumer products. KotlerTs definition of the con-<lb />sumer market clearly describes the traditional<lb />library-patron relationship. He defines the con-<lb />sumer market as oall individuals and households<lb />who buy or acquire goods and services for per-<lb />sonal consumption.o Though most library serv-<lb />ices are free to the consumer, a opurchase� of the<lb />libraryTs goods or services takes place whenever a<lb />person uses the library. As part of the consumer<lb />market, libraries have always responded to<lb />changes in the market. The history of libraries is<lb />one of response to customer needs and of new<lb />product development. Libraries have always seg-<lb />mented markets, developed products and at-<lb />tempted to discern customer needs. é<lb /><lb />Library Market Segmentation and Target<lb />Markets<lb /><lb />The library marketplace has been extensively<lb /><lb />128"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />segmented. Library services for academic seg-<lb />ments, governmental segments, school and cor-<lb />porate segments have been developed. Our large<lb />academic and public libraries, moreover, have<lb />been further segmented. Public libraries have<lb />segmented their markets by providing service<lb />through separate departments for genealogists,<lb />businesses, children, young adults, and so forth.<lb />Public libraries also commonly segment services<lb />geographically by establishing branches and pro-<lb />viding bookmobile services. Academic libraries<lb />take a more subject-oriented segmentation by<lb />establishing special services and collections for<lb />university departments. The reason for all of this<lb />segmentation is the desire by the library to deliver<lb />efficient, quality service. Is this process very dif-<lb />ferent from the market segmentation done by<lb />corporations? Is it uncommon, as well, for librar-<lb />ies to choose to invest more human and monetary<lb />resources in a specific segment because of the<lb />demand for increased services in an area by the<lb />librariesT clientele? Is not this process, in reality,<lb />the selection of a target market?<lb /><lb />The history of libraries is one<lb />of response to customer needs<lb />and of new product develop-<lb />ment.<lb /><lb />The practice of market segmentation is a<lb />time-honored library practice. Perhaps the most<lb />straightforward historical example of library<lb />marketplace segmentation can be found in John<lb />Cotton DanaTs creation of the Special Libraries<lb />Association. The SLA Constitution adopted on<lb />July 2, 1909 stated: oThe object of this Association<lb />is to promote the interests of the commercial,<lb />industrial, technical, civic, municipal and legisla-<lb />tive reference libraries, the special departments<lb />of public libraries, universities, welfare associa-<lb />tions and business organizations.� This is classic<lb />market segmentation.<lb /><lb />Libraries and Product Development<lb /><lb />Libraries are constantly offering new prod-<lb />ucts and services. Most of the products offered"<lb />books, periodicals, etc.."are purchased by the<lb />libraries from manufacturers and packaged for<lb />oresale� to the consumer. When performing these<lb />duties libraries are, in effect, retailers like K-Mart,<lb />Sears, or Bloomingdales. But libraries also develop<lb />many products and services of their own. Product<lb />development has been an essential component of<lb />library services for decades.<lb /><lb />Consider the development of reference ser-<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0009" />
        <p>vice. In the United States in the nineteenth cen-<lb />tury, society was changing, information needs<lb />were changing. Thomas Galvin, in the Encyclope-<lb />dia of Library and Information Science, writes:<lb /><lb />The inauguration of formalized reference service in librar-<lb />ies seems clearly to be related to certain economic and<lb />social developments in the larger context of 19th century<lb />American society. Chief among these are the transition<lb />from a rural, agricultural to an urban, industrial econ-<lb />omy; the acculturation of a large immigrant population;<lb />the rise of public education; and the changing character<lb />of the American college and university. As the public<lb />library movement swept across the United States in the<lb />last decades of the 19th century, college and university<lb />libraries were also changing radically in character as a<lb />consequence of a growing orientation toward graduate<lb />study and research.®<lb /><lb />Reference service was developed because the<lb />information needs of the country were changing<lb />and libraries developed this new product, orefer-<lb />ence service,� to respond to the needs.<lb /><lb />The development of reference service con-<lb />tinues at a rapid pace in almost twenty-first cen-<lb />tury America. Most of the development has been<lb />spurred by technologies like the microcomputer,<lb />enhanced online searching, online data bases, and<lb />CD-ROM. A main difference between library prod-<lb />uct development and corporate product devel-<lb />opment is the small amount of research made in<lb />product development by libraries compared to<lb />T the extensive research and expenditure made by<lb />corporations. Libraries, of course, do not have the<lb />dollars to invest in extensive development. But<lb />most libraries have the time and personnel neces-<lb />sary for rudimentary product development if the<lb />library places a premium on such a program.<lb /><lb />Libraries and Customer Needs<lb /><lb />Response to customer needs is not a new<lb />phenomenon in libraries. If it were, we would still<lb />be employing monks to create illuminated manu-<lb />scripts. American libraries, in particular, have<lb />always shown a high degree of sensitivity to cus-<lb />tomer needs. In discussing the history of refer-<lb />ence service, Galvin further writes that othe newly<lb />established public libraries of the late 19th cen-<lb />tury were dedicated more to the use of books than<lb />to their preservation, and they had been created<lb />to serve the entire community, rather than merely<lb />an economic, social, or intellectual elite.� The<lb />founders of the Special Libraries Association con-<lb />sidered customer needs from the very first days of<lb />the organization. oAt the first conference, held in<lb />New York City on November 5, 1909, with about<lb />thirty-three members present, committees were<lb />formed to consider the problems of: agricultural<lb />libraries, commercial associations, insurance li-<lb /><lb />braries, legislative and municipal reference librar-<lb />ies, membership libraries, public utility libraries<lb />and sociological and technical libraries.�8 In 1909<lb />oproblems of libraries� were considered; today we<lb />would call them customer needs. This response of<lb />the SLA founders and others continues unabated<lb />today as libraries offer public access micro-<lb />computers, videotape programs, and other forms<lb />of information provision.<lb /><lb />The terminology is new; the concepts are old.<lb />Libraries, under various guises, have been seg-<lb />menting markets, establishing target markets,<lb />developing products, and analyzing customer<lb />needs since the last century. Then why does a<lb />feeling of apprehension accompany the librarianTs<lb />advance into business oriented marketing? Part<lb />of the reason is the terminology; part is the<lb />sophistication of modern marketing technique. A<lb />major factor, too, is the liberal arts background of<lb />most librarians. The professionTs equation of<lb />libraries with othe preservation of our culture�<lb />often causes the more utilitarian aspects of our<lb />industry to be ignored. Much library use of mar-<lb />keting has been instinctive or couched in tradi-<lb />tional library training and terminology. But our<lb />training has prepared us much better than we<lb />realize to enter the world of marketing. The fol-<lb />lowing suggestions can help us make this entry<lb />more profitable.<lb /><lb />Attainment of marketing pro-<lb />ficiency is the duty of the<lb />individual and is possible only<lb />through training and experi-<lb />ence.<lb /><lb />Becoming a Marketer<lb /><lb />If you are interested in marketing, if you are<lb />interested in applying marketing concepts to your<lb />library's operations, start with the realization that<lb />you probably have been applying sound market-<lb />ing practices for many years. You have just called<lb />the practice by a different name. You probably<lb />have been identifying the needs of your patrons,<lb />developing products and services, segmenting<lb />and targeting markets. If you are like most librar-<lb />ians, you have been investing your finite financial<lb />resources very wisely and very efficiently. This<lb />article, though, has only touched the tip of the<lb />marketing iceberg. There is much value for library<lb />operations to be gained from business literature<lb />and courses. The acquisition of an M.B.A. is not<lb />necessary. But there are steps that can be taken<lb />to increase your knowledge of marketing. Here<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 129<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0010" />
        <p>are some hat are relatively painless and available<lb />to everyone:<lb /><lb />1. Read the Wall Street Journal every day.<lb />Like acquiring a taste for some types of food,<lb />reading the Journal is not always easy. But the<lb />more you read, the more familiar you will become<lb />with common business concepts and terminology.<lb />You will benefit, too, from the wide variety of sub-<lb />jects covered by the Journal. The business sec-<lb />tions of the New York Times and Business Week<lb />offer similar benefits.<lb /><lb />2. Learn the language of the business world.<lb />This will take patience and a self-understanding<lb />that business vocabulary is not inherently evil. As<lb />you master the vocabulary, translate the terms<lb />into those commonly used by the library profes-<lb />sion. Mastery of business terminology will also<lb />help in working with the business community in<lb />your town.<lb /><lb />3. Take a basic marketing course at your<lb />local academic institution or community college.<lb />The Small Business Centers at many community<lb />colleges offer excellent seminars and courses in<lb />marketing.<lb /><lb />4. Mimic. Watch all of those commercials,<lb />look at all of those direct mail pieces and bill-<lb />boards analytically. Try to divine the companyTs<lb />target markets and market segments. oListen� to<lb />the method being used; identify probable consu-<lb />mer needs being attacked. Analyze how the prod-<lb />uct being marketed meets the probable consumer<lb />needs. Look for factors built into the product and<lb />its marketing by the company that will make that<lb />product stand out. Some of these techniques can<lb />be applied to the marketing of your library.<lb /><lb />5. Visit a local supermarket. Do not go to<lb />buy; go to observe. Try to visit a large chain store<lb />like Food Lion, A&amp;P, or Safeway. Interview the<lb />storeTs manager and department heads. The<lb />chain will have done extensive analysis of traffic<lb />patterns, display type and usage. Note where<lb />products are placed in the store; analyze how the<lb />products are displayed. There is much similarity<lb />between the floor layout and systems of a super-<lb />market and a library, especially a public library.<lb /><lb />Marketing Concept<lb /><lb />The most important step that can be taken,<lb />however, is the adoption by the libraryTs manage-<lb />ment and all staff members of the Marketing Con-<lb />cept. The marketing concept is a management<lb />orientation that holds that the key to achieving<lb />organizational goals consists of determining the<lb />needs and wants of target markets and delivering<lb />the desired satisfactions more effectively and effi-<lb />ciently than competitors.°<lb /><lb />130"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />Marketing is not public rela-<lb />tions.<lb /><lb />The marketing concept, a marketing orienta-<lb />tion in daily library operations, must not be<lb />adopted just by management, but by every single<lb />member of the staff. No employee should be<lb />exempt. Peter Drucker emphasizes this primacy<lb />of marketing in an organization:<lb /><lb />Marketing is so basic that it cannot be considered a<lb />separate function (i.e. a separate skill or work) within the<lb />business, on a par with others such as manufacturing or<lb />personnel. Marketing requires separate work, and a dis-<lb />tinct group of activities. But it is, first, a central dimension<lb />of the entire business. It is the whole business seen from a<lb />point of view of its final result, that is, from the customerTs<lb />point of view. Concern and responsibility for marketing,<lb />must, therefore, permeate all areas of the enterprise.!°<lb /><lb />The marketing concept is difficult to incul-<lb />cate in a staff. Obviously, those staff members<lb />who have regular customer contact need to be<lb />most accepting of the marketing concept. Much<lb />reference work, for example, is selling, is needs<lb />fulfillment. But in the heat of answering reference<lb />questions or responding to other demands made<lb />by the public, a sense of service equilibrium is dif-<lb />ficult to maintain. Professionalism demands,<lb />though, that this equilibrium be maintained and<lb />that the customer be given quality service.<lb /><lb />Those staff members who do not have regular<lb />customer contact will have a much harder time<lb />sustaining a marketing oriented mindset. Manu-<lb />facturing companies have similar problems. It is<lb />easy for the companyTs salesforce to have a mar-<lb />keting orientation. Customer needs fulfillment is<lb />an integral part of their job, and much of their<lb />direct compensation depends on how well they<lb />interact with the customers. For the person on<lb />the production line, supervisor and worker, the<lb />problem is more difficult. There is no regular cus-<lb />tomer contact. Salespeople receive constant re-<lb />wards and gratification when a customer buys<lb />what they have to sell. This reward structure is<lb />not always a natural part of the production line<lb />life. Yet, when production line employees have a<lb />sense of service, of marketing, or self-importance<lb />based on the knowledge that they are helping a<lb />customer, then productivity and product quality<lb />increase. In a library setting, consider the chaos<lb />possible if technical services functions are per-<lb />formed below standards. How does this affect the<lb />operations of the organization? How does sloppy<lb />technical services work affect customer service,<lb />customer satisfaction, and the customer's percep-<lb />tion of the library? The answers are obvious.<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0011" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />A marketing approach to daily work should,<lb />then, be adopted by all employees regardless of<lb />the amount of direct customer contact present in<lb />their jobs. It is crucial, too, that the marketing<lb />orientation be adopted by professional and non-<lb />professional staff. No one is exempt. Professional<lb />staff should not assume that the MLS automati-<lb />cally has given them the ability to deal profes-<lb />sionally with customers, or that the MLS has<lb />exempted them from professionally dealing with<lb />customers. Non-professional staff should be<lb />taught that they play an important role in mar-<lb />keting the library's services, especially if they have<lb />direct customer contact. The following questions<lb />are meant to serve as a quick self-examination, a<lb />self-audit, of a library's marketing orientation.<lb /><lb />Marketing Audit<lb /><lb />1. Is service the primary reason you became<lb />a librarian?<lb /><lb />2. Does your library exist to provide service<lb />to customers, or does your library exist to pre-<lb />serve and warehouse materials?<lb /><lb />3. Do you discuss customer needs at staff<lb />meetings? Have you ever talked about customers,<lb />and customer service and marketing in general at<lb />your staff meetings?<lb /><lb />4. Do you discuss customer needs at meet-<lb />ings of your board, Friends association, profes-<lb />sional associations?<lb /><lb />5. Do you have quality control procedures<lb />built into your technical services functions?<lb /><lb />6. Do you know who your customers are?<lb /><lb />7. How many customers have you lost or<lb />gained in the past six months?<lb /><lb />8. Based on how you are dressed at this very<lb />moment (assuming you are at work and not tak-<lb />ing a shower) would you, the customer be able to<lb />identify you the librarian based on your dress and<lb />demeanor?<lb /><lb />9. How often do you ask a customer if you<lb />can help them?<lb /><lb />10. Have you recently walked into another<lb />library as a customer? How were you treated?<lb />Would you have treated yourself better or worse<lb />than your competitor?<lb /><lb />11. Are customer service measurements built<lb />into your employee evaluation procedures?<lb /><lb />No matter how well or how poorly you feel<lb />you score on these questions, you should plan to<lb />acquire training in basic marketing concepts. You<lb />can never have too much training in filling the<lb />needs of your customers.<lb /><lb />Summary<lb /><lb />Peter Drucker has also written that othere is<lb /><lb />only one valid definition of business purpose: to<lb />create a customer.�! That purpose operates, too,<lb />deep in the history of librarianship. We have<lb />created a product, we have segmented markets,<lb />we are constantly trying to ascertain customer<lb />needs. We just have not necessarily used these<lb />terms to describe what we do, and we have not<lb />always brought a systematic businesslike ap-<lb />proach to these functions. But the functions are<lb />familiar; they should not cause rebellion or revul-<lb />sion for us just because these phrases seem to<lb />emanate from the for-profit sector. Libraries are,<lb />wittingly or unwittingly, an industry. We have<lb />competition; we have products and services; we<lb />need customers. Marketing can help us improve<lb />long-standing library practices because market-<lb />ing is not a brave new world. ItTs just the applica-<lb />tion of new words to our old world.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1. Philip Kopler, Principles of Marketing, third edition. (Engle-<lb />wood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1986), 757.<lb /><lb />2. Ibid., xix.<lb /><lb />8. Ibid., 757.<lb /><lb />4. Ibid., 754.<lb /><lb />5. Adol Winifred Johns, Special Libraries. (Metuchen, NJ:<lb />Scarecrow Press, 1968): 92.<lb /><lb />6. Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science. (New York:<lb />Marcel Deker, 1978) 25: 211.<lb /><lb />7. Ibid.<lb /><lb />8. Johns.<lb /><lb />9. Kotler.<lb /><lb />10. Peter Drucker, Management. Tasks. Responsibilities. Practi-<lb />ces. (New York: Harper &amp; Row, 1974), 63.<lb /><lb />11. Ibid., 61.<lb /><lb />Subscription Order<lb /><lb />Please place mailing label.<lb />from your issue here.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries is published four<lb />times a year by the North Carolina Library<lb />Association. Subscription: $32 per year; $50<lb />foreign countries. Single copy $10. Address<lb />new subscriptions, renewals, and related<lb />correspondence to Frances B. Bradburn, edi-<lb />tor; North Carolina Libraries, Joyner Library,<lb />East Carolina University, Greenville, NC<lb />27858 or call (919) 757-6076. (For member-<lb />ship information, see address label on jour-<lb />nal)<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"131<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0012" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Marketing Fundamentals for Librarians<lb /><lb />Diane Strauss<lb /><lb />Not too long ago, the following advertisement<lb />appeared in an issue of Library Hotline:<lb /><lb />Director of Marketing, St. Louis Public Library. Exciting<lb />opportunity to work for one of the countryTs premier<lb />libraries. Reporting to the director of development, the<lb />director of marketing formulates and maintains a mar-<lb />keting information system. Develops an annual market-<lb />ing plan as well as a five year marketing plan. Identifies<lb />and evaluates current situations and future trends that<lb />would have major marketing and public relations impli-<lb />cations for the library. Develops and implements public<lb />relations programs designed to enhance the library's<lb />image, gain awareness and use of the library.!<lb /><lb />Few libraries can afford full-time marketing spe-<lb />cialists, however, and not many have marketing<lb />information systems or marketing plans. More to<lb />the point, while many libraries have annual and<lb />five-year plans, they are not specifically identi-<lb />fied as marketing documents. Librarians have,<lb />in fact, been practicing marketing piecemeal for<lb />years; what until recently has been lacking is a<lb />sense of marketing as a series of related activities<lb />that are as appropriate"and as important"to<lb />libraries as they are to corporations. This article<lb />will identify and describe basic marketing prin-<lb />ciples, and show how they can be applied to<lb />libraries.<lb /><lb />Marketing Mix<lb /><lb />To many people, advertising and marketing<lb />are synonymous. When they think of marketing,<lb />they think of the broadcast and print ads with<lb />which they are bombarded daily, for automobiles,<lb />beer, floor wax, lipstick, and hundreds of other<lb />consumer goods. Marketing, however, is an ex-<lb />tremely broad and complex field, of which adver-<lb />tising is just one part. It is a mix of activities,<lb />beginning with estimating the demand for specific<lb />products or services and leading to their devel-<lb />opment, pricing, distribution, and promotion.<lb />Known as the omarketing mix,� these activities<lb />can be reduced to four broad categories: product,<lb />price, place, and promotion.<lb /><lb />Product planning involves the product itself<lb />as it is designed to appeal to a predetermined<lb /><lb />Diane Strauss is Head, Business Administration/Social<lb />Sciences Reference Department at Davis Library, the Univer-<lb />sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />132"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />group of potential users. It includes decisions<lb />about package design, brand names, and the<lb />development of new products. In 1984, for exam-<lb />ple, PepsiCo began test marketing Slice®, a caf-<lb />feine-free soft drink that contains real fruit juice,<lb />to see if user response merited full production<lb />and distribution. The ohealthful� soda pop proved<lb />a marketing masterpiece: less than two years<lb />later, it enjoyed retail sales of $1 billion, and Coca-<lb />Cola and other soft drink companies rushed to<lb />follow PepsiCoTs lead.<lb /><lb />Libraries, you may be thinking, are not so<lb />crassly commercial. While we are driven by a ser-<lb />vice ideology rather than a profit motivation, our<lb />ultimate goals are not really very different from<lb />PepsiCoTs or any other companyTs: to stay in busi-<lb />ness; to compete effectively with other, similar<lb />organizations; to gain user acceptance; and, more<lb />than that, to broaden our base of user support.<lb />What are a library's oproducts�? Our products are<lb />what we do"the services we provide, the resour-<lb />ces we offer. They can range from the books in our<lb />collections and the data bases we search to such<lb />services as interlibrary loan, storytelling, film pro-<lb />grams, and telephone reference. The products<lb />each library offers should be a reflection not only<lb />of its general mission to inform and educate, but<lb />also of the specific needs and interests of its<lb />community of users.<lb /><lb />When we consider the library's product, we must return<lb />to the concept of marketing as an exchange process. We<lb />seek the communityTs use of library services"and we also<lb />seek the community's approval through good will and<lb />financial support. In exchange, the library must return to<lb />the community the best possible response to their needs<lb />within the scope of available resources.?<lb /><lb />Marketers must also make a series of deci-<lb />sions relating to pricing, setting justified and<lb />profitable prices for their products. At first<lb />glance, this may seem inapplicable to libraries.<lb />Some libraries have been charging for photocopy-<lb />ing and data base searching for years, and a few<lb />such operations have earned enough profit to<lb />help subsidize other library services and collec-<lb />tions. For the most part, however, library charges<lb />are indirect. When considering pricing in a library<lb />setting, then, it is useful to substitute ocost� for<lb />oprice.� What does each library product cost? How<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0013" />
        <p>much, for example, does it cost to maintain a ver-<lb />tical file collection? Could the money we spend on<lb />staff time, postage, and file cabinets be used to<lb />support some other, possibly more important,<lb />product? Do the benefits exceed the costs? As in<lb />product planning, a firm grasp of the library's<lb />mission and of the current needs of its commun-<lb />ity of users is essential to making wise pricing and<lb />cost decisions.<lb /><lb />Promotion involves personal selling, public<lb />relations, and advertising, using print, broadcast,<lb />and other media. It is, in a sense, communicating<lb />with an ulterior motive: in libraries, encouraging<lb />use and gaining community support. Library<lb />promotion ranges from the simple to the sophisti-<lb />cated, including exhibits and displays; posters,<lb />pamphlets, newsletters, and user guides; public<lb />service announcements on radio and television;<lb />news releases and articles; slide/tape and video<lb />presentations; and speeches. It also includes<lb />meeting individually with such user groups as<lb />faculty members, marketing departments, and<lb />civic clubs. Such meetings are useful because they<lb />offer librarians the opportunity to learn more<lb />about their users and to respond more effectively<lb />to their needs.<lb /><lb />Finally, place, in marketing, refers not only to<lb />the geographic area in which a product is mar-<lb />keted, but also to the channels and intermediaries<lb />through which the product moves. Several library<lb />oplace� decisions come to mind. The location of a<lb />new branch library is a place decision. Another is<lb />whether a particular service should be offered in<lb />one department or another. Should bibliographic<lb />instruction be offered by a specialist, for example,<lb />or should it be one of many services offered by the<lb />reference department? Should data base search-<lb />ing be done only by librarians, or should users be<lb />able to do their own searching without librarians<lb />as intermediaries? To be effective, place decisions,<lb />like those concerning product, pricing, and pro-<lb />motion, must be based on an understanding of<lb />library goals and user needs.<lb /><lb />Market segmentation is a way<lb />of acknowledging that librar-<lb />ies cannot be all things to all<lb />people.<lb /><lb />Market Segmentation<lb /><lb />In traditional business practice, marketers<lb />define their markets by attempting to identify<lb />particular segments of the population, people<lb />who are likely to want and be able to afford the<lb /><lb />product that is being sold. This process of dividing<lb />a larger, somewhat diverse, market into smaller<lb />markets in which demand for a particular prod-<lb />uct is likely to be greater is called market segmen-<lb />tation. Traditionally, such variables as geographic<lb />location, age, race, sex, income, peer groups, life-<lb />style, and political affiliation have been used to<lb />identify target markets, but any characteristic<lb />that identifies and defines actual or potential<lb />consumers can be used.<lb /><lb />While the concept of segmenting markets is<lb />as relevant to libraries as to other organizations,<lb />it may be that libraries will need to use different<lb />characteristics to define major user groups. In<lb />academic libraries, for example, such variables<lb />may include academic status (faculty member,<lb />graduate student, undergraduate student, visit-<lb />ing scholar, or staff member) and academic disci-<lb />pline, rather than such traditional demographic<lb />characteristics as age and income.<lb /><lb />Market segmentation is a way of acknowledg-<lb />ing that libraries cannot be all things to all people.<lb />oIn the best of all possible worlds and times,�<lb />writes Darlene Weingand, othe library would<lb />respond to every community need with maximum<lb />resources. However, in the real world, resources<lb />are finite and must be directed toward achieving<lb />the most effective results.�? Market segmentation<lb />provides focus and helps us to set priorities. If it is<lb />practiced effectively, it ensures greater respon-<lb />siveness to the needs of specific user groups.<lb /><lb />In summary, libraries must determine the<lb />best combination of product, price, promotion,<lb />and place"the marketing mix"to reach each<lb />target market (market segment) identified. To be<lb />effective, such analysis must be based on an<lb />understanding and appreciation of the library's<lb />goals and of the characteristics and needs of its<lb />community of users. One way in which such<lb />information can be gathered is through market-<lb />ing research.<lb /><lb />Marketing Research<lb /><lb />Marketing research includes a range of activi-<lb />ties but, in essence, is othe process of systemati-<lb />cally gathering and analyzing information about<lb />marketing problems and potentials for use in<lb />making marketing decisions.� In the private sec-<lb />tor, it may include such activities as sales and<lb />advertising research, identifying trends, and at-<lb />tempting to determine the potential for new prod-<lb />ucts and services. Consumer attitudes and re-<lb />actions may be studied, the effectiveness of<lb />promotional programs evaluated, and product<lb />sales compared with those of competitors. Market<lb />researchers may use surveys, interviews, or even<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 133<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0014" />
        <p>hidden television cameras to gather the informa-<lb />tion they require.<lb /><lb />Researchers use both primary and secondary<lb />data. Primary data, specifically gathered and ana-<lb />lyzed for the research at hand, are relevant and<lb />timely. While the fit between data and problem is<lb />good, however, this advantage is offset by the<lb />expense, expertise, and time required to produce<lb />primary data. Secondary data, on the other hand,<lb />are data that already exist, collected for some<lb />purpose other than the research currently under-<lb />way. They are easy to obtain and usually inexpen-<lb />sive (or even free); but they, too, have drawbacks.<lb />The fit between secondary information and the<lb />research being conducted may be none too good,<lb />and in some instances, the data may be unaccept-<lb />able. They may be outdated, biased, or otherwise<lb />unreliable. Market researchers are advised, how-<lb />ever, to use good secondary data whenever they<lb />are available, and to collect primary data only for<lb />those questions that secondary data cannot<lb />answer.<lb /><lb />Sound marketing research is<lb />thoughtfully planned, exe-<lb />cuted, analyzed, and reported.<lb />Its effectiveness can at least<lb />in part be measured by its<lb />impact on library policy and<lb />decision making.<lb /><lb />Typically, secondary data are produced by<lb />federal, state, and local government agencies, by<lb />trade organizations and associations, and by<lb />commercial publishers. Many libraries have strong<lb />collections of secondary data; marketers and busi-<lb />ness people frequently are referred to libraries to<lb />access such rich sources of secondary informa-<lb />tion as census data, economic forecasts, and<lb />industry-related statistical compilations.<lb /><lb />Marketing research is an essential ingredient<lb />for effective marketing in libraries as well as in the<lb />private sector. How should it be done in libraries?<lb />To begin, certain key questions must be asked.<lb />oWhy do we need this information?� oHow will we<lb />use it when we get it?� oWill our findings in some<lb />way affect library decision making?� Unless the<lb />research findings are expected to have an impact<lb />on decision making, the research should not be<lb />carried out. Beware of research conducted merely<lb />to retrieve ointeresting� facts. The branch librar-<lb />ian, for example, who thinks it might be interest-<lb />ing to learn more about changing neighborhood<lb />demographics but does not plan to modify pro-<lb /><lb />134"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />grams, collections, or services as a result of the<lb />findings, is wasting time and money. Research<lb />must serve a useful purpose.<lb /><lb />The next step is to draw up a list of specific<lb />information requirements. A written list itemizing<lb />the issues to be investigated, data requirements,<lb />and questions to be asked is preferable because it<lb />eliminates ambiguities and ensures common goals<lb />for those participating in the project. Several dif-<lb />ferent approaches may be taken.<lb /><lb />Some find it useful to determine information require-<lb />ments by stating their beliefs about the market as a set of<lb />hypotheses. For example, a library director trying to<lb />determine the buildingTs best operating hours may be<lb />interested in a test of the hypothesis that opening the<lb />library two evenings a week will increase traffic on the<lb />days selected by 10 percent. A second hypothesis could<lb />be that the particular day chosen will have no impact on<lb />the percentage increase in traffic. These hypotheses are<lb />then used to generate data requirements. For the library,<lb />information about use by time of day would be required,<lb />but data about payment of overdue fines and length of<lb />time books are held would not be necessary.<lb /><lb />Another fruitful approach is to prepare samples of<lb />possible outputs from the project and see what questions<lb />the sample report raises. Are other data needed before<lb />the results can be used? For example, in preparing a draft<lb />report the library director may also see a need to deter-<lb />mine staffing requirements by asking, say, what types of<lb />materials evening users are likely to want. Will evening<lb />users want to have access to the childrenTs book section,<lb />or can that section be closed? Will evening users require<lb />the services of a fully trained reference librarian? Careful<lb />examination of the sample output will also reveal<lb />whether the report contains data that will not be useful<lb />and can be eliminated from the study. As this library<lb />example illustrates, it is often useful for a manager to<lb />determine beforehand what information will be needed if<lb />each of the alternatives being studied is adopted.®<lb /><lb />When the research problem has been identi-<lb />fied and information specifications itemized, the<lb />next step is to review existing secondary data.<lb />Two main kinds are available in most libraries.<lb />The first consists of internal library records.<lb />These may include circulation and reference sta-<lb />tistics, complaints and compliments from the<lb />suggestion box, planning documents, the libraryTs<lb />mission statement, analyses of special programs<lb />and services, and staff observations. These inter-<lb />nal records almost always contain information<lb />that can be used in marketing research. In addi-<lb />tion, most libraries contain an array of business<lb />reference sources that can be extremely useful.<lb />Such basic publications as the Editor &amp; Publisher<lb />Market Guide, Survey of Buying Power Data Ser-<lb /><lb />Beware of research conducted<lb />merely to retrieve ointerest-<lb />ing�T facts.<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0015" />
        <p>vice, and Rand McNallyTs Commercial Atlas &amp;<lb />Marketing Guide contain up-to-date population<lb />estimates and brief overviews of the cities and<lb />towns listed. Even more geographically precise<lb />data can be found in the block statistics and cen-<lb />sus tract statistics published as part of the<lb />decennial census of population and housing,<lb />while more frequently updated information is<lb />available in the annual Sourcebook of Demogra-<lb />phics and Buying Power for Every ZIP Code in<lb />the USA. Online data bases also contain useful<lb />general information. Donnelley Demographics,<lb />for example, is particularly good for current pop-<lb />ulation estimates and five-year projections for cit-<lb />ies and towns too small to be included in most<lb />annual Census Bureau publications. These are<lb />but a few of the standard sources available in<lb />many libraries. Their value in library as well as in<lb />business marketing research should not be under-<lb />estimated.<lb /><lb />Finally, librarians may need to locate addi-<lb />tional secondary data that are made available by<lb />other organizations. If the library is part of some<lb />larger body such as a university, city or county<lb /><lb />The products each library<lb />offers should be a reflection<lb />not only of its general mission<lb />to inform and educate, but<lb />also of the specific needs and<lb />interests of its community of<lb />users.<lb /><lb />government, or corporation, the parent organiza-<lb />tion may also have documents and records on<lb />hand that will supplement library research. Imag-<lb />ination and persistence may be necessary to iden-<lb />tify and retrieve such information, but it is usually<lb />well worth the effort.<lb /><lb />If available information is inadequate, re-<lb />searchers must decide whether the cost of collect-<lb />ing primary data will be offset by the anticipated<lb />benefits. If the decision is to proceed, other issues<lb />must be resolved. Should an exploratory study be<lb />conducted? Is a user survey preferable, or should<lb />focused group interviews be conducted? Should<lb />the library do its own research, or should it hire<lb />consultants? While space constraints preclude<lb />discussion of each of these options, the following<lb />bibliography cites several sources that treat them<lb />in some detail.<lb /><lb />Gathering of both primary and secondary<lb />data is followed by careful analysis and ultimately<lb />by a report in which the findings are presented.<lb /><lb />Sound marketing research is thoughtfully<lb />planned, executed, anaiyzed, and reported. Its<lb />effectiveness can at least in part be measured by<lb />its impact on library policy and decision making.<lb /><lb />References<lb />1. oClassified Advertising,� Library Hotline 17 (March 7, 1988):<lb />EBs<lb />2. Darlene E. Weingand, oThe Role of Marketing in Future of<lb />Rural Public Libraries,� Illinois Public Libraries 68 (October<lb />1986): 335.<lb />3. Ibid, 335.<lb />4. Diane Strauss, Handbook of Business Information (Engle-<lb />wood, Colo.: Libraries Unlimited, 1988), 190.<lb />5. Christopher H. Lovelock and Charles B. Weinberg, Marketing<lb />for Public and Nonprofit Managers (New York: Wiley, 1984),<lb /><lb />131.<lb />Further Reading<lb /><lb />Carrell, Daniel. oLibrary Marketing: Old and New Truths.� Wilson<lb />Library Bulletin 57 (November 1982): 212-216.<lb /><lb />Cassell, Kay Ann. Knowing Your Community and Its Needs. Chi-<lb />cago: American Library Association, 1988.<lb /><lb />DElia, George. oA Procedure for Identifying and Surveying<lb />Potential Users of Public Libraries.� Library Research 2<lb />(Fall 1980): 239-249.<lb /><lb />Dragon, Andrea C. oThe Marketing of Public Library Services.�<lb />Drexel Library Quarterly 19 (Spring 1983): 117-132.<lb /><lb />Edinger, Joyce A. oMarketing Library Services: Strategy for Sur-<lb />vival.� College &amp; Research Libraries (July 1980): 328-332.<lb /><lb />Grunewald, Joseph P. Developing a Marketing Program for<lb />Libraries. Clarion, Pa: Clarion State College, 1983.<lb /><lb />, and Traynor, Kenneth. oA Marketing Plan for the Law<lb />Library.� Law Library Journal 79 (Winter 1987): 103-113.<lb /><lb />Halperin, Michael. oMarketing Segmentation for Information<lb />Services,� Drexel Library Quarterly 17 (Spring 1981): 77-<lb />87.<lb /><lb />Kies, Cosette N. Marketing and Public Relations for Libraries.<lb />Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1987.<lb /><lb />Leisner, Tony. oMission Statements and the Marketing Mix.� Pub-<lb />lic Libraries 25 (Fall 1986): 86-87.<lb /><lb />Lovelock, Christopher H., and Weinberg, Charles B. Marketing<lb />for Public and Nonprofit Managers. New York: Wiley, 1981.<lb /><lb />Lynch, Christine Koontz, and Rockwood, Persio Emmett. oMar-<lb />keting Strategy for ChildrenTs Services.� Public Library<lb />Quarterly 7 (Fall/Winter 1986): 27-40.<lb /><lb />McDowell, Billie L. oBasic Strategies for Marketing Community<lb />College Library Services.� Community &amp; Junior College<lb />Libraries 1 (Fall 1982): 39-42.<lb /><lb />Shapiro, Stanley J. oMarketing and the Information Professional:<lb />Odd Couple or Meaningful Relationship.� Special Libraries<lb />71 (November 1980): 469-474.<lb /><lb />Sterngold, Arthur. oMarketing for Special Libraries and Informa-<lb />tion Centers: The Positioning Process.� Special Libraries 73<lb />(October 1982): 254-259.<lb /><lb />Stone, Dennis J. oMarketing as an Integral Part of Law Library<lb />Management.� Law Library Journal 79 (Winter 1987): 103-<lb />113.<lb /><lb />Thesing, Jane I. oMarketing Academic Library Bibliographic<lb />Instruction Programs: Case and Commentary.� Research<lb />Strategies 3 (Winter 1985): 29-36.<lb /><lb />Weingand, Darlene E. Marketing/Planning Library and Infor-<lb />mation Services. Englewood, Colo.: Libraries Unlimited,<lb />1987.<lb /><lb />Wood, Elizabeth J. oStrategic Planning and the Marketing Pro-<lb />cess: Library Applications.� Jowrnal of Academic Librar-<lb />ianship 9 (March 1983): 15-20.<lb /><lb />Zachert, Martha Jane and Williams, Robert V., oMarketing Mea-<lb />sures for Information Services.� Special Libraries 77<lb /><lb />(Spring 1986): 61-70, al<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"135<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0016" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />oSell� Is Not A Four-Letter Word<lb /><lb />Lessons Learned from the Competitive Marketplace<lb /><lb />Helen Causey<lb /><lb />I spent five years as a sales representative for<lb />a publishing company. I was hired for that job for<lb />two reasons: one, I was a working librarian and<lb />spoke olibraryese� and two, I seem to have enough<lb />chutzpa to make it in sales.<lb /><lb />The mindset of the-private sector, the atti-<lb />tudes prevalent in large companies, and a pro-<lb />duce-or-get-out atmosphere were light years<lb />away from the safe and secure world I left in the<lb />public library. But I learned how to play their<lb />games, to live with the owhat have you done for<lb />me lately� syndrome. I became accountable for my<lb />time and effort, and it paid off. I've returned to<lb />the public library world and realize itTs not as safe<lb />and secure as I once thought. We have our own<lb />game to play. And as public money gets tighter,<lb />the demands on that money become greater, and<lb />the number of competitors increase, the game<lb />may turn into hard ball.<lb /><lb />In the private sector it all boils down to one<lb />thing"the bottom line. ItTs true in libraries too.<lb />We must become accountable for what we do.<lb />Just because we are intrinsically good and pure of<lb />heart does not mean that the world owes us a<lb />living. Our bottom line is determined by how<lb />much service we render to the public. Our ocorpo-<lb />rate comptroller� may be called the Board of<lb />County Commissioners or Town Council, but con-<lb />trol us they do; and if we want to get their atten-<lb />tion, just let our ounits-of-service� numbers go<lb />down and we'll soon have it. Elected officials are<lb />as accountable to the public as the comptroller is<lb />to his board of directors. They must show value<lb />for the dollars spent and a good return on their<lb />investment. They must provide a product that is<lb />needed or wanted by the public. With increasing<lb />demands for decreasing dollars, which service do<lb />you think the public is willing to have reduced"<lb />libraries or garbage collection? Those of us<lb />dependent on public money, no matter at what<lb />level, must make our services more indispensable<lb />than garbage collection. If we donTt, we are going<lb />to lose momentum until we come to a dead stop,<lb /><lb />Helen Causey is director of the Moore County Library in Car-<lb />thage, North Carolina.<lb /><lb />136"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />and if that happens, we've no one to blame but<lb />ourselves.<lb /><lb />Look at the private sectorTs response to this<lb />problem. If you are Acme Wax Company and have<lb />been making liquid floor wax for years, you had<lb />better take a look around and notice that every-<lb />one is installing new ono-wax flooring� over old<lb />floors. If you take note of this before you go out of<lb />business, you'll do what a major floor wax com-<lb />pany did. They came out with a product that is<lb />ospecially formulated to shine your no-wax<lb />floors.� It may even be the same product they've<lb />been selling for years (although in a new bottle),<lb />but they didnTt lose their business while they sat<lb />on their hands and wondered why.<lb /><lb />We know the value of our services; we've got<lb />to start telling others of their value. We've got to<lb />sell our services. ItTs not hard, itTs not dirty, and<lb />itTs not beneath us. We have to stop thinking that,<lb />because we are cultural, because we are valuable,<lb />and because we are noble, the all-knowing public<lb />will somehow find its way to our doorstep and<lb />we'll be there ready to anoint their heads with<lb />knowledge. The oall-knowing� public is hardly<lb />aware that we exist, and we've got to do some-<lb />thing about that. In a continuing education class<lb />at a local college, I was appalled to hear the<lb />teacher telling a classroom of business people<lb />about a wonderful source of information (the U.S.<lb />Census Bureau publication) that would give them<lb />all the information they needed to do an assign-<lb />ment. This research was available, he said, for a<lb />fee from a certain place in town. I couldnTt stand<lb />it, [had to raise my hand and tell them it was also<lb />available at their local public library for free. This<lb />seemed to be news to everyone there but me.<lb /><lb />More important than the public at large, the<lb />powers that be are often unaware of what we're<lb />really all about. Someone told me of hearing a<lb />local official actually boast in an open meeting<lb />that he onever reads.� This is a man who controls<lb />the purse strings. This is a ocorporate comp-<lb />troller� who brags about not using the companyTs<lb />product. What chance does that product have for<lb />increased funding?<lb /><lb />We can do something about this. We can<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0017" />
        <p>learn lessons from corporate America and apply<lb />them to our own product. Selling service is no<lb />different from selling storm windows. I believe the<lb />reason we have such an aversion to the term osell-<lb />ing� is the stereotypical view we have of salespeo-<lb />ple. ItTs true there are pushy, arrogant, and<lb />unprincipled salespeople, but it is as unfair a<lb />generalization of the profession as a whole as the<lb />dowdy old-maid librarian is an unfair characteri-<lb />zation of our profession. Librarians, of all people,<lb />should have an aversion to occupational stereo-<lb />types.<lb /><lb />The private sector has turned selling into an<lb />art form. It has had to. In business if you donTt<lb />succeed you donTt survive. When the stakes are<lb />that high, businesses must be critical of all areas<lb />of their operation. They must constantly evaluate<lb />and re-evaluate. This is true for libraries too. Who<lb />are our customers? Notice I said customers. I dis-<lb />like the term opatrons.� A frequent library user<lb />recently brought to my attention a sign she found<lb />confusing. The sign referred to olibrary patrons�<lb />and she wondered if that meant someone who<lb />had given the library money. We have to stop<lb />using jargon that the rest of the world doesnTt<lb />understand. These opatrons� are customers who<lb />buy our service with their tax dollars. Each of us<lb />has had someone say oI pay your salary,� and<lb />they're right"they do. If they pay our salary but<lb />donTt use our service, we are risking unemploy-<lb />ment. ThatTs a cold, hard, fact of life in the outside<lb />world.<lb /><lb />The people who are already using our librar-<lb />ies are not the only customers we have. We must<lb />consider the entire public when we consider our<lb />customersT needs. Those needs are being met now<lb />but not by us. Being in sales gives one the perspec-<lb />tive of viewing the entire world as a potential cus-<lb />tomer base. Everyone to whom you are not<lb />currently selling is a future sales prospect. This is<lb />an attitude we must foster in the public sector as<lb />well. Someone said the support for the public<lb />library is two inches wide and ten miles deep"<lb />meaning we have ardent supporters, but rela-<lb />tively few of them. We have to make our support<lb />system ten miles wide to ensure we have the clout<lb />to increase our funding.<lb /><lb />We've talked about the why of selling. LetTs<lb />talk about the how. Marketing and selling are not<lb />interchangeable terms. Marketing is used to<lb />determine what products you need to have, and<lb />selling is pushing the products you already have.<lb />We must do both in libraries. Do we have the right<lb />products for our customers? How can we find out<lb />if we do? Of the products we already have, how<lb />can we sell them?<lb /><lb />In marketing, the first thing they teach you to<lb />do is research. See whatTs going on around you. In<lb />the business world, if you are interested in open-<lb />ing a restaurant, you first do some research. You<lb />find demographics on what percentage of todayTs<lb />population eats out and how often. What is the<lb />population of the service area you are in? How<lb />many restaurants are already there? Will the<lb />population support another? The age demogra-<lb />phics will tell you whether to open a pizza place or<lb />a fancy restaurant. What is the average income<lb />level of your area? Is there a strong ethnic influ-<lb />ence? What percentage of the women work out-<lb />side the home? These questions and many more<lb />have to be answered before you put hard-earned<lb />money into a new venture.<lb /><lb />Those of us who are depend-<lb />ent on public money... must<lb />make our services more indis-<lb />pensable than garbage collec-<lb />tion.<lb /><lb />This research is equally important for the<lb />public sector. I lived through the last community<lb />analysis this state undertook, and no one hesti-<lb />tates more than I to suggest it again. But the fact<lb />is that an in-depth survey of our service area"<lb />who is out there and what do they want"is<lb />exactly what we should be doing if we want to<lb />stay in business. Using focus groups to evaluate<lb />the publicTs needs has been undertaken in many<lb />locations with some success. The Public Library<lb />Services Committee of the Public Library Associa-<lb />tion sponsored a program on using focus groups<lb />to determine needs at the American Library<lb />Association (ALA) Conference in New Orleans.<lb />This may be a more practical approach than a full<lb />community analysis. Those who reported on proj-<lb />ects during this program stressed that you must<lb />be prepared for what you are going to learn and<lb />you must not take it personally. The public has<lb />strange and wondrous perceptions of what we<lb />can or should do for them.<lb /><lb />Research is important, but be careful about<lb />asking the wrong questions, or worse, asking the<lb />right questions but not listening to the answers.<lb />My sales manager used to tell a story about a dog<lb />food company that put out a new brand of dog<lb />food. The company did research on the most per-<lb />fectly balanced diet for dogs; they came up with a<lb />perfectly designed package; they put out ingen-<lb />ious advertising; their cans were in the perfect<lb />shelf location in the stores"yet, the product was<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 137<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0018" />
        <p>not selling. They held high level strategy meetings<lb />to determine what to do about this dilemma, and<lb />suggestions were made about package redesign,<lb />gimmicks and give-aways. Finally, at the end of a<lb />meeting, someone asked, oDoes anyone have any<lb />idea why this product isnTt selling?� A salesman<lb />who had been sitting quietly through all this dis-<lb />cussion raised his hand and said, oI think I know<lb />the problem"the dogs won't eat it.�<lb /><lb />If we look at the private sector approach to<lb />test marketing a new product, we may get some<lb />ideas on what questions to ask and what to do<lb />with the answers. In the company I worked for,<lb />we did a good bit of marketing research. This<lb />relates directly to libraries if you substitute oser-<lb />vice� or oprogram� for the word oproduct.� Prod-<lb />uct development at our company occurred in<lb />several ways. One of the most important was to<lb />get in touch with potential customers, explain the<lb />ideas we had for a product, and ask their opin-<lb />ions. This was an enlightening experience. Many a<lb />wonderful idea was struck down in its prime by<lb />customer comments. Just because we felt there<lb />was a real need for a newspaper morgue collec-<lb />tion didnTt mean the customers did. That collec-<lb />tion never made it beyond the idea stage. This is<lb />an important point: donTt hold on to something<lb />that has no life in it. There are workshops now<lb />being planned for national library conferences<lb />that deal with how to tell when an existing library<lb />program has outlived its usefulness. Those same<lb />criteria hold true for programs you should never<lb />start. Even if itTs the best idea you've ever had, if<lb />the dogs wonTt eat it, let it go. Often we just jump<lb />headlong into a project or service without the<lb />slightest idea of whether anyone out there is<lb />interested or really needs it. Research is so impor-<lb />tant. Know what your customers want and need,<lb />and donTt be reluctant to let go of an idea that<lb />won't fly.<lb /><lb />... an in-depth survey of our<lb />service area...is exactly<lb />what we should be doing if we<lb />want to stay in business.<lb /><lb />The marketing research we did for our com-<lb />pany was sometimes general in nature. We would<lb />give a customer a subject area such as health care<lb />and let him or her tell us what information was<lb />needed. We wanted to learn what information<lb />was hard or impossible to get elsewhere, how they<lb />would use it, how it should be arranged, where<lb />they would put it if they had it, and how much<lb />they would pay for it. All of these questions<lb /><lb />138" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />helped the people responsible for product devel-<lb />opment put together the right collection in the<lb />right configuration for the right price. Often,<lb />while still in the development state, we would call<lb />upon those same customers again and review the<lb />newly structured product for their reactions.<lb />Many refinements were made during this process<lb />before the product was ready to market. All of<lb />these steps are important for libraries. We have to<lb />do more planning and ask the right questions to<lb />fine tune our product.<lb /><lb />Once we have our customersT wants and<lb />needs determined in a certain area and a product<lb />(or service) developed, the next step is selling. If<lb />we have developed the best widget in the world<lb />and no one knows it we've wasted our time, effort,<lb />and money. Our companyTs selling effort was<lb />divided into two parts"promotion and sales. The<lb />promotion department was responsible for cre-<lb />ating printed pieces and brochures. That depart-<lb />ment did a first-class job with our printed<lb />materials, producing professional, quality work.<lb />Those of us in libraries need to pay more atten-<lb />tion to the quality of the promotional materials<lb />we distribute. If we show the public sloppy, ama-<lb />teurish, mimeographed work, how can we expect<lb />them to take us seriously? Peggy Barber of the<lb />ALA Communications Office recently said at a<lb />public relations lecture that she was so tired of<lb />seeing library pieces and brochures that looked<lb />like they had been cranked out on the copying<lb />machine. She said libraries should have their<lb />major promotional materials produced profes-<lb />sionally. We need to plan our style and to be con-<lb />sistent. It may be ocozy,� oacademic,� othrifty,� or<lb />whatever, but we must stick with it. We need to<lb />hire a graphic artist to help us set up that iden-<lb />tity. A professional who knows how to project the<lb />image we choose will save us money and countless<lb />hours of future planning. That money will be well<lb />spent and will give us a look of professionalism.<lb />One of the secrets that sales representatives have<lb />is to look successful. A orep� I used to know always<lb />wore her full-length mink coat and diamonds to<lb />the ALA Midwinter Conference because it gave<lb />her and her company the look of success. ItTs all<lb />image. Would you take the advice of a seedy-look-<lb />ing stockbroker or doctor? Image is so important<lb />to professionalism and salesmanship. That also<lb />makes it important to librarians. If we want to be<lb />treated as professionals and sell our services, we<lb />must look the part. We donTt have to have a large<lb />budget to look stylish in print or in person, but we<lb />do have to plan, get professional help, and be con-<lb />stantly aware of the image we project.<lb /><lb />The other half of the marketing department<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0019" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />in our company was sales. We were responsible<lb />for direct contact with the customers. We hustled<lb />the product. Everyone who works in the public<lb />services sections of our library is a member of our<lb />sales department. Everyone. The sales depart-<lb />mentTs responsibility is to know thoroughly the<lb />products it sells, be able to describe them accu-<lb />rately, and show the customer that a product is<lb />something that will make his life better and eas-<lb />ier. How is this different from what our circula-<lb />tion staff should be doing every day? Sales people<lb />are hired to be outgoing, friendly, aggressive. Pub-<lb />lic service people should be outgoing, friendly and,<lb />yes, aggressive. Approach customers and ask<lb />them if they need help; donTt wait for them to get<lb />up the nerve to come to us. Many people come<lb />into a library, walk directly to the card catalog,<lb />look for a book on oQueen bees� under oQ� and, not<lb />finding one, leave without ever speaking to a soul.<lb />ThatTs not service; itTs just warehousing materials.<lb />When our company exhibited at national conven-<lb />tions like ALA, the sales staff needed to be in the<lb />aisles in front of our booth talking to people, not<lb />waiting at the back of the booth for someone to<lb />come in and ask a question. The next time you go<lb />to a library conference, stroll through the exhibits<lb />and see how many sales representatives are cow-<lb />ering in the back of the booth waiting for someone<lb />to come in. Any that are, are not successful<lb />salesmen. (Those at the backs of the booths are<lb />usually corporate vice-presidents. )<lb /><lb />Each of our sales reps had an extensive file<lb />on every customer. In it we noted when we talked<lb />with them and what was said. This included tid-<lb />bits like, oparents moving to Florida,� ochild sick,�<lb />or obuilding new house,� in addition to business<lb />information like oapplying for grant for history<lb />materials,� oexpects increased budget next year,�<lb />or owill make decision on this in June.� Every sales<lb />rep we talk to on the phone or who comes into<lb />our office does the same thing when he hangs up<lb />or goes back to his car. Then, before he calls or<lb />comes to see us again, he reviews those notes. He<lb />can start up a friendly conversation with oHave<lb />you moved into your new house yet?� and work<lb />his way into oHave you found out about your<lb />grant?� As customers, we must admit it makes us<lb />feel special that he cares enough about us to<lb />remember things about our lives. But a big part of<lb />sales is making the customer feel comfortable and<lb />at ease with you. Again, the public services staff<lb />should emulate this technique. That is what read-<lb />ersT advisory services should be all about. No mat-<lb />ter how busy the circulation department, you<lb />canTt work the front desk day in and day out<lb />without getting to know the regulars, finding out<lb /><lb />that Mrs. SmithTs grandchildren are coming to<lb />visit and that Mr. and Mrs. Jones are going on a<lb />cruise to Alaska. Suggest some childrenTs books<lb />for Mrs. Smith to read to her grandchildren and<lb />travel books on Alaska for the Joneses, along with<lb />afew paperback mysteries for the trip. oSell� those<lb />books. If people come to the desk with a book by<lb />Isak Dinesen, ask them if they've seen the new<lb />biography of her life.<lb /><lb />We must involve ourselves in what we're<lb />doing. It will help us do a better job and keep us<lb />from getting bored. We could hire robots to check<lb />books in and out, but thatTs not what the front<lb />desk should be about. The strongest people in the<lb />library should be at the front desk (and I don't<lb />mean physically strongest either). That desk is<lb />the hub. ItTs the perception the public has of othe<lb />library.� We must put our outgoing, friendly,<lb />aggressive sales people at the front desk and let<lb />them sell.<lb /><lb />The public has strange and<lb />wondrous perceptions of what<lb />we can or should do for them.<lb /><lb />The other thing a sales rep does in the out-<lb />side world is to build a customer base. This is the<lb />challenge of sales. ItTs much easier to sell to a<lb />customer we already have, those people that are<lb />already using our library. The harder part is get-<lb />ting those customers who donTt use our service.<lb />Remember"they are already customers, they are<lb />just getting their needs met elsewhere. These cus-<lb />tomers are critical to a company if it expects to<lb />grow. Just as in private business, these customers<lb />are critical to our needs. If we are to grow and<lb />prosper, we must have these non-users as part of<lb />our customer base. How do we attract the non-<lb />user? This goes back to market research, focus<lb />groups, and product development. Who are these<lb />people, what are their needs, who is now fulfilling<lb />those needs, and how can we let them know what<lb />we can do for them? We have to ask these people<lb />the right questions.<lb /><lb />The owner of a local bookshop told me she<lb />had asked people why they came to the bookstore<lb />to buy things that they could get at the library for<lb />free. A good question. The responses included oI<lb />didnTt know the library had it� or, if they knew we<lb />had it, oIt was easier to find in the bookstore.� This<lb />told me two important things: one, we needed to<lb />concentrate on public awareness, and, two, librar-<lb />ies have arranged a system of filing and storing<lb />that only we understand. This is the kind of useful<lb />information we get when we ask the right people<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 139<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0020" />
        <p>the right questions.<lb /><lb />We must be creative in the ways we inform<lb />the public that we have the product to fulfill their<lb />needs. We need to look around and see what ser-<lb />vices we already have and how we can better<lb />inform the customers of our product. The first<lb />place to start is with the hand that feeds us. What<lb />do the county or town administrators think we do<lb />all day, check out romance novels to little old<lb />ladies? We would probably be surprised if we<lb />really asked them. The answers would include<lb />something about oreading material� and ohome-<lb />work for schoolchildren� but not much else. We<lb />should start with the local government adminis-<lb />trator. If we have the General Statutes of North<lb />Carolina, we tell him. If we see information from<lb />the County Commissioners Association on our<lb />computer network, we send him a copy and ask<lb />him if he would like to see more to pass along to<lb />the county commissioners or other department<lb />heads. If heTs looking for a place to store regula-<lb />tory code books, we volunteer to take them. We<lb />ask for a set of state contracts on fiche for our<lb />library, so local government employees can make<lb />copies of the information on our reader/printer<lb />instead of having to copy all the information by<lb />hand. Thus, we make ourselves useful to the local<lb />government administrator. Soon he'll be calling us<lb />with questions, and we'll never again have to<lb />explain to him what we do all day.<lb /><lb />Our profession should not be<lb />merely guardians of man-<lb />kindTs knowledge, but dis-<lb />pensers of it as well.<lb /><lb />This applies to other departments in the local<lb />government also. Someone called our library one<lb />day and asked what the symptoms of a certain<lb />type of spider bite were. When I suggested calling<lb />eh Health Department, the caller said, oThis is the<lb />Health Department.� We can let the Register of<lb />Deeds and County ClerkTs office know that we<lb />have copies of old county records, and that weTre<lb />willing to take the genealogists off their hands"<lb />theyll love us for it. If the purchasing office is<lb />having a hard time locating a company from<lb />which to buy replacement parts, we find the<lb />information in our Thomas Registry. The Eco-<lb />nomic Development office will be delighted if we<lb />can find company addresses, phone numbers, and<lb />management names for it. Anyone who thinks any<lb />of these things is really not our job is in the wrong<lb />business. If these people havenTt asked us for any<lb />of this information yet, we should volunteer it. We<lb /><lb />140"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />can make the first contact. In sales this is called<lb />ocold calling,� and itTs hard to do. To approach a<lb />stranger and initiate a sales call takes practice<lb />and nerve. Start with these friends and col-<lb />leagues; itTs easier.<lb /><lb />After the cold calling technique is mastered,<lb />it should be put to good use. We can send flyers to<lb />all the lawyers in the county and let them know<lb />about some of the legal, business, and profes-<lb />sional resources we have. (We had better not send<lb />a three-page bibliography; no one will read it.) We<lb />can let doctors and care-givers know that we have<lb />some new books on the psychological aspects of<lb />cancer or dealing with the families of Alzheimers<lb />patients. If thereTs an automotive mechanics class<lb />at the community college, we can let them know<lb />we have ChiltonTs Repair Manuals. All we have to<lb />do is look around our libraries. What do we<lb />already have, who would use it, and how can we<lb />let them know we have it? We mustnTt be afraid to<lb />sell our product. We should call on the Chamber<lb />of Commerce, ask them what their needs are, and<lb />then fulfill those needs. Take the initiative.<lb /><lb />Just as the private sector is profit motivated<lb />(the more business you do, the more money you<lb />make), we have to be funding motivated (the<lb />more service we render, the more support we<lb />get). Try to justify additional funding to a Board<lb />of Commissioners without showing an increase in<lb />usage. We live and die by our numbers, and the<lb />only way to increase our numbers is to serve the<lb />needs of more customers. The only way to serve<lb />more customers is to sell our service. LetTs take the<lb />lessons taught by the experts in private business<lb />and use what they do best"selling"to give more<lb />service to our customers. Our profession should not<lb />be merely guardians of mankindTs knowledge but<lb />dispensers of it as well. LetTs open up these infor-<lb />mation warehouses and let the light of the outside<lb /><lb />world in. P|<lb /><lb />Book Week<lb /><lb />November 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0021" />
        <p>Booktalk!<lb /><lb />by Joni Bodart-Talbot<lb /><lb />Summer 1988 388pp. ISBN 0-8242-0764-5. $28 U.S and Canada, $32 other countries<lb /><lb />Offering 500 booktalks as entertaining as they are<lb />persuasive, Booktalk! 3 provides ready-to-use material<lb />designed to turn students and library patrons into avid<lb />readers. Written and compiled by Joni Bodart-Talbot,<lb />Booktalk! 3 is the perfect way of bringing readers<lb />and books together.<lb /><lb />A Treasure Trove Of Booktalks<lb /><lb />Designed especially with the needs of librarians, teachers, and<lb />reading specialists in mind, Booktalk! 3 offers all-new booktalks<lb />contributed by more than 80 booktalkers from all over the United<lb />States. Running from two to seven minutes in length, the booktalks<lb />are intended for audiences ranging from children to high school<lb />students and adults.<lb /><lb />Everything You Need for Successful Booktalks<lb />The ideal source for creating and delivering successful booktalks, Also of Interest:<lb /><lb />Booktalk! 3 does not duplicate any of the talks or other material in BOOKTALKING<lb /><lb />Booktalk! 2. However, it does bring back several favorites from the WITH JONI BODART<lb />original 1980 Booktalk! (now out of print), including talks on The Videocassette. 28 minutes. 1986.<lb />Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien, The Left Hand of ISBN 0-8242-0741-6<lb />Darkness by Ursula LeGuin, and Ane opel ssa ags S'Gulde<lb />A Zoo in My Luggage by Gerald $99 other countries.<lb /><lb />Durrell. Booktalks are<lb /><lb />arranged alphabetically by BOOKTALK! 2<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />title, and include bibliogra- re dianten All Ages<lb />phies by author, age level, and by Joni Bodart 408pp. 1985.<lb /><lb />theme and genre. ISBN 0-8242-0716-5. LC 85-14223.<lb /><lb />$25 U.S. and Canada,<lb />$28 other countries.<lb /><lb />Titles featured in Booktalk! 3<lb /><lb />* Dakota Dugout by Ann Turner<lb /><lb />* Growing Up by Russell Baker<lb /><lb />+ Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte<lb /><lb />» The Celery Stalks at Midnight<lb /><lb />by James Howe * Beyond the<lb />Chocolate War by Robert Cormier<lb />° The SeaWolf by Jack London<lb /><lb />¢ The Snarkout Boys and the<lb />Baconburg Horror by Daniel<lb />Pinkwater * Glory Road by Bruce<lb />Catton * Catch-22 by Joseph Heller<lb />*Downtown by Norma Fox Mazer<lb />* The Girl with the Silver Eyes by<lb /><lb />@ Willo Davis Roberts « Cracker<lb /><lb />To Order Call Toll-Free<lb />1-800-367-6770<lb /><lb />In New York State call<lb />1-800-462-6060;<lb /><lb />in Canada call collect<lb />212-588-8400.<lb /><lb />THE<lb /><lb />H.W. WILSON<lb /><lb />COMPANY<lb />950 University Avenue<lb /><lb />Bronx, New York 10452<lb />(212) 588-8400<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "141<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0022" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />The Public Library at Crisis:<lb />Is Marketing the Answer?<lb /><lb />Bernard Vavrek<lb /><lb />This article explores three challenges that<lb /><lb />are affecting the ability of the public library toT<lb /><lb />survive and relates their solutions to marketing<lb />efforts. It is directed at the trustee who is respon-<lb />sible for the future of public libraries in the United<lb />States.<lb /><lb />The category opublic library� includes a var-<lb />iety of different institutions all bearing a similar<lb />title. This paper will focus on small organizations<lb />within resident populations of 25,000 or fewer<lb />people, here to be considered as orural� environ-<lb />ments. This extended definition of rural (the U. S.<lb />Census BureauTs definition considers places of<lb />fewer than 2,500 to be rural) encompasses a<lb />majority of public libraries in the United States,<lb />regardless of location.<lb /><lb />For this paper, marketing for nonprofit<lb />organizations is defined in the classic sense: a sys-<lb />tem or strategy that includes data gathering, goal<lb />setting, implementing programs, follow-through,<lb />and evaluation. These components will be de-<lb />scribed in more detail later in this essay.<lb /><lb />The Crises<lb /><lb />Challenges, interestingly, affect people and<lb />institutions unevenly. It is significant to note that,<lb />in spite of constant crisis management, trustees<lb />and public librarians continue to maintain enthu-<lb />siasm and dedication to their endeavors. Unfor-<lb />tunately, because of a sense of commitment and<lb />desperation, these same individuals are burning<lb />themselves out attempting to cope with the vagar-<lb />ies of modern public librarianship. While an<lb />expenditure of increased energies is admirable,<lb />the human machine will quickly arrive at a point<lb />when enthusiasm is simply not enough to cope<lb />with current problems. Further, there is little<lb />hope of reducing the seriousness of the issues to<lb />be faced in the immediate future.<lb /><lb />It is, of course, an exercise in immodesty for<lb />any author to identify challenges and to be bold<lb />enough to offer suggestions as palliatives. Further,<lb /><lb />Bernard Vavrek is professor and director of the Center for the<lb />Study of Rural Librarianship in the College of Library Science<lb />at Clarion State University in Clarion, Pennsylvania.<lb /><lb />142"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />while this individual is going to consider three<lb />challenges confronting public librarianship, these<lb />categories impinge on each other rather than<lb />proceeding in parallel. The reader will probably<lb />not be surprised by the developments to be dis-<lb />cussed. Two out of the three are really not new.<lb />The challenge occurs in implementing change.<lb /><lb />The information explosion, as we have come<lb />to call it, is the first of these challenges. While<lb />there is nothing exciting in calling attention to the<lb />obvious, what must be considered is the continu-<lb />ing and ultimate extension of this sustained<lb />information outburst as a reality of librarianship.<lb />No one person or institution can cope with the<lb />information produced by our global society. We<lb />now understand that the growth of information<lb />creates a demand for more information and what<lb />we now reap is a opapermore� society as opposed<lb />to the predicted paperless existence. An enduring<lb />commitment somehow to contain an information-<lb />rich world through a balanced collection of<lb />library materials was never really achievable. It is<lb />less so today. And there is little reason to recount<lb />the variety of visual formats that confront the<lb />modern public library, including those of the cur-<lb />rent electronic vintage, particularly, the optical<lb />disc configuration.<lb /><lb />The second trend is a corollary of the first. It<lb />has helped to fuel the information juggernaut.<lb />While Alvin Toffler, who informed us about The<lb />Third Wave, may have been the first to point to<lb />the development which he called odemassifica-<lb />tion,� it is arguable whether anyone perceived<lb />what this trend would mean in a practical sense.<lb />Essentially, Toffler foresaw the decentralization<lb />and specialization of the communications indus-<lb />try as it reorganized itself with publications<lb />intended for narrower and narrower audiences.<lb />The current spurt in the production of regional<lb />book publishers, the growth of cable television<lb />services, the availability of focused periodicals<lb />such as Working Woman, RunnerTs World, and<lb />Modern Maturity are examples of this demassifi-<lb />cation. Another instance of this trend appeared<lb />in a rather inconspicuous newspaper report indi-<lb />cating that USA Today will be made available to<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0023" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />subscribers in a one-page summarized version<lb />through telefacsimile transmission.! It is the<lb />authorTs view that Toffler underestimated the<lb />significance of this osubjective demand.� The multi-<lb />billion dollar microcomputer industry, coupled<lb />with the growth of other home-oriented media<lb />such as the video cassette recorder, one million<lb />units of which are being sold monthly in the Uni-<lb />ted States, has greatly accelerated proprietary<lb />usage.<lb /><lb />This osubjective demand� has created a rela-<lb />tively unique situation within public libraries. It<lb />has literally refashioned the public library, which<lb />has ostensibly been considered an agency of mass<lb />communications, into an institution that increas-<lb />ingly must commit its resources to cope with<lb />patronsT subjective needs.? Public librariesT lend-<lb />ing of videocassette tapes and computer hard-<lb />ware and software is an obvious example of<lb />efforts to meet these new specialized demands.<lb /><lb />Some would consider the above-mentioned<lb />developments to be the results of careful planning<lb />and market positioning. While this may be true, it<lb />is also important to note that the United States is<lb />rapidly becoming a nation of single persons. Since<lb />1980, for example, half of the homes added in<lb />America are now occupied by people living alone<lb />or with nonrelations. These households now<lb />account for twenty-eight percent of the total, as<lb />opposed to only nineteen percent in 1970.° Com-<lb />prising the one-person home, in addition to those<lb />who are unrelated, are those individuals who<lb />have never been married, those who are divorced,<lb />or those persons whose spouses are dead. This<lb />increased percentage of single households is evi-<lb />dence of changed lifestyles which must be recog-<lb />nized and catered to in the marketplace. Likewise<lb />the public library, which historically must evalu-<lb />ate the significance of societal trends before<lb />transforming itself, has been extended in new<lb />directions to meet these challenges.<lb /><lb />The third trend deals with the declining<lb />amount of money available to support public<lb />libraries. Because of the unavailability of current<lb />national statistics, it is awkward to attempt to<lb />generalize about this situation. It may be accurate<lb />to say, however, that public libraries are hurting.<lb />Fortunately, this is not true in every public<lb />library; but it is an enormous problem which is<lb />not endemic to a specific region of the country.<lb />Financing the local public library is a similar prob-<lb />lem in Clarion, Pennsylvania, and Willows, Cali-<lb />fornia.<lb /><lb />Available statistical data from the Center for<lb />the Study of Rural Librarianship suggest that<lb />budgets for small public libraries are actually<lb /><lb />increasing. While this may be true, a national<lb />average of $69,000 for libraries in populations of<lb />2,501 to 25,000 people, and an average budget of<lb />$22,000 in towns with populations below 2,500,<lb />certainly cannot be considered extravagant finan-<lb />cial support.® There simply is not enough money<lb />available to accomplish all of those responsibili-<lb />ties perceived as functions of the community<lb />library, whether this institution is a function of<lb />city government or a part of a county arrange-<lb />ment. In the latter instance, the structure of polit-<lb />ical life in the United States is being changed by<lb />the growth in significance of county government<lb />that increasingly is expected to provide addi-<lb />tional social support"only one of which is the<lb />library"for its citizens. Unfortunately, it appears<lb />that eighty percent of all county administrators<lb />are politically and fiscally conservative.t Further,<lb />in some states the county government is pre-<lb />cluded from raising sufficient taxes to support<lb />required and necessary services because state<lb />legislatures will not permit tax levels to be<lb />increased.<lb /><lb />An enduring commitment<lb />somehow to contain an infor-<lb />mation-rich world through a<lb />balanced collection of library<lb />materials was never really<lb />achievable.<lb /><lb />The fiscal dilemma is not limited to the<lb />amount of dollars available to local libraries. In<lb />some cases, the library staff has never conducted<lb />a survey of its users and consequently has been<lb />able to accomplish little in the way of what today<lb />is being called ostrategic planning.� In short, little<lb />planning of any kind has been done. As a conse-<lb />quence, the library staff has no sense of priority<lb />needs to be translated into services. The effect of<lb />this lack of planning is not a casual matter.<lb />Rather, it has caused staff members to attempt to<lb />do everything out of a sense of duty. Additionally,<lb />the presumed insatiable community appetite is<lb />satisfied (or salved) with more and more diversi-<lb />fied services. While this is not true in all small<lb />libraries, the pressures are widespread and come<lb />from suggestions made at professional meetings,<lb />from the library literature, and from the commun-<lb />ity itself. Further, speakers from far away places<lb />exhort audiences of trustees and rural librarians<lb />with the theme that more and more must be done<lb />to meet professional responsibilities. This author<lb />admits his guilt. The problem is that we infre-<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 143<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0024" />
        <p>quently consider limitations which should be<lb />placed on services. There is now little alternative<lb />but to consider what the library can afford to<lb />provide"a question of interest to all types of<lb />libraries.<lb /><lb />In institutions where budgets are remarkably<lb />narrower than expenses, librarians and trustees<lb />are attempting additional avenues of fundraising<lb />to keep things solvent. Bake sales, dances, book<lb />and stationery sales, and grant proposals are<lb />among the techniques attempted. What has now<lb />created a siege mentality relative to these actions,<lb />and justifiably so, is that fundraising is no longer a<lb />matter associated with additional library pro-<lb />gramming or extra services. Ingenious and time-<lb />consuming projects have become obligations of<lb />the trustees to keep the library ship in the water.<lb />The typical nature of the situation can be per-<lb />ceived in the following comment.<lb /><lb />The (anywhere) Board spends most of its volunteer<lb />time on fundraising events; that may be a raffle, bake sale,<lb />book fair, government pleas with ~cup in hand,T etc. This<lb />year the Board went all out, holding golf tournaments,<lb />food stands at tourist attractions, and private house par-<lb />ties to keep [the library] afloat.®<lb /><lb />This ohand-to-mouth� approach of providing for<lb />the fiscal needs of the library is degrading as well<lb />as impractical. Will a point soon be reached when<lb />the entire library budget consists of revenues<lb />gathered from self-initiated projects? What are<lb />the alternatives? While there are a variety of choi-<lb />ces, marketing is the key. This will be the focus of<lb />our discussion for the remainder of this article.<lb /><lb />The problem is that we infre-<lb />quently consider limitations<lb /><lb />which should be placed on<lb />services.<lb /><lb />The Relevance of Marketing<lb /><lb />It is fair to say that, with the exception of the<lb />product itself (and American society is often<lb />treated to illusion as opposed to substance), mar-<lb />keting is a prerequisite activity in any organiza-<lb />tion. The fact that the library community does not<lb />always recognize this is undoubtedly one of the<lb />reasons for this issue of North Carolina Librar-<lb />des. The difficulty is to transform marketing from<lb />a cliché that one assumes will mitigate all library<lb />difficulties into a practical endeavor. In reality,<lb />marketing occurs constantly in any organization,<lb />including the library, sometimes as a surprise to<lb />the staff. For example, every institution has an<lb />oimage,� which is a major concern to marketers.<lb /><lb />144"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />The challenge, however, is to know what kind of<lb />image your organization projects and to facilitate<lb />change, if that is considered desirable.<lb /><lb />This is a crucial time for public librarianship.<lb />While undoubtedly a quick check of the library<lb />literature would yield an historical record of<lb />other authors sounding a similar concern, the<lb />survival of rural America"whether agricultural,<lb />industrial, or resort based"is being confronted as<lb />never before. Community well-being is such a per-<lb />vasive concern for non-metropolitan people and<lb />agencies that services, including the library, will<lb />continue to be challenged. While applying market-<lb />ing skills in desperate economic situations will not<lb />always ensure success, the only way for the<lb />library to remain competitive is for the library<lb />board to facilitate the awareness that there is no<lb />alternative to marketing the library, if the library<lb />is to survive in some form.<lb /><lb />It is of some import to discuss the meaning of<lb />marketing for nonprofit organizations. Too often<lb />our subject is inextricably related only to public<lb />relations. One will often hear individuals talking<lb />about marketing in relationship to newspaper ads<lb />and radio spots. Without question, public rela-<lb />tions"in whatever form"becomes a key element<lb />in the marketing model. It is important to<lb />remember, however, that marketing is a strategy,<lb />that is, a methodology. The components for this<lb />strategy comprise analysis of the problem; pro-<lb />gram formation; timetable; implementation; fol-<lb />low-through; and evaluation. Conceptually, as a<lb />paradigm, marketing is similar to a variety of<lb />managerial techniques (e.g., management by<lb />objectives).<lb /><lb />At its fundamental level, marketing is simple.<lb />Ensuring its acceptance and use, however, takes<lb />some effort. Marketing is also complicated by the<lb />fact that the library deals with multiple publics,<lb />or markets. Children, senior Americans, the non-<lb />literate, and others compose our audiences. Mar-<lb />keting strategists remind us of a fundamental<lb />principle: not all publics or audiences can be<lb />served simultaneously. This vital fact is only<lb />slowly being appreciated among those responsible<lb />for library management. The public library cannot<lb />be all things to all people. There is neither enough<lb />emotion nor money to do everything. It is the<lb />author's view that libraries have been organized<lb />to provide too many services out of a sense of<lb />commitment to the public.<lb /><lb />Clearly, however, the rural public library<lb />must focus its assets, human as well as physical,<lb />to meet its current challenges. Also, it must be<lb />prepared to direct its services to meet community<lb />needs in the light of a potentially dwindling econ-<lb /><lb />ee Tees ee<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0025" />
        <p>omy. Marketing is an essential tool for the library<lb />trustee not only because of the inherent (and in<lb />some places, legal) obligation to maintain the<lb />libraryTs solvency, but to reduce the emotion and<lb />frustration currently related to endless book and<lb />bake sales, dances, and other efforts at raising<lb />money. Unfortunately, it is not a panacea for the<lb />overall lack of funding. What it helps to ensure,<lb />however, is that the library's funds are channeled<lb />into purposeful library activities as determined by<lb />the community's representatives, the trustees.<lb /><lb />MarketingTs Lack of Popularity<lb /><lb />If marketing is such an important contribu-<lb />tion to the United States, why is it not applied<lb />more frequently? The next section discusses why<lb />marketing is just developing as a library strategy.<lb />The final section of this paper will present some<lb />ohow to do it� suggestions.<lb /><lb />While this author may be accused of too often<lb />commenting on the fact that education is the key<lb />issue in library development, the frequent lack of<lb />trained staff in AmericaTs rural public libraries is<lb />a vital concern. Non-academically trained staff,<lb />regardless of their commitment, are often un-<lb />aware of the meaning and application of market-<lb />ing. As suggested elsewhere in this paper,<lb />marketing is typically related to public relations.<lb />To verify this point, The Center for the Study of<lb />Rural Librarianship recently conducted a study<lb />to ask rural librarians if they participated in mar-<lb />keting activities. More than half of those surveyed<lb />answered in the affirmative. When the Center<lb />inquired about the marketing examples, however,<lb />virtually every respondent indicated instances of<lb />newspaper articles, publishing bookmarks, and so<lb />on.<lb /><lb />If the library board finds itself unable to<lb />augment its academically trained staff (or hire an<lb />academically trained librarian), one would offer<lb />the obvious alternative of supporting attendance<lb />of the current staff at local workshops or confer-<lb />ences where marketing matters are being con-<lb />sidered. It is anticipated that trustees would also<lb />attend. In the absence of workshops or conferen-<lb />ces, this author would like to suggest a book that<lb />the Center for the Study of Rural Librarianship<lb />publishes, which is a remarkable bargain for<lb />$5.00: Developing a Marketing Program for<lb />Libraries.T This practical guide to marketing is a<lb />no-nonsense approach to the subject.<lb /><lb />Another reason for the omeasured� applica-<lb />tion of marketing in libraries is the fact that mar-<lb />keting for nonprofit organizations is only a<lb />relatively recent pursuit among specialists. Philip<lb />Kotler, the guru of marketing, was among the first<lb /><lb />A classic for the library and classroom by the 1985 winner<lb />of the North Carolina Gold Medal Award for Literature<lb /><lb />The Tall Woman<lb />b<lb /><lb />'y<lb /><lb />Wilma Dykeman<lb /><lb />(Fiction, Grades 8 and up; English or Social Studies.<lb />Set in Western North Carolina during the Civil War)<lb /><lb />oEach time I teach a literature course, | ask my students, ~Of all<lb />the books we've read, which was your favorite?T The response<lb />is always unanimous, oThe Tall Woman by Wilma Dykeman.T�<lb /><lb />Diane Goldsmith (McDowell High School and<lb />Mars Hill College)<lb /><lb />oThe Tall Woman is a regular feature of my classes at Raben<lb />County High School.�<lb />Eliot Wigginton (The Foxfire Fund, Raben Gap, Georgia)<lb /><lb />15% library discount with this ad; $1.25 postage. Please<lb />ask about our sizable discount for classroom use.<lb /><lb />Wakestone Books<lb /><lb />405 Clifton Heights<lb />Newport, Tennessee 37821<lb /><lb />to publish a text on the nonprofit aspects of this<lb />subject, and this work dates only from 1975.8 His-<lb />torically, marketing has been primarily associated<lb />with for-profit organizations and has been slow to<lb />adapt for the not-for-profit sector. While libraries,<lb />museums, orchestras, and other organizations<lb />are now attempting to apply the aspects of mar-<lb />keting that pertain to the nonprofit sector, many<lb />individuals in this sector continue to have a<lb />rather negative impression that marketers bowl<lb />over people, persuading them to consume prod-<lb />ucts that are really not necessary or desirable.<lb /><lb />A third reason for a disinclination toward<lb />marketing relates to that hateful trio composed of<lb />the lack of money, time and staff. Ironically, this<lb />mentality may be related to the fact that a mar-<lb />keting approach is not taken in providing library<lb />services. Because the staff is attempting to do<lb />everything at the same time for all library clients,<lb />there genuinely is not time for yet another activ-<lb />ity, marketing. One is quick to acknowledge, how-<lb />ever, that since a majority of libraries are staffed<lb />by only one person, even the best planning must<lb />recognize the practical limitations of what can be<lb />accomplished. Parenthetically, this author com-<lb />miserated with a librarian who was attending a<lb />recent workshop relating to the development of<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 145<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0026" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />The difficulty is to transform<lb />marketing from a cliché that<lb />one assumes will mitigate all<lb />library difficulties into a prac-<lb />tical endeavor.<lb /><lb />literacy programs and lamented the lack of time<lb />for this onew� endeavor despite its importance. A<lb />thoughtful marketer might indicate that perhaps<lb />a literacy program was not feasible at this time.<lb /><lb />Using the above literacy program as an<lb />example of a marketing strategy, the marketer or<lb />person responsible for the planning would con-<lb />sider the following steps. He or she would attempt<lb />to identify whether or not a literacy project is<lb />needed. Such questions as whether there are<lb />other literacy providers, or whether there are sig-<lb />nificant numbers of persons in need of training<lb />might be asked. If there is a need, one would then<lb />establish goals and objectives, identify who is to<lb />be in charge, plan a budget, and define methods of<lb />public relations. Establishing a timetable is the<lb />next step. Implementating the program and fol-<lb />low-through are the next ingredients; followed,<lb />finally by evaluation of the project. The lack of<lb />evaluation tends to be a weakness in projects of<lb />all types. In judging the success of a marketing<lb />program (remember the emphasis in marketing<lb />is on an organized series of activities), one<lb />wishes to determine, among other things, how<lb />effective were the efforts at attracting students<lb />(as we continue to use our literacy example), or<lb />whether the tutoring was offered at times that<lb />would attract adults in need of education.<lb /><lb />At the outset of this section, the author indi-<lb />cated that lack of time was one reason for ignor-<lb />ing the marketing approach to library services.<lb />One would be less than candid, however, not to<lb />comment on the obvious"planning and imple-<lb />menting marketing programs do take time. It is<lb />much easier to start something and hope for the<lb />best. Unfortunately, this latter approach brings us<lb />back to the reality that the public library must be<lb />operated as a business"nonprofit, of course. And<lb />it is the trusteesT responsibility to ensure that effi-<lb />cient planning is characteristic of the library,<lb />regardless of its size.<lb /><lb />While this next commentary may appear to<lb />be tangential to the subject, the author believes<lb />that the lack of national standards for public<lb />libraries is another reason that marketing strate-<lb />gies are not more prevalent. The emphasis on<lb />community mission statements is fundamentally<lb />important since public libraries are different. But<lb /><lb />146" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />a basic error, in my view, was created in the public<lb />library movement by abandoning quantitative<lb />standards in an effort to be totally community<lb />oriented. This is related to marketing in the sense<lb />that there may not be the pressure to omeasure-<lb />up� with oneTs library service, since there are no<lb />guidelines by which to make a comparison. Indi-<lb />vidual state agencies and organizations, notably<lb />in North Carolina, have attempted to overcome<lb />the absence of standards with the development of<lb />state measures. Even though we recognize that<lb />independence is associated with rural America,<lb />much is to be gained by having at least a rough<lb />sense of what is occurring in other communities.<lb /><lb />The reader should now appreciate the fact<lb />that the author will not persist in enumerating<lb />additional reasons why marketing is not more<lb />often utilized. The previous review was written<lb />with the idea that one would recognize some of<lb />the reasons for marketingTs infrequent entry into<lb />library administration and attempt to hurdle<lb />them.<lb /><lb />Facilitating Marketing<lb /><lb />The title of this paper posed a serious ques-<lb />tion: can marketing overcome the current crises<lb />facing rural public libraries? The answer is oyes,�<lb />without question. Further a premise behind this<lb />paper is that most libraries must reevaluate their<lb />services in the light of available resources. This<lb />examination is extremely difficult without a mar-<lb />keting approach to library management. For<lb />example, while we relate the public library to the<lb />image of a community information center, it must<lb />be understood there are definite limits to what<lb />can be provided. This is a simple theorem, but it<lb />has yet to be put into practice in most communi-<lb />ties. The opposite tendency (to attempt more and<lb />more) seems to be symptomatic. The literacy<lb />example that has been used before in this paper is<lb />certainly a further example of expanding library<lb />services. Presently, for example, there is consid-<lb />erable concern that American workers cannot<lb />function at a literacy level to perform job-related<lb />tasks. The question becomes, why should the pub-<lb />lic library take on the responsibility of overcoming<lb />this deficiency? Should business itself not provide<lb />this service?<lb /><lb />The difficulty, as noted earlier in this paper, is<lb />that the public library has a variety of audiences<lb />to recognize. We simply must remember that not<lb />all levels of the community can be provided with<lb />the same level of service at the same time. This<lb />does not mean abandoning children while serving<lb />the senior American. By using a marketing<lb />approach, libraries may focus on special services<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0027" />
        <p>to children one year and to older Americans<lb />another time. It is assumed that the library will<lb />continue to maintain onormal services,� while tar-<lb />geting programs on a selected basis. Marketing is<lb />not just another gimmick. It is a way to manage<lb />the library and enable it to survive.<lb /><lb />WhereTs the Beef?<lb /><lb />The author intentionally left a loaded gun at<lb />the end of the previous paragraph. It is character-<lb />ized as onormal services.� The intent was to<lb />emphasize the fact that it is the board of trustees<lb />who ultimately must reconcile what is meant by<lb />the libraryTs standard services. Logically, libraries<lb />loan materials, answer reference questions, and<lb />so forth. The options may be limited, of course, if<lb />state or regional standards specify expectations.<lb />But loaning videocassettes, providing literacy<lb />training, and providing computerized information<lb />services, however desirable, are not etched into<lb />stone. If the public library is the community's<lb />library, then the people must decide the services.<lb />This does not necessarily mean that all matters<lb />are judgments left to a town meeting. Rather, the<lb />responsibility is vested in the trustees assisted by<lb />the library staff and the library's friends.<lb /><lb />The author now senses the perspiration<lb />forming on the readerTs forehead as one contem-<lb />plates the future of the public library. It is not<lb />assumed that the trustees (unless they wish to)<lb />will be directly involved in implementing marketing<lb />strategies for the library. The expectation is clear,<lb />however, that the board must encourage and be<lb />vitally interested in the library's development, or<lb />the library will founder as an institution. The<lb />board must facilitate the use of marketing, or<lb />there is little hope of coping with the stress of a<lb />changing rural society.<lb /><lb />The following brief section, in conclusion,<lb />suggests techniques of olocating the beef� while<lb />recognizing the inherent limitations of most rural<lb />libraries:<lb /><lb />1. The obvious first alternatives for planning<lb />and implementing a marketing program are<lb />members of the library staff or friends of the<lb />library. A less often utilized approach is to<lb />encourage the involvement of individuals such as<lb />representatives from the Cooperative Extension<lb />Service, Soil Conservation Service, Grange, Cham-<lb />ber of Commerce, Rotary Club, and others. The<lb />library community has not been as active as it<lb />should be in soliciting assistance from other<lb />community participants. A third method would<lb />be to ask help of staff from the state, local, or<lb />regional libraries.<lb /><lb />2. The author intentionally omitted a discus-<lb /><lb />sion of the costs of marketing activities. It has<lb />been our experience that funding is not a crucial<lb />problem. Programs can be implemented on the<lb />proverbial shoestring. Obviously, if one is distribut-<lb />ing T-shirts to the kids who come to story hours,<lb />somebody has to pay for these. But, in the<lb />authorTs view, using the lack of funds as a reason<lb />not to implement planning is sometimes an<lb />excuse for inaction. One also sympathizes with<lb />the fact that someone must pay for the stationery,<lb />postage, and other supplies.<lb /><lb />3. Finally, marketing strategies do not have to<lb />be of grand design, implemented over a pro-<lb />tracted period, to be effective. The concepts of<lb />marketing can just as easily be employed during a<lb />one-day interval. The key is action. It is not meant<lb />to be condescending to the reader to ask one to<lb />remember that, while marketing is a popular con-<lb />cept at the present, it is only a label for effective<lb />library planning.<lb /><lb />Admittedly, this essay has rambled over a<lb />variety of different thoughts. One hopes the<lb />reader will judge this commentary in the light of<lb />the author's assignment. This discussion was not<lb />meant to be a technical expression of marketing<lb />principles. There is plenty of text dealing with<lb />that. Rather, the message was to indicate that<lb />trustees face challenges as never before. The<lb />recent notice that the Shasta County Library<lb />(California) will be closed because of the lack of<lb />funds is a reminder of reality. And circumstances<lb />are going to become worse. Our concern is the<lb />growth of the rural public library and the con-<lb />tinuation of the American dream. Can marketing,<lb />itself, ensure these? No, but it is of fundamental<lb />importance.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1. oNews Digest by Facsimile,� New York Times, (July 26, 1988):<lb />23.<lb /><lb />2. Although taking a slightly different tack on this theme, the<lb />reader is, nevertheless, directed to the interesting article by Wil-<lb />liam F. Birdsall, oCommunity, Individualism and the American<lb />Public Library,� Library Journal 110 (November 1, 1985): 21-24.<lb />3. John Herbers, oOne Person Homes Show Big U.S. Rise,� New<lb />York Times, (November 20, 1985): A.32.<lb /><lb />4. oCounties Gain Power as Federal Influence Wanes,� New York<lb />Times, (November 10, 1985): A.1, A.34.<lb /><lb />5. Bernard Vavrek, Reference Service in Rural Public Libraries,<lb />(Clarion, Pa.: Center for the Study of Rural Librarianship,<lb />College of Library Science, Clarion University of Pennsylvania,<lb />1982): 18-19.<lb /><lb />6. This comment came from a document recently sent to the<lb />author by a trustee who is located on the east coast.<lb /><lb />7. Joseph Grunenwald, Developing a Marketing Program for<lb />Libraries, (Clarion, Pa.: Center for the Study of Rural<lb />Librarianship, College of Library Science, Clarion University of<lb />Pennsylvania, 1983.)<lb /><lb />8. Philip KotlerTs text is now in the third edition and entitled:<lb />Strategic Marketing for Nonprofit Organizations, (Englewood<lb />Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1987.) cl<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 147<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0028" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Marketing and Public Libraries:<lb />The Commitment<lb /><lb />Charles F. Montouri<lb /><lb />There is little doubt that libraries will apply<lb />marketing techniques to the development and<lb />distribution of library products and services in<lb />the years ahead. There is, however, sufficient<lb />cause for concern. The concern arises from the<lb />experience of the past. All too often libraries have<lb />turned legitimate conceptual processes (partici-<lb />patory management, zero based budgeting, etc.)<lb />into fly-by-night fads. After introducing a new<lb />program or mission, the effort is left to die on the<lb />vine, primarily due to neglect and lack of consis-<lb />tent attention. The amount of attention is gener-<lb />ally proportionate to the amount of risk the<lb />administration is willing to tolerate, but tolerance<lb />levels have not been particularly high. When<lb />accounting time rolls around and results are tal-<lb />lied the score is, more often than not, a tie.<lb />Nothing lost"nothing gained.<lb /><lb />Marketing Considered: The Risks<lb /><lb />Librarians have begun eagerly to accept mar-<lb />keting practices. In their article in the Journal of<lb />Library Administration, oThe ABCs of Imple-<lb />menting Library Marketing,� Andrea Dragon and<lb />Tony Leisner comment: oIndeed, the missionary<lb />zeal with which articles on marketing are written<lb />is indicative of a wide-spread grassroots move-<lb />ment within the profession. This interest in mar-<lb />keting is not the result of a mandate from the<lb />leaders of the professional associations nor is it<lb />due to any governmental action. This obottom-up�<lb />interest in marketing has grown out of librariansT<lb />desire to find a more appropriate model for relat-<lb />ing their professional activities to their com-<lb />munityTs needs.� This statement was written in<lb />1983. Five years have since passed and the mar-<lb />keting momentum continues to increase.<lb /><lb />As a legitimate conceptual process, then, is<lb />marketing to be the next fad for libraries? Is the<lb />knowledge that marketing is a system requiring a<lb />total commitment, sufficient reason for librarians<lb />to put concern aside? Will there be risks? Without<lb />doubt there will be risks because no human<lb /><lb />Charles F. Montouri is Business/Adult Services Librarian for<lb />the State Library of North Carolina.<lb /><lb />148"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />enterprise is risk free. Since marketing is a total<lb />management process involving administration<lb />and support staff, however, the risks can be min-<lb />imized and individual responsibility for error can<lb />be eased. Administration and support staff will<lb />need to enter the marketing process understand-<lb />ing that there are no guarantees for success"<lb />only hopes reinforced by sound planning. The<lb />sharing of risks will bring the joys of sharing the<lb />rewards.<lb /><lb />In order to minimize risks, administrators<lb />should have a solid understanding of the market-<lb />ing process. There is an excellent body of informa-<lb />tion now available in print about marketing and<lb />libraries (see the References at the end of this<lb />article). Because the implementation of a market-<lb />ing program will demand total commitment of<lb />institutional resources, library administrators<lb />should become totally familiar with marketing<lb />procedures. When the chief administrator en-<lb />dorses a marketing approach, the leadership<lb />he/she demonstrates sets the marketing pro-<lb />gramsT future course and resultant success or<lb />failure.<lb /><lb />Moving Ahead<lb /><lb />Once the administrator makes a personal<lb />commitment to a marketing program, the next<lb />step should be to gather support. The administra-<lb />tor should confer with each of the libraryTs consti-<lb />tuencies: board, staff, supervisors, and Friends. In<lb />the process of gathering support for the program,<lb />the administrator will be able to judge the degree<lb />of support for the program. This lobbying effort<lb />will also allow the administrator to point out the<lb />benefits of a marketing program. Some of the<lb />expected benefits will be high levels of staff crea-<lb />tivity and morale, opportunities for a wide range<lb />of publicity, a change of image. The administrator<lb />will also need to define the anticipated outcomes,<lb />since these represent the justification for embrac-<lb />ing a marketing approach to product and service<lb />delivery. New users, increased repeat business,<lb />high levels of user satisfaction, new product<lb />development, a commitment to the needs of indi-<lb />vidual users are some of the expected outcomes.<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0029" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Gathering support, though, means more than<lb />a resolution passed by the Board. Support means<lb />that each board member will be willing to make a<lb />personal commitment to the process. Gathering<lb />support means more than a presentation of the<lb />program to the staff. It means that each staff<lb />member has a clear understanding of the unique<lb />contribution he/she can make to the success of<lb />the marketing effort. Gathering support means<lb />more than an objective to be met in each supervi-<lb />sorTs annual work plan. It means that the supervi-<lb />sors will provide the leadership necessary to<lb />surmount the problems which most certainly will<lb />arise. Gathering support means more than a<lb />monetary contribution from the Friends of the<lb />Library. It means that the Friends are out in the<lb />community among the leaders and organizations<lb />supporting the exciting new developments at the<lb />library.<lb /><lb />While support for the program builds, a cus-<lb />tomer orientation philosophy should be devel-<lb />oped by the staff. Concern for non-users means<lb />that unserved or underserved populations are<lb />being identified as potential markets and market<lb />segments. A marketing mindset is beginning to<lb />form, but it will not form overnight. It will come<lb />about through in-service continuing education,<lb />marketing strategies and market research,<lb />through the implementation of the marketing<lb />plan, and through experience.<lb /><lb />In summary, the administrator must appre-<lb />ciate the value of a commitment to marketing and<lb />the development of a marketing mindset in<lb />implementing this type of program and library<lb />direction. This administrative support is crucial if<lb />the program is to be successful.<lb /><lb />Meeting Needs<lb /><lb />Marketing has been referred to as an ex-<lb />change process. As an exchange process, it must<lb />meet needs. The library has been looked upon as<lb />existing because of the public good, not because<lb />of a public need. In times of great social change, it<lb />becomes difficult to identify what is the public<lb />good. It is not difficult to identify public needs.<lb />Thus it makes sense in a period of scarce resour-<lb />ces to change the image of the library from one of<lb />a public good to one of a public need. Can market-<lb />ing help bring about this change since it is a pro-<lb />cess of uncovering and meeting needs?<lb /><lb />The critical question becomes: what needs<lb />can a library legitimately meet which other agen-<lb />cies cannot? The answer is simple"information<lb />needs. Free access to the worldTs body of accumu-<lb />lated knowledge is available at the library. Retrie-<lb />val of a rare work of literature from some remote<lb /><lb />location is possible through the library. The give<lb />and take of a reference interview in order to<lb />answer a difficult question can be a prized and<lb />valuable experience. How many places offer free,<lb />unbiased consumer information? These are but a<lb />few of the more obvious services provided by<lb />libraries. ALL of a personTs information needs can<lb />be met at one place"the library.<lb /><lb />Libraries are unique because of a simple con-<lb />cept. The community pools information resources<lb />so that every citizen can have access to a rich<lb />variety of materials that would be unaffordable<lb />otherwise. Undoubtedly, many unmet informa-<lb />tional needs of the public remain because of the<lb />passive role the library has assumed over the<lb />years. There has also been a substantial waste of<lb />resources due to library personnelTs sometimes<lb />erroneous perception of community needs.<lb /><lb />... it makes sense in a period<lb />of scarce resources to change<lb />the image of the library from<lb />one of public good to one of a<lb />public need.<lb /><lb />Marketing and modern technology can help<lb />change this approach. They can help the library<lb />become a visible, active component in the daily<lb />workings of our communities. The wonders of tele-<lb />communications, at very little cost, can multiply<lb />the amount of resources available to local com-<lb />munities"a feat not possible to achieve through<lb />published hard print acquisitions. Selection of<lb />resources can now be customized to meet the<lb />needs of the individual citizen. The librarianTs task<lb />becomes one of reaching out to these individuals<lb />in such a way that they fully understand that the<lb />library will work with them in providing the<lb />answers they seek. Providing answers is signifi-<lb />cantly different from providing information.<lb /><lb />The distinction between the provision of<lb />answers and the provision of information is in the<lb />ability of the librarian to uncover the patronTs real<lb />need during the interview process and, later, to<lb />interpret, analyze and correlate relevant raw<lb />data. Professional experience marks the differ-<lb />ence between providing information and provid-<lb />ing answers. Since the librarian becomes the core<lb />of the marketing distribution function (delivering<lb />the product), it is necessary to realize that this<lb />new approach requires something more than<lb />passive response. It requires assertive and aggres-<lb />sive behavior. A recommended reading is Herbert<lb />AchleitnerTs article: oAssertive Librarianship: A<lb />Means of Customizing Services� in Marketing for<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 149<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0030" />
        <p>Libraries and Information Agencies. Reference<lb />librarians, in particular, have always received<lb />enjoyment from the challenge to come up with<lb />sources of information. Now they have the oppor-<lb />tunity to enjoy the challenge and to experience<lb />greater pride in the results of their work.<lb /><lb />Resource Commitment<lb /><lb />Librarians are a pivotal element in the infor-<lb />mation product distribution function, one of four<lb />components of the marketing process. The other<lb />components are product, price, and promotion.<lb />Professional librarians and support staff are the<lb />personnel resources assigned to the marketing<lb />effort. These other resources need to be commit-<lb />ted:<lb /><lb />1. Time. A time commitment that allows<lb />research, planning and discussion, training, inter-<lb />viewing, assembling publicity, and evaluating all<lb />pieces of the total program must be made. Time<lb />should be allocated on the basis of priority.<lb />Though marketing may be the number one prior-<lb />ity, it is important to keep in mind during the<lb />analysis that marketing is not a substitute or<lb />replacement for existing programs. Marketing will<lb />enhance all valid programs. The important need<lb />is to find time within those programs that can be<lb />applied more effectively.<lb /><lb />What needs can a library legit-<lb />imately meet which other<lb />agencies cannot?<lb /><lb />2. Money. Sufficient financial resources (not<lb />counting personnel, space, or equipment) are<lb />crucial. It would be wise to commit funds to con-<lb />tractual services such as surveys, annual data<lb />updates, and media costs.<lb /><lb />3. Attitude. As a bridge between the market-<lb />place and the institution, support staff are impor-<lb />tant to the marketing effort. Their cooperation<lb />and participation provide continuity to the pro-<lb />gram. Circulation personnel, for example, are in a<lb />position to test user interests and needs. Their<lb />pleasant manner before the public tends to pro-<lb />mote a positive library image.<lb /><lb />Marketing is not new to libraries. Many librar-<lb />ies have developed marketing programs without a<lb />coordinated marketing plan. Bookmobile service<lb />is essentially a marketing service that provides<lb />products on demand to a known clientele or<lb />market segment. ChildrenTs programs provide<lb />services such as pre-school story hours. Outreach<lb />programs are designed to meet individual needs.<lb />What library has not done a user study? A user<lb /><lb />150"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />study is a type of market research survey. In<lb />effect, a number of resources have been assigned<lb />already to marketing by libraries without any<lb />formal or unified plan. The only elements missing<lb />are the official commitment and the label.<lb /><lb />Strategies<lb /><lb />The word strategy indicates a defined goal is<lb />present. The strategy is an organized plan to<lb />reach that goal. A marketing strategy indicates<lb />the tools and techniques of marketing will be ap-<lb />plied in the strategic plan to reach the goal. The<lb />goal is essentially the mission statement of the<lb />library. The goals and objectives and the long<lb />range plan have been defined by the library. A<lb />marketing strategy must be in tune with these<lb />goals.<lb /><lb />The libraryTs mission goals and the back-<lb />ground and qualifications of the staff will need to<lb />be emphasized when developing a marketing stra-<lb />tegy. What are the critical elements of the long<lb />range plan which must, by necessity, be met by<lb />the marketing plan? Will the marketing plan offer<lb />an opportunity to revise the long range plan? Will<lb />staff have to change behaviors due to new<lb />methods of delivery? These are questions to be<lb />considered in setting up a strategy. The insight-<lb />fulness of the chief administrator and an atmos-<lb />phere of open dialogue are essential in the<lb />development of a workable strategy.<lb /><lb />The mission statement of the library, in all<lb />likelihood, has been developed without the con-<lb />sideration of a marketing effort to carry it for-<lb />ward. It has been generated as an internally<lb />based program designed to serve the consti-<lb />tuency. If it has been a visionary plan, its content<lb />might be broad enough to embrace advances in<lb />technology and new information demands. If this<lb />is the case, adaptability to a marketing approach<lb />might not be too difficult. If, on the other hand,<lb />the mission and goals have been established on<lb />the basis of traditional library goals and practices,<lb />a whole new approach will be needed. Knowledge<lb />of the characteristics of the staff will help to<lb />determine personal flexibility in implementing<lb />the plan. Staff reorientation might need to be fol-<lb />lowed by a major in-service training period.<lb /><lb />The purpose of this essay is not to provide a<lb />how-to. Rather, it is meant to provide an overview<lb />that produces an internal and external assess-<lb />ment of the existing climate in the library and the<lb />community. The assessment should determine<lb />the potential for a marketing approach. By com-<lb />pleting a thorough assessment of both the exter-<lb />nal and internal environments preliminary to a<lb />decision to implement a marketing program, the<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0031" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Faxon<lb />figures.<lb /><lb />Productivity is a critical concern in todayTs library.<lb />ThatTs why more and more decision makers are looking<lb />into Faxon. We can be the best source for all of<lb /><lb />your journal and continuation subscriptions. Our<lb />services enable you to devote your valuable person-<lb />nel resources to other crucial library functions.<lb /><lb />As a full service agent with access to more than<lb />200,000 different periodicals, we can handle<lb /><lb />ordering, claiming, check-in, and routing. Our growing<lb />international network links you to other libraries,<lb />publishers, online systems, and networks.<lb /><lb />lf you can profit from improved productivity, a call<lb />to Faxon figures.<lb /><lb />1-800-225-6055<lb />or 1-617-329-3350 (collect)<lb /><lb />fa:on<lb /><lb />The Faxon Company 15 Southwest Park Westwood, MA 02090<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"151<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0032" />
        <p>administrator will be more fully prepared and<lb />strategically positioned to achieve positive results.<lb /><lb />Marketing Today<lb /><lb />It is well established that companies sell prod-<lb />ucts through marketing programs. So essential is<lb />this business practice that most companies assign<lb />the responsibility for its implementation to a staff-<lb />appointed marketing manager. Following the<lb />proven success of marketing as a business tool,<lb />other organizations have followed suit. Non-profit<lb />agencies such as academic institutions, charities,<lb />and hospitals adapted techniques to broaden<lb />their image and to expand their client base. Philip<lb />Kotler thoroughly explores this subject in his sem-<lb />inal work Marketing for Non-profit Organiza-<lb />tions.<lb /><lb />Librarians have become increasingly recep-<lb />tive to the idea of applying marketing techniques<lb />to the library setting. Marketing seminars and<lb />workshops draw overflow crowds. A new publica-<lb />tion, Marketing Library Services, has been an<lb />overnight success, finding a need and filling it. As<lb />Sharon LaRosa, Editor, states oPerhaps because<lb />of the need to ensure the library's continued<lb />existence, or a desire to enhance our own profes-<lb />sional image, more librarians are recognizing that<lb />marketing can help them achieve the success they<lb />desire.�<lb /><lb />Authors addressing the specific needs of<lb />libraries are Cosette Kies, and Darlene E. Wein-<lb />gand, Professor at the University of Wisconsin.<lb />Marketing and Public Relations for Libraries<lb />and Marketing/Planning Library Information<lb />Services are the respective titles they recently<lb />published. The former is a theoretical approach<lb />to promotion of libraries and deals with some of<lb />the issues involved. The latter work is a more spe-<lb />cific approach to structuring marketing informa-<lb />tion service delivery. Another excellent work is<lb />Strategic Marketing for Libraries A Handbook<lb />by Elizabeth J. Wood. Increased interest in mar-<lb />keting information services also seems to be on<lb />the ascendancy because of the burgeoning com-<lb />petitive environment facing libraries.<lb /><lb />Public libraries in North Carolina have under-<lb />taken several basic marketing efforts. Community<lb />Analysis, The Planning Process, Output Mea-<lb />sures, and Planning &amp; Role Setting for Public<lb />Libraries have all been useful tools for auditing<lb />the community and the library. Marketing re-<lb />quires such auditing. Those libraries that have<lb />utilized these tools are in a much better position<lb />to move on to a full scale marketing program.<lb /><lb />Marketing is a positive force in the distribu-<lb />tion of limited resources. Marketing, at its best,<lb /><lb />152"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />determines the customerTs need and fills that<lb />need with the right product. Wasteful dormant<lb />resources can be elminated. In retailing, turnover<lb />and shelf space are parts of the equation for bot-<lb />tom line profitability.<lb /><lb />Marketing is a positive force<lb />in the distribution of limited<lb />resources.<lb /><lb />Library Promotion<lb /><lb />While it is an accepted fact that the media<lb />generally treat libraries favorably at every oppor-<lb />tunity, the opportunities only arise because they<lb />are created by the library. Media do not aggres-<lb />sively pursue libraries for news of feature mate-<lb />rial. Thus, it becomes necessary for the library, in<lb />order to have a consistent publicity and public<lb />relations program, to appoint a public relations<lb />manager. This person establishes proper relations<lb />with the media and is familiar with deadlines. It is<lb />unfortunate that a coordinated public relations<lb />program of this type is rare in small and medium<lb />sized libraries.<lb /><lb />Library promotion has been a marketing<lb />mainstay for years. Library promotional efforts<lb />have linked programming activities with publicity.<lb />When the promotional effort does not result in<lb />appreciable gains in new users or increased circu-<lb />lation of materials, interest wanes. Promotional<lb />activities, however, tend to rise and fall when<lb />administrations change. In many libraries each<lb />department is responsible for its own publicity,<lb />thus creating an uneven image of the library. This<lb />uneven approach, lacking in focus, can do little to<lb />improve the library's image in the community.<lb />Internally generated, without a clear idea of the<lb />targeted audience, this method seldom generates<lb />a sizable or loyal following.<lb /><lb />Often interchanged with promotion is public<lb />relations. Kies in Marketing and Public Relations<lb />for Libraries sets forth some distinctions regard-<lb />ing closely related terms including public rela-<lb />tions, promotions, advertising, publicity, selling,<lb />community relations and, of course, marketing. A<lb />word about public relations and its relationship<lb />to marketing is needed. The emphasis in public<lb />relations is on the image, while the emphasis in<lb />marketing is on the needs of the customer. When<lb />the library has satisfied customer needs it has<lb />also built loyalty and has improved its image.<lb /><lb />A word about selling and its relationship to<lb />marketing also is needed. Once referred to as the<lb />salesmanTs salesman, Arthur oRed� Motley, former<lb />president of the National Chamber of Commerce<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0033" />
        <p>and president and publisher of Parade Magazine,<lb />operated under this personal credo: oNothing<lb />happens until somebody sells something.� If<lb />things are going to happen in libraries, somebody<lb />had better sell something. The director sells the<lb />county manager on the proposed budget. The<lb />department head sells the director on the need<lb />for additional. staff, and so on. Persuasion is sell-<lb />ing in sheepTs clothing. There are soft sell and<lb />hard sell approaches. Marketing tends to empha-<lb />size a soft sell approach. Libraries, by providing the<lb />products and services the public needs, sell them-<lb />selves when it comes to budget time.<lb /><lb />In Summary<lb /><lb />This overview of marketing in the library<lb />environment has attempted to call attention to<lb />the totality of the marketing process. To market<lb />or not to market is a decision to be reached only<lb />after much consideration of cost-benefit factors<lb />based on a full understanding of what is involved.<lb />This article, hopefully, has created a greater<lb />awareness of the administrative role in imple-<lb />menting a marketing program. Marketing is not<lb />simply an assignment or delegation. Administra-<lb />tive commitment and involvement are impera-<lb />tives. Peter Davis states in the Journal of Library<lb />Administration, oLibraries at the Turning Point:<lb />A willingness to take risks can only arise out of<lb />confidence in the process, in the ability of some-<lb />one to manage the process, and a good sense of<lb />what ought to be done when complexities arise.�<lb /><lb />The basic steps toward implementing a suc-<lb />cessful library marketing program are:<lb /><lb />1. Acquire a full knowledge of marketing<lb />processes.<lb /><lb />2. Adopt a marketing mindset.<lb /><lb />3. State the commitment to the marketing<lb />program.<lb /><lb />4. Coordinate the long range plans with the<lb />marketing process.<lb /><lb />5. Gather support.<lb /><lb />6. Introduce the plan and enlist assistance.<lb /><lb />7. Oversee, evaluate, and change.<lb /><lb />One parting thought. Remember twenty-six<lb />percent (the percentage of the public who are<lb />library users) is not a majority. They might be<lb />loud but they are still not a majority. The problem<lb />needs attention. Remember Proposition 13 or a<lb />more recent event"the closing of Shasta County<lb />Library in California!<lb /><lb />References<lb />Arnold, S. E. Standards of Information Marketing: Theory and<lb /><lb />Tactics for Information Professionals. Special Libraries<lb />Association paper (June, 1988) Louisville, KY.<lb /><lb />Ashton, D. oMarketing and Communications: Activities that<lb />Support Library Growth.� Arkansas Libraries (December,<lb />1985): 13-6.<lb /><lb />Brisfjord, L. G. oThe Four Environments of the End User: Market-<lb />ing Implications.� ASIS 23 (September-October, 1986): 45-7.<lb /><lb />Davis, P. oLibraries at the Turning Point: Issues in Proactive<lb />Planning.� Journal of Library Administration (Summer,<lb />1980): 15-24.<lb /><lb />Dragon, A. and Leisner, T. oThe ABCs of Implementing Library<lb />Marketing.� Journal of Library Administration. 4 (Winter,<lb />1983): 33-47.<lb /><lb />Fjallbrant, N. oPromotion and Marketing of Library Services.�<lb />IATUL Proceedings; Delft, Netherlands, 1985.<lb /><lb />Goodman, F. E. oGoodbye, Patrons ... Hello, Customers.� North<lb />Carolina Libraries 45 (Winter, 1987): 206-9.<lb /><lb />Gothberg, H. M. oUnderstanding Marketing"Or Why You Can't<lb />Sell Libraries Like Kitty Litter. Library Administration<lb />and Management (March, 1987): 56-60.<lb /><lb />Grunewald, J. P. Developing a Marketing Program for Librar-<lb />ies. Clarion, PA: Clarion State University, 1983.<lb /><lb />Kies, C. Marketing and Public Relations for Libraries. Metu-<lb />chen, NJ: Scarecrow, 1987.<lb /><lb />LaRosa, S. Marketing Library Services. HarrodTs Creek, KY.<lb /><lb />Lynch, C. K. and Rockwood, P. E. oMarketing Strategy for Chil-<lb />drenTs Services.� Public Library Quarterly (Fall-Winter,<lb />1986): 27-40.<lb /><lb />Norman, O. G. oMarketing Libraries and Information Services:<lb />An Annotated Guide to the Literature.� RSR (Spring, 1982):<lb />69-80.<lb /><lb />Sherkow, S. oMarketing Library and Information Services.� Min-<lb />nesota Libraries 28 (Winter, 1985-86): 106-8.<lb /><lb />Weingand, D. E. Marketing for Libraries and Information Agen-<lb />cies. Norwood, NJ, 1984: Ablex.<lb /><lb />Weingand, D. E. Marketing/Planning Library and Information<lb />Services. Littleton, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 1987.<lb /><lb />Weingand, D. E. oThe Role of Marketing in the Future of Rural<lb />Public Libraries.� Illinois Libraries 68 (October, 1986): 490-<lb />9.<lb /><lb />Wood, E. J. Strategic Marketing for Libraries: a Handbook.<lb /><lb />Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1988. cl<lb /><lb />be superperson<lb /><lb />use your library<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 153<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0034" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Marketing the Special Library:<lb />A Perspective<lb /><lb />Barry K. Miller<lb /><lb />The marketing of the special library in the<lb />corporate setting offers numerous opportunities<lb />and challenges for the resourceful information<lb />professional. In many types of libraries, marketing<lb />is the sign of exceptional leadership. It is the<lb />aggressive, proactive library which markets its<lb />services and reaps the rewards of that marketing.<lb />In the corporate setting, however, marketing is<lb />often a matter of survival, for in few other settings<lb />is the very existence of the library ever called into<lb />question. Few of us can imagine an educational<lb />institution or a community without a library; but<lb />many businesses can and do survive without<lb />them. It is incumbent upon the corporate librar-<lb />ies, therefore, to ensure that the corporate library<lb />is properly marketed to serve the needs of the<lb />company in such a way that it becomes viewed as<lb />essential, as opposed to merely desirable. This<lb />type of marketing requires a clear understanding<lb />of both marketing principles and corporate prior-<lb />ities. It requires some thought to determine how<lb />the library may contribute toward meeting these<lb />priorities and the marketing which is undertaken<lb />must be vigorous and ongoing.<lb /><lb />Marketing principles require that one identify<lb />and define both the market and the product to be<lb />offered. While this may seem obvious in the case<lb />of a library, closer examination indicates that it is<lb />not. The market may be employees of the com-<lb />pany of which the special library is a part; but it<lb />may also include suppliers, customers, an indus-<lb />try, or the public at large. In a large company, it<lb />may be only certain groups or departments, not<lb />the whole company. The product of the library<lb />may be the provision of timely information ser-<lb />vice, but which subjects will be covered? What<lb />kind of information? Are there competing suppli-<lb />ers already within the company, such as man-<lb />agement information systems or records manage-<lb />ment? Are there external information suppliers<lb />or external libraries which provide service to the<lb />company? These and other factors will define or<lb />delimit the services needed and offered by the<lb /><lb />Barry K. Miller is Manager for the Marketing Research Intel-<lb />ligence Center, RJR Tobacco USA in Winston-Salem, North<lb />Carolina.<lb /><lb />154"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />corporate library. In most cases, the corporate<lb />library cannot be all things to all people. Neither<lb />resources nor management support will permit<lb />such an approach. As in most endeavors, it is<lb />important for the corporate library to under-<lb />stand and define what it does, and to do it well.<lb />This does not preclude a broad range of services<lb />or a flexible approach, but it does mean that they<lb />should be well conceived and attuned to the<lb />needs of the market and the opportunity for suc-<lb />cess,<lb /><lb />A key element in marketing the corporate<lb />library is an understanding of how the business<lb />person within the company might use the library.<lb />In my own experience, I have categorized corpo-<lb />rate library usage as follows:<lb /><lb />1. Project Work"involving a distinct begin-<lb />ning and resolution, in which information gath-<lb />ering is often critical to the initial stages. Project<lb />work typically involves the expenditure of signifi-<lb />cant amounts of time and resources as opposed<lb />to more conventional reference work. One exam-<lb />ple might be the client who has a new assignment<lb />and needs some guidance in starting to work on<lb />it. Another example might be the creation of a<lb />merger and acquisition team which requires large<lb />amounts of very specific data to make a decision<lb />affecting the future direction of the corporation.<lb />Project work offers the potential for significant,T<lb />immediate impact on the client or corporation<lb />and thus is a good tool for marketing the libraryTs<lb />services and resources. The earlier the librarian<lb />can be involved in the project, the greater the ser-<lb />vice which can be provided. Ideally, the librarian<lb />should be part of the project team and be kept<lb />up-to-date on the projectTs progress, at least<lb />through the information gathering phase. The<lb />ability to become part of such a team establishes<lb />the client relationship between the librarian and<lb />the business person and elevates the librarian to a<lb />level at which peer interaction may develop. The<lb />traditional library/patron relationship is a dis-<lb />tinct handicap in the corporate setting and<lb />implies a passive rather than active relationship<lb />between the library and other departments<lb />within the company.<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0035" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />2. Competitive Intelligence"involving the<lb />gathering, organizing, and disseminating of<lb />information on competitive companies to deter-<lb />mine their strengths, weaknesses, strategies,<lb />present status, and future directions. Similar in<lb />many ways to project work, competitive intelli-<lb />gence usually involves continuing the flow of<lb />information to the client, thus developing com-<lb />munication and feedback mechanisms to ensure<lb />that information gets to the proper clients and is<lb />timely and usable. Competitive intelligence has<lb />become a popular buzzword in American corpo-<lb />rations during the last few years. Membership in<lb />the Society of Competitive Intelligence Profes-<lb />sionals has gone from almost nil to several<lb />hundred in two years. It is important that com-<lb />petitive intelligence professionals understand the<lb />role of library services in meeting some of their<lb />needs. Indeed, many corporate libraries direct or<lb />work hand-in-hand with the competitive intelli-<lb />gence function. The opportunities for interaction<lb />and mutual growth are significant.<lb /><lb />A key element in marketing<lb />the corporate library is an<lb />understanding of how busi-<lb />ness persons within the com-<lb />pany might use the library.<lb /><lb />3. Environmental Scanning and Current<lb />Awareness"in which the library assumes respon-<lb />sibility for keeping key clients informed of devel-<lb />opments in their areas of interest and respon-<lb />sibility. In most other libraries, the responsibility<lb />for accomplishing this current awareness objec-<lb />tive lies with the client. In the corporate library, it<lb />may be the responsibility of the librarian to learn<lb />the clientTs interests and to be proactive in provid-<lb />ing information to him or her. The use of selective<lb />dissemination of information profiles with online<lb />data bases is one useful tool to provide this kind of<lb />service without its becoming overly labor inten-<lb />sive. As a cautionary note, it must be remembered<lb />that the busy executive usually has limited time<lb />to read, so the information provided must be con-<lb />cise and targeted.<lb /><lb />4. Fact-checking and Reference"in which<lb />the special library acts much like a reference<lb />desk in any other library, providing relatively<lb />quick answers to specific questions. This kind of<lb />fact-checking is frequently involved in the devel-<lb />opment of press releases or company publica-<lb />tions. As any newspaper library in particular<lb />knows, this can be an extensive responsibility<lb /><lb />requiring rapid response to a high volume of<lb />inquiries.<lb /><lb />5. Personnel and Management Develop-<lb />ment"ihrough which the libraryTs services and re-<lb />sources are available to the client to improve that<lb />clientTs managerial skills and career develop-<lb />ment. This is an issue whose importance to the<lb />client should not be forgotten by the corporate<lb />librarian, who will almost always want to develop<lb />friends with bright futures in the corporation. The<lb />ability to assist in solving a time management<lb />problem or learning the latest thinking on a man-<lb />agement technique may be quite important to the<lb />client. While the same information may be avail-<lb />able from another type of library outside the cor-<lb />poration, the ability to provide it reinforces the<lb />idea of the corporate library as a source of one-<lb />stop shopping to meet the needs of the business<lb />person for work-oriented information.<lb /><lb />6. Document Delivery"through which the<lb />library provides access to specific articles, books,<lb />or reports, either from its own collection or from<lb />external sources. In the typical corporate setting,<lb />this work usually means the establishment of<lb />rapid delivery systems, as the corporate client<lb />often needs the information quickly or not at all.<lb />My own experience shows that, generally, busi-<lb />ness people need specific documents, and scien-<lb />tific or research and development personnel<lb />simply want answers. As a result, there is height-<lb />ened emphasis on the ability to identify and con-<lb />tact outside experts to obtain answers rather<lb />than focusing on documents. While one does not<lb />wish to diminish the value of documents, be they<lb />internal reports, journals, books, or data bases, it<lb />must be remembered that the corporate libraryTs<lb />product is within the limitations of its market"<lb />information"in whatever form that might take,<lb />including the spoken word of an expert in the<lb />field. The presence of both an adequate long-dist-<lb />ance telephone budget and a solid awareness of<lb />the expertise of people within the librarianTs own<lb />company can be as important in providing infor-<lb />mation to a client as a reference book or an online<lb />data base.<lb /><lb />It is the aggressive, proactive<lb />library which markets its ser-<lb />vices and reaps the rewards of<lb />that marketing.<lb /><lb />Several adjustments in library practice may<lb />serve to improve the librarianTs ability to market<lb />the library in one or more of the above ways. First,<lb />the librarian may wish to emphasize services<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 155<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0036" />
        <p>rather than resources when marketing the special<lb />library. Few special libraries are self-service; few<lb />clients receive much bibliographic instruction.<lb />Rather, the client of the special library may call or<lb />inquire for information itself, not just guidance in<lb />locating it. The librarian is thus in the role of<lb />mediating between the client and the resources.<lb />In our library, we often illustrate this point with<lb />the admonition that our role is to find the infor-<lb />mation as quickly and thoroughly as possible,<lb />while the clientTs role is to use it to make deci-<lb />sions.<lb /><lb />... the librarian may wish to<lb />emphasize services rather<lb />than resources when market-<lb />ing the special library.<lb /><lb />Secondly, the corporate librarian should be<lb />prepared to package the information obtained so<lb />that it is as useful as possible to the client. Such<lb />packaging may include preparing executive sum-<lb />maries and annotations, highlighting key points<lb />or especially pertinent citations, and generally<lb />ensuring that the client does not simply receive a<lb />pile of data or citations. The transfer of informa-<lb />tion from corporate librarian to client should be<lb />made as convenient and useful as time and<lb />resources can permit. If the information is un-<lb />intelligible to the client, it is useless. Seen in this<lb />light, the carefully compiled company dossier is<lb />clearly more important than a bibliography of<lb />articles on the company.<lb /><lb />Third, the corporate librarian should seg-<lb />ment the market. That is to say, one must deter-<lb />mine which clients can best be served by the<lb />library and serve them intensively. Some corpo-<lb />rate functions simply need the library function<lb />more than others. In general, strategic functions<lb />such as executive management, planning, new<lb />product development, research and development,<lb />and marketing will need the libraryTs services<lb />more than tactical departments such as the build-<lb />ing office, shipping, or warehousing. As the corpo-<lb />rate library itself often falls under tactical<lb />functions, it is particularly important that the<lb />librarian develop sources of support, as oneTs own<lb />management may have comparatively little need<lb />for library services. Unlike the public library, for<lb />example, the corporate library is not under a<lb />responsibility to serve all people equally. Rather, it<lb />has the freedom to segment its market and seek<lb />the niches in which it can render the greatest ser-<lb />vices. Those niches vary from company to com-<lb />pany and from time to time.<lb /><lb />156"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />Finally, the corporate librarian must respond<lb />quickly and remain flexible. The current business<lb />environment requires that corporations be as<lb />adaptable as possible. Organizational structures<lb />change, as do the people to whom the library<lb />reports, and it is important that the corporate<lb />librarian not become too enamored of that which<lb />he or she has created or of a particular organiza-<lb />tional pattern. While many business people seem<lb />not to expect librarians to have it, the character-<lb />istic of flexibility is one which modern corpora-<lb />tions value highly.<lb /><lb />In summary, the marketing of the special<lb />library is not simply one of a number of things<lb />which the librarian does, such as personnel selec-<lb />tion, budgeting, or writing the annual report.<lb />Rather, it must be integrated into the entire<lb />structure of the library's operation. Brochures,<lb />presentations, tours, orientations, office visits,<lb />surveys, library committees, and other such tech-<lb />niques are certainly part of marketing the library;<lb />but one must recognize that a marketing phil-<lb />osophy really must drive the libraryTs operation.<lb />Just as a marketing-driven company integrates<lb />that philosophy into all areas of the company,<lb />from research and development to manufactur-<lb />ing to personnel, so too must the special librarian<lb />allow marketing considerations to develop the<lb />library itself, from what services are offered to<lb />what resources are bought to what kinds of peo-<lb />ple are hired to work in the library. The successful<lb />company always keeps in mind the wants and<lb />needs of its customers"it does not often simply<lb />develop a product and then try to figure out who<lb />might buy it. One must remember that the special<lb />library does not exist to preserve and store<lb />information which is not useful to the corpora-<lb />tion. However significant the role of archives of<lb />learning may be for other libraries, the corporate<lb />library must always be aware of the companyTs<lb /><lb />needs in order to survive. a<lb /><lb />Book Week<lb /><lb />November 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0037" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Promoting Services in North Carolina<lb />Community College LRCs<lb /><lb />Nancy C. Rountree<lb /><lb />The fifty-eight community colleges in North<lb />Carolina differ in many respects. The regions in<lb />which they are to be found vary from the moun-<lb />tains to the coast and their settings include<lb />urban, suburban, and rural. Student body size<lb />ranges from a little over 100 to over 15,000.1<lb /><lb />Each of these community colleges houses a<lb />library, sometimes known in North Carolina as a<lb />Learning Resources Center or LRC. These LRCs<lb />have much to offer their users. Books, periodicals,<lb />microforms and audiovisual materials are avail-<lb />able for research and leisure activities. The avail-<lb />ability of computers is increasing for personal use<lb />and for online searching, as well as for reference<lb />sources on CD-ROM or laser disc. Interlibrary ser-<lb />vices and networking provide additional informa-<lb />tion beyond that available in one particular<lb />library.<lb /><lb />The community college LRC serves a non-res-<lb />ident student population involved in programs<lb />that vary from auto mechanics to college prepar-<lb />atory. There are also a number of continuing edu-<lb />cation courses offered, such as sewing, notary<lb />public, and aerobics. Many of these are taught on<lb />off-campus locations. Students attending these<lb />classes may never come to campus. Moreover,<lb />unless an assignment is made which involves the<lb />use of library materials or facilities, it is possible<lb />that some students might complete programs<lb />without ever having entered the LRC.<lb /><lb />But how does the wser of the LRC learn of the<lb />services offered? Can the non-user or those with<lb />little previous experience be reached? In consult-<lb />ing the library literature for information on mar-<lb />keting the services of community college LRCs,<lb />there was very little to be found. It was possible<lb />that the answers to these questions could be dis-<lb />covered by querying the LRCs themselves; there-<lb />fore, a survey was conducted to determine what<lb />marketing activities were occurring in the LRCs in<lb />North Carolina. The survey was funded by the<lb />Department of Library and Information Science<lb />at East Carolina University.<lb /><lb />Nancy Rountree is assistant librarian at Coastal Carolina<lb />Community College, Jacksonville, N.C.<lb /><lb />Methodology<lb /><lb />In October, 1986, a questionnaire was used to<lb />gather information on how the community col-<lb />leges in North Carolina made both users and non-<lb />users aware of their services. Accompanied by a<lb />cover letter to explain the purpose of the survey,<lb />a questionnaire was mailed to the head of each of<lb />the LRCs. For purposes of this survey, marketing<lb />was defined as any effort to reach out to library<lb />staff, faculty, administration, students, and mem-<lb />bers of the community. The questionnaire was<lb />short, consisting of the front and back of one<lb />sheet. The questions were simple with a variety of<lb />possible answers to be checked. Some left space<lb />for brief explanations. A comprehensive question<lb />was included, containing a list of ways in which<lb />services might be advertised, and participants<lb />were asked to check as many as applied. At the<lb />end of the questionnaire, space was provided for<lb />comments.<lb /><lb />Results<lb /><lb />The rate of return for the questionnaire was<lb />excellent. Of the fifty-eight questionnaires, fifty-<lb />two (89 percent) were returned. In answer to the<lb />comprehensive question listing ways to advertise<lb />services, fourteen of the eighteen items were<lb />checked over 50 percent of the time. Items which<lb />were the two most frequently checked were orien-<lb />tation sessions (94 percent) and distribution of a<lb />onew materials� list (90 percent). The latter, how-<lb />ever, was distributed mostly to faculty and admin-<lb />istration, although some LRCs post copies for<lb />studentsT perusal. Another popular activity was<lb />library tours, which were given by 88 percent of<lb />the LRCs. In addition, eighty-two percent of the<lb />respondents have a new materials shelf or cart,<lb />seventy-six percent provide a handbook of servi-<lb />ces, and seventy-three percent make subject bib-<lb />liographies available. Suggestion boxes (36 per-<lb />cent) and regular columns in the campus news-<lb />paper/newsletter (19 percent) were the least<lb />frequently checked items.<lb /><lb />The results were broken down by area to see<lb />if LRCs in urban areas with larger student bodies<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 157<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0038" />
        <p>and closer proximity to other libraries have dif-<lb />ferent marketing strategies than LRCs in rural<lb />areas or small towns (Table I). An area was<lb />defined as rural if the population was under<lb />2,000, small town if the population fell between<lb />2,000 and 10,000, and urban if the population was<lb />over 10,000. Orientation sessions were used by<lb />100 percent of the LRCs in rural areas and small<lb />towns, but only by 87 percent of the LRCs in<lb />urban areas. Urban area LRCs indicate that new<lb />material lists were the most popular means of<lb />advertising holdings (91% percent). The most<lb />noticeable differences were in the handbook of<lb />services which had a response rate of 84 percent<lb />for rural areas and 86 percent for small towns,<lb />while urban areas showed a response rate of only<lb />66 percent. With subject bibliographies, small<lb />towns and urban areas rated this 86 percent and<lb />75 percent, respectively, while rural areas had a<lb />response rate of only 53 percent. Proximity to<lb />other libraries proved to have no bearing on the<lb />results.<lb /><lb />TABLE I.<lb />Breakdown by Area<lb /><lb />SR RARITIES TET, ELE TN SES TE TSS TTS� PRR I CER EE I STINE PY SEI<lb /><lb />rural small urban<lb /><lb />area town area<lb />pot edt SN Sa ta, HARE ny eer ON. SNR ENE eT<lb />orientation sessions 100% 100% 87%<lb />new materials list 84% 93% 91%<lb />library tours 92% 86% 87%<lb />new material shelf/cart 92% 84% 83%<lb />handbook of services 84% 86% 66%<lb />subject bibliographies 53% 86% 75%<lb /><lb />SERA SSCL P:R ES SE TILE SNES<lb /><lb />A breakdown by student body size (Table II)<lb />showed that in LRCs serving student bodies of<lb />2,000-2,999, new material lists were checked most<lb />often (100 percent). Orientation sessions, library<lb />tours, new material lists, and displays all shared<lb />top-ranking (100 percent each) in LRCs serving<lb />student populations of 3,000 or more. Orientation<lb />sessions were checked more often in LRCs serving<lb />student bodies of less than 2,000 (98 percent).<lb /><lb />TABLE II.<lb />Breakdown by Student Body Size<lb /><lb />1,000- 2,000-<lb /><lb />1-999 1,999 2,999 3,000+<lb />orientation sessions 93% 93% 92% 100% -<lb />new materials list 80% 87% 100% 100%<lb />library tours 80% 87% 84% 100%<lb />new material shelf/cart 80% 75% 92% 87%<lb />handbook of services 73% 81% 84% 62%<lb />subject bibliographies 73% 62% 69% 87%<lb /><lb />SER OA SC A AE POL A FCM I EC<lb /><lb />Another aspect of the survey dealt with mar-<lb /><lb />158" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />keting to the community. Providing services to<lb />community members could help in recruiting new<lb />students and could gain benefactors for the LRC<lb />as well as for the school. On the other hand, it<lb />may be felt that community college LRCs are<lb />primarily for the students and faculty, and com-<lb />munity service should not interfere with this pur-<lb />pose and should not be actively pursued. When<lb />asked, oDo you actively market your libraryTs ser-<lb />vices to members of the community?�, 62 percent<lb />checked yes. Even though all of these LRCs are<lb />within ten miles of a public library, it was indi-<lb />cated that as members of the community, offering<lb />services to community members, whether full or<lb />limited, was a part of their duties.<lb /><lb />The extent of community services varies from<lb />LRC to LRC. One school promoted the availability<lb />of audiovisual hardware and software to local<lb />business and civic groups at their regular meet-<lb />ings and also hosted various groups in the LRC.<lb />This LRC had also provided extended research<lb />for several motion pictures that were filmed in<lb />the state and had a museum provided by com-<lb />munity patrons. Others provided orientation ses-<lb />sions for community groups. Radio, TV and/or<lb />local newspapers had a response rate of 53 per-<lb />cent in this category and were used to promote<lb />special services that were offered and also to<lb />announce hours of operation. One LRC used this<lb />medium to advertise its DIALOG service.<lb /><lb />Respondents were asked to provide informa-<lb />tion on other things they were doing that did not<lb />appear on the questionnaire. One LRC sent mem-<lb />orandums to faculty about new services, used<lb />bookmarks that were placed at the circulation<lb />desk and were also placed in books as they were<lb />checked out to promote library hours and Polar-<lb />oid camera availability. They had an art display<lb />by a North Carolina artist from the area which<lb />attracted people to the LRC. Another conducted<lb />information sessions for any teacher who re-<lb />quested them. These sessions focused on the spe-<lb />cific subject area of interest to the faculty<lb />member. Exhibits at shopping malls were also<lb />mentioned.<lb /><lb />Respondents were also asked to utilize the<lb />comment section of the questionnaire to discuss<lb />any aspect of marketing the LRC they wished.<lb />Comments received included: oStaff members are<lb />trained to offer service, service, service . . .�; oWord<lb />of mouth is important. Talking to patrons on<lb />campus.�; oA friendly smile and a hello to students<lb />and faculty as they come through the library en<lb />route from one building to another is probably the<lb />most effective. All staff and work-study students<lb />are permanently pleasant.�<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0039" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Conclusion<lb /><lb />Data indicates that LRCs were indeed utiliz-<lb />ing various methods to market their services.<lb />While some of these methods, such as orientation<lb />sessions, were aimed directly at the student user;<lb />others, such as the handbook of services, edu-<lb />cated not only the student, but the faculty<lb />member as well. Still other methods indirectly<lb />reached the student through faculty members.<lb />For example, once faculty members have become<lb />aware of new acquisitions through the onew<lb />materials� list, they may suggest supplementary<lb />readings or sources for reports, term papers, or<lb />speeches to their students.<lb /><lb />It was not surprising to find that orientation<lb />sessions were used 94 percent of the time. This is<lb />a reliable method used by librarians from elemen-<lb />tary school through college level. An occasional<lb />column by librarians in the campus newspaper/<lb />newsletter is a good way to reach out to students<lb />who are in programs that do not use the LRC,<lb />even though resources for these students exist.<lb />This method rated only 61 percent and might be<lb />something that more LRCs should consider doing.<lb /><lb />It was surprising to see that urban areas and<lb />schools with student bodies of 3,000+ were not<lb />utilizing a handbook of services. Tables I and II<lb />show only 66 percent and 62 percent, respec-<lb />tively, in this category. Since these are used fre-<lb />quently in college and university libraries, the<lb />researcher expected the usage to be greater in<lb />the larger community colleges as compared with<lb />smaller ones; however, this was not the case.<lb /><lb />Some good ideas surfaced when participants<lb />were asked to name things they were doing that<lb />were not mentioned in the questionnaire. The<lb />researcher particularly liked the idea of sending<lb />memorandums to faculty announcing new servi-<lb />ces"when the support of our faculty members is<lb />gained, it becomes easier to reach students. The<lb />fact that there were not many suggestions given<lb />was disappointing. The researcher hopes that this<lb />suggested a lack of time for elaboration on the<lb />respondentsT part rather than the lack of unique<lb />ideas.<lb /><lb />Additional comments centered around the<lb />basic foundation of public relations in the LRC"<lb />that of making people feel welcome. We can have<lb />the latest in technology and a wealth of knowl-<lb />edge at our fingertips, but it is basically useless if<lb />people do not feel free to walk through the door<lb />to use it.<lb /><lb />Marketing is only a small part of the activity<lb />of the LRCs of the community colleges in North<lb />Carolina, but it is an important part. With the<lb /><lb />increase in services offered, we should look for the<lb />best ways of promoting these services. Time spent<lb />on marketing is not wasted if it gains an addi-<lb />tional user.<lb /><lb />Reference<lb /><lb />1. PetersonTs Annual Guide to Undergraduate Study: Two Year<lb />Colleges 1986, Princeton, N.J.: PetersonTs Guides, 1985.<lb /><lb />RSE SRR REET TEI EIT BT RL SO TT<lb /><lb />Survey<lb />1. This community college is located in a:<lb />"" rural area (under 2,000) _"_ urban area (over 10,000)<lb />"" small town (2,000-10,000)<lb /><lb />2. Approximate size of the student body:<lb />"" to 999 "" 2,000-2,999<lb />"" 1,000-1,999 "" 3000+<lb /><lb />8. Approximate number of miles from community college to:<lb />a. Public library<lb />" within ten<lb />" 10-20<lb />"" more than 20<lb />b. College or university library<lb />"" within ten<lb />"" 10-20<lb />"more than 20<lb />c. Other library (please specify)<lb />"" within ten<lb />" 10-20<lb />"" more than 20<lb /><lb />Would<lb />you<lb />keep<lb />her<lb />from<lb />flying<lb />on<lb /><lb />Halloween?<lb /><lb />BANNED<lb />BOOKS<lb /><lb />WEEK<lb />SEPTEMBER 24-<lb />OCTOBER 1, 1988<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 159<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0040" />
        <p>4. Do you actively market your libraryTs services to members of<lb />the community?<lb />Yes<lb />await 0}<lb /><lb />5. In what ways do you achieve public relations? (please check<lb />as many as apply)<lb />"" suggestion box<lb />"" newsletters<lb />a. made available to:<lb />a~facuity<lb />"" students<lb />estat<lb />"" administration<lb />"" other (please specify)<lb />b. is distribution through:<lb />"" pick up by interested party<lb />"" distributed to persons on a list<lb />" mail<lb />"" other (please specify)<lb />"" regular column in campus newspaper/newsletter<lb />"" occasional column in campus newspaper/newsletter<lb />"" new material shelf or cart<lb />"" new material list<lb />a. distributed to:<lb />"" faculty<lb />"" students<lb />"" administration<lb />"" other (please specify)<lb /><lb />"" orientation sessions<lb />a. for:<lb />"" faculty<lb />"" students<lb />"" other (please specify)<lb />"" library tours<lb />"" slide/tape orientations<lb />"" individual<lb />"" group<lb />"" bulletin boards<lb />"" displays<lb />"" handbook of services<lb />"" for faculty<lb />"" for students<lb />"" handbook of usage<lb />"" for faculty<lb />"" for students<lb />"" Subject bibliographies<lb />"" other in-house publications (brochures, pamphlets, etc.)<lb />"" literature searches<lb />"" staff meetings<lb />"" radio, TV, and/or local newspaper (please specify how<lb />used)<lb /><lb />"" other (please specify)<lb /><lb />Comments:<lb /><lb />Join NCLA<lb /><lb />To enroll as a member of the association or<lb />to renew your membership, check the approp-<lb />riate type of membership and the sections or<lb />round tables which you wish to join. NCLA mem-<lb />bership entitles you to membership in one of the<lb />sections or round tables shown below at no extra<lb />cost. For each additional section, add $7.00 to<lb /><lb />your regular dues.<lb />Return the form below along with your check<lb />or money order made payable to North Carolina<lb /><lb />Library Assocation. All memberships are for two<lb />calendar years. If you enroll during the last quarter<lb />of a year, membership will cover the next two<lb /><lb />years.<lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb />0 New membership 0 Renewal O Membership no.<lb /><lb />Name<lb />Middle<lb /><lb />Position<lb /><lb />Business Address<lb /><lb />City or Town State<lb /><lb />Mailing Address (if diffrent from above)<lb /><lb />160"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />CHECK TYPE OF DUES:<lb /><lb />O FULL-TIME LIBRARY SCHOOL STUDENTS<lb />(one biennium only)<lb />O RETIRED LIBRARIANS<lb />O NON-LIBRARY PERSONNEL:<lb />(a) Trustees; (b) oFriends of Libraries� members;<lb />(c) Non-salaried<lb /><lb />LIBRARY PERSONNEL<lb /><lb />0 Earning up to $15,000<lb /><lb />O Earning $15,001 to $25,000<lb /><lb />O Earning $25,001 to $35,000<lb /><lb />O Earing $35,001 and above<lb /><lb />0 INSTITUTIONAL (Libraries and library/<lb />education-related businesses<lb /><lb />O CONTRIBUTING (Individuals, associations, firms, etc.<lb />interested in the work of NCLA)<lb /><lb />CHECK SECTIONS: (one included in basic dues; each<lb />additional section $7.00)<lb /><lb />D ChildrenTs<lb /><lb />O College &amp; Univ.<lb /><lb />O Comm. &amp; Jr. College<lb /><lb />O Documents<lb /><lb />O Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb />Round Table<lb /><lb />D Jr. Members Round Table<lb /><lb />Mail to: Nancy Fogarty, Treasurer, NCLA,<lb />P.O. Box 4266, Greensboro, NC 27404<lb /><lb />0 NCASL (School)<lb /><lb />O Public<lb /><lb />O Ref. &amp; Adult<lb /><lb />O RTS (Res.-Tech.)<lb /><lb />O Trustees<lb /><lb />WomenTs Round Table<lb /><lb />Xx"<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0041" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />A Tool for Measuring Success<lb /><lb />Carol Myers<lb /><lb />The Public Library of Charlotte and Meck-<lb />lenburg County included fourteen questions in a<lb />telephone survey of Mecklenburg County resi-<lb />dents conducted by the Urban Institute of the<lb />University of North Carolina at Charlotte in<lb />October 1987. The Urban Institute conducts the<lb />survey annually, and participants share the costs<lb />of the survey and the statistical analysis of the<lb />results.<lb /><lb />The Public Library of Charlotte has partici-<lb />pated in the survey twice, once in 1983 and again<lb />in 1987. In 1983, the libraryTs administration<lb />wanted to evaluate the local political and social<lb />climate prior to placing a $11.2 million dollar bond<lb />issue for a new main library and three branches<lb />before the voters. In 1987, a $2.3 million dollar<lb />bond for a new regional branch in southeast<lb />Charlotte was on the November ballot, and the<lb />survey provided information on the publicTs likely<lb />response to the bond. The results of the 1987 sur-<lb />vey and their usefulness are the focus of this arti-<lb />cle,<lb /><lb />The Urban Institute surveyed and reported<lb />the answers of 850 residents of Mecklenburg<lb />County to 14 questions the library designed. The<lb />full text of the questions and the results are<lb />included in the appendix. The results are statisti-<lb />cally valid +/- 4 percent at 98 percent confi-<lb />dence level (that is, if the survey were conducted<lb />100 times, the results would fall within the 94 per-<lb />cent to 100 percent range 98 times.) The Urban<lb />Institute used a number of techniques to mini-<lb />mize possible skewing, including employing random<lb />digit dialing and setting a quota on three-digit tele-<lb />phone number prefixes to insure that persons<lb />from all areas of the county were sampled. The<lb />library received both the statistical results of the<lb />fourteen questions the library included and cross<lb />tabulations with other demographic and voter<lb />information collected as part of the survey.<lb /><lb />Some of the findings of the survey confirmed<lb />assumptions and instincts we already had about<lb />our patrons and community. We know we are<lb />generally well-liked; the question becomes how<lb />well-liked? When asked oHow important do you<lb /><lb />Carol Myers is head of technical services for the Public<lb />Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, North Caro-<lb />lina.<lb /><lb />feel the library system is to our community?�, 84.1<lb />percent found it to be overy important,� the<lb />strongest measure one could choose. For other<lb />questions, our expectations were based more on<lb />hope. When asked if respondents would support<lb />more government funds being spent to improve<lb />library services, 78.9 percent gave a positive<lb />answer.<lb /><lb />The 118 cross tabulated reports yielded valu-<lb />able information. From cross tabulations, we<lb />found that the Public Library of Charlotte and<lb />Mecklenburg County is overy important� to the<lb />countyTs population regardless of age, sex, or race.<lb />Not surprisingly, the trend is that those with more<lb />years of education are stronger supporters and<lb />users of the library. Those with a college educa-<lb />tion showed the strongest support for providing<lb />more funds to improve library services. Re-<lb />sponses showed that, as a group, those twenty-five<lb />to thirty-four years of age made the highest per-<lb />centage of visits to the library"five to ten visits a<lb />year.<lb /><lb />Other figures touched areas that we might<lb />not have instinctively known. For example, in<lb />comparing the omore funds to improve library<lb />services?� question with income range, the highest<lb />percentage of agreement was the group reporting<lb />a $10,000 - $19,999 annual income, although all<lb />income groups agreed by at least 73.2 percent.<lb />More blacks support additional funds for improv-<lb />ing library service than whites by 87.0 percent to<lb />77.1 percent.<lb /><lb />Cross tabulations specific to voter registra-<lb />tion information found that, of those registered to<lb />vote, 85.3 percent believed the library to be overy<lb />important.� Further, of those who oalways vote,�<lb />78.1 percent stated that more government funds<lb />should go to the library to improve service. For<lb />those with children, the figure goes up to 81.6 per-<lb />cent. A higher number of registered voters use the<lb />library than those reporting themselves as not<lb />registered.<lb /><lb />Several of the figures prompted a closer look.<lb />For example, 73.4 percent of the respondents<lb />said they used the library within the last year. The<lb />figure may be high. Perhaps the ohalo effect� was<lb />at work here. Did that many respondents actually<lb />use the library, or were they giving an answer that<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 161<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0042" />
        <p>they felt was the oright� or obest� answer? The<lb />wording of that question was wide open, and a<lb />more specific question or a follow-up question as<lb />to what use was made of the library might be<lb />more valuable in a future survey.<lb /><lb />The library did choose carefully the wording<lb />of the question, oWould you be willing to see more<lb />government funds spent to improve public library<lb />services in Mecklenburg County?� We envisioned a<lb />much lower positive response had we asked,<lb />oWould you be willing to pay higher local taxes to<lb />improve public library services in Mecklenburg<lb />County?�<lb /><lb />When the results of the phone survey were<lb />reviewed, we were cautiously pleased with the<lb />respondentsT positive attitudes towards the li-<lb />brary. The survey indicated that the libraryTs bond<lb />would pass based on the 78.9 percent of the<lb />respondents who were willing to see more<lb />government funding spent on public library servi-<lb />ces. And the bond did pass handsomely. With a 40<lb />percent voter turnout, 77 percent of those voting<lb />voted yes for the $2.9 million library bonds.<lb /><lb />Had the survey indicated that the political<lb />climate was cloudy or uncertain for the bond, the<lb />Friends of the Library, the library board, and/or<lb />the bond campaign committee would have had<lb />useful information available to address the nega-<lb />tives. Even more importantly, they had the demo-<lb />graphic information from the survey to identify<lb />those more likely to vote for the library. Then<lb />their efforts could (and did) concentrate on<lb />reaching those voters who support the library to<lb />encourage them to go to the polls and vote. As it<lb />was, the survey's report of an apparently bright<lb />outlook allowed those advocating the bond to<lb />speak confidently and emphasize the benefits of a<lb />new regional branch.<lb /><lb />Was the survey helpful to us? Was it worth<lb />the cost? Did it tell us anything we did not already<lb />know? The answer to all three questions is yes.<lb />The survey confirmed in valid and believable<lb />numbers that the residents of this county were<lb />positive about their public library and its services.<lb />We believe they still are. The UNCC telephone sur-<lb />vey was a valuable tool for pinpointing the pub-<lb />licTs perception of the library within the prevailing<lb />political climate. If the ultimate measure of suc-<lb />cess for a public library is a high level of public<lb />approval, then this telephone survey verified for<lb />us the library's success at that one point in time.<lb />We do not intend to rest on our laurels. Participa-<lb />tion in a future UNCC Urban Institute survey will<lb />allow us to measure how well we do.<lb /><lb />162"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />Survey<lb /><lb />1. How important do you feel the library system is to our com-<lb />munity? Would you say it is very important, important, some-<lb />what important or not important?<lb /><lb />a. Very important 84.1%<lb />b. Important 12.4%<lb />c. Somewhat important 2.9%<lb />d. Not important 0.4%<lb />e. DonTt know 0.2%<lb /><lb />2. About how far from your home is the nearest public library?<lb />Is it less than one mile, 1-2 miles, 3-5 miles or over 5 miles from<lb /><lb />your home?<lb />a. Less than 1 mile 21.1%<lb />b. 1-2 miles 34.8%<lb />c. 3-5 miles 30.6%<lb />d. Over 5 miles 10.9%<lb />e. DonTt know 2.6%<lb /><lb />3. Would you be willing to see more government funds spent to<lb />improve public library services in Mecklenburg County?<lb /><lb />a. Yes 78.9%<lb />b. No 16.0%<lb />c. DonTt know 5.1%<lb /><lb />4, Have you or any member of your household used any branch<lb />of the Mecklenburg Public Library, including the Main Library, in<lb /><lb />the past year?<lb />a. Yes (ask questions 5-10) 73.4%<lb />b. No (ask questions 11-14) 26.1%<lb />c. DonTt know 0.5%<lb /><lb />5-9. (If Yes) We would like to know the age groups of persons<lb /><lb />who use the library. Thinking of the ages of yourself and family<lb /><lb />members who have used the public library in the last year.<lb />(percentages listed for those reporting at least one)<lb /><lb />5, How many users are 12 and under? 11.1%<lb />6. How many users are 13-17? 14.1%<lb />7. How many are 18-29? 18.1%<lb />8. How many are 30-50? 20.1%<lb />9. How many are over age 50? 7.1%<lb /><lb />10. Please estimate the total number of library visits or calls<lb />made by yourself and household members in the past year.<lb />Would you say the number is less than 5, 5-10, 11-20, or over 20?<lb /><lb />a. Less than 5 21.5%<lb />b. 5-10 30.8%<lb />ce. 11-20 22.4%<lb />d. Over 20 24.5%<lb />e. DonTt know 0.8%<lb /><lb />11. (If no one has used the library) Do you agree or disagree<lb />with the following statement:<lb />11. Library branches are too far from my home<lb /><lb />a. Agree 18.1%<lb /><lb />b. Disagree 75.7%<lb /><lb />c. DonTt know 6.2%<lb />12. Library hours are not convenient<lb /><lb />a. Agree 12.8%<lb /><lb />b. Disagree 70.8%<lb /><lb />c. DonTt know 16.4%<lb />13. I donTt know where library branches are located<lb /><lb />a. Agree 14.6%<lb /><lb />b. Disagree 79.2%<lb /><lb />c. DonTt know 6.2%<lb />14. ITm too busy to go to the library<lb /><lb />a, Agree 43.4%<lb /><lb />b. Disagree 50.4%<lb /><lb />c. DonTt know 6.2%<lb /><lb />IM<lb />al<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0043" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Serving Older Adults in North Carolina<lb />Public Libraries: A Survey<lb /><lb />Diane G. Thompson<lb /><lb />Older adults have particular challenges in<lb />the aging process characteristic of their age<lb />group. These may include coping with role loss,<lb />reduced income, declining health, social isola-<lb />tion, and the negative attitude of society towards<lb />aging. In addition many older adults have the<lb />added burden of becoming mentally or physically<lb />disabled.<lb /><lb />Information can play a vital role in helping<lb />the older adult understand and cope with these<lb />challenges. In a study of reading interests and<lb />activity of older adults, Elizabeth Grubb con-<lb />cluded that those adults who are active readers<lb />have a variety of interests and have an easier<lb />time adjusting to the problems of old age.T An-<lb />other conclusion she made (after comparing<lb />reading interests of older adults with younger<lb />adults) was that oreading interests and activity<lb />of older adults are distinct enough to call special<lb />attention by public libraries with regard to staf-<lb />fing, to budgeting, and to programming.�<lb /><lb />The purpose of the present study is to provide<lb />information about older adults which can aid<lb />library administrators in North Carolina to<lb />evaluate current services, and to plan for future<lb />programs and services. This document, although<lb />not exhaustive, seeks to supply information<lb />about types of library services and programs<lb />currently available to older adults and reasons<lb />why certain libraries in the state find success in<lb />their programming for older adult patrons.<lb /><lb />*Elizabeth Grubb, oReading Interests and Activity of Older<lb />Adults and Their Sense of Life Satisfaction� (Ph.D. Dissertation,<lb />North Texas State University, 1982).<lb /><lb />t Ibid. :<lb /><lb />Survey Scope<lb /><lb />The present survey is limited to the 108 pub-<lb />lic library systems in North Carolina listed in the<lb />Statistics and Directory of North Carolina Public<lb />Libraries, July 1, 1984 - June 30, 1985. This<lb />includes fifteen regional libraries, fifty-one county<lb />libraries, forty-one municipal libraries and one<lb /><lb />Diane G. Thompson is a circulation assistant at Greensboro<lb />Public Library in Greensboro, N.C. This paper was written as<lb />part of the requirement for completion of Ms. ThompsonTs<lb />MLS at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.<lb /><lb />Indian reservation library.<lb /><lb />The services and programs listed in the sur-<lb />vey include: 1. those offered by public libraries in<lb />the 1971 National Survey of Library Services to<lb />the Aging for the Cleveland Public Library;!<lb />2. those found by a comprehensive inventory of<lb />Services for the Elderly in the Illinois Public<lb />Libraries (1980) (published in 1981);? and 8. pro-<lb />grams and services identified by Betty J. TurockTs<lb />study of Public Library Services for the Aging in<lb />the Eiighties.®<lb /><lb />Services and programs are limited to those<lb />provided directly for older adults and do not<lb />include regular or routine services such as<lb />general circulation and reference services. Ex-<lb />cluded, also, are book lists concerned with or spe-<lb />cifically for older adults.<lb /><lb />The Literature<lb /><lb />Betty Turock finds that most of the literature<lb />on older adult services in the public libraries is<lb />limited to descriptions of isolated programs and<lb />is not integrated. To clarify she says, oif they (ser-<lb />vices) were more widespread they would be<lb />reported as aggregates, not through specific site<lb />descriptions and through statistical compilations<lb />not single cases.�<lb /><lb />This paper will summarize results of two<lb />major surveys influencing choices of services/<lb />programs for inclusion in the present survey, and<lb />describe local examples of those services/pro-<lb />grams. The two major surveys are the 1971<lb />National Survey of Libraries to the Aging,T and<lb />Services for the Elderly in the Illinois Public<lb />Libraries, 1981.°<lb /><lb />1971 National Survey<lb /><lb />The purpose of the 1971 National Survey of<lb />Library Services to the Aging was oto determine<lb />the scope of library services rendered to persons<lb />over sixty-five by public libraries and libraries at<lb />state and federal institutions.� The study em-<lb />phasized public library service. Three hundred<lb />and ninety libraries that appeared to offer<lb />exemplary services to the aging were chosen.®<lb />From the data gathered by questionnaire, (of the<lb />244 libraries that responded, 211 reported offer-<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 163<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0044" />
        <p>ing services to older adults), three broad catego-<lb />ries of services were documented: 1) extension<lb />services including books by mail, bookmobiles,<lb />personal home or bedside delivery, deposit collec-<lb />tions in service centers, nursing homes, and<lb />apartments for the aging; 2) group programs<lb />sponsored by the library (held in the library or<lb />alternative places such as nutrition sites, service<lb />centers, drop-in centers, homes for the aging; and<lb />3) special materials and equipment for the hand-<lb />icapped (talking books and large print items).®<lb /><lb />The survey documented that extension serv-<lb />ices, largely delivery to the impaired aging,<lb />accounted for about 66. percent of services ren-<lb />dered; group programs about 20 percent of the<lb />services; and special material about 12 percent!°<lb />These results show that the majority of services<lb />offered were largely outreach to impaired older<lb />adults.<lb /><lb />... those adults who are<lb />active readers have a variety<lb />of interests and have an eas-<lb />ier time adjusting to the prob-<lb />lems of old age.<lb /><lb />1981 Illinois Survey<lb /><lb />A task force of the Illinois State Library<lb />undertook in 1980, a survey of Services for the<lb />Elderly in Illinois Public Libraries. When com-<lb />pared with the libraries chosen in the 1971 survey,<lb />the following may be noted:<lb /><lb />1) The Illinois study addressed all public<lb />libraries in the state as opposed to the nationwide<lb />study of 1971 which chose only exemplary public<lb />libraries. Because of this, almost all of the public<lb />libraries responding to the 1971 Survey could<lb />report some servces to older adults while only<lb />thirty-seven percent of Illinois libraries reported<lb />services.<lb /><lb />2) The Illinois study defined oolder adults,�<lb />60+; the 1971 Survey, 65+ oJust how significant.<lb />this difference is would be hard to measure<lb />exactly, but it is generally agreed that library use<lb />declines with age.�!!<lb /><lb />3) Categories of services derived from data<lb />differed. However, some means of comparison<lb />was possible.'�<lb /><lb />The following statement by Casey is impor-<lb />tant. oThe Illinois survey accomplishes in-depth for<lb />the public libraries in one important state what<lb />an update of the 1971 survey might have done for<lb />all American public libraries.�!? There is presently<lb />no national update of the 1971 Survey. Further<lb /><lb />164"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />she says, oalthough one cannot assume that all<lb />states are as enlightened as Illinois about library<lb />services to the aging, ... the 1981 study may at<lb />least point the direction which public libraries are<lb />taking in service ...� to older adults.4<lb /><lb />Comparison of Services in 1971 and 1981 Surveys<lb /><lb />Casey has attempted to match services from<lb />the 1971 survey to the 1981 survey.!® She<lb />includes the three categories of service of the<lb />1971 Survey together with estimated percentages<lb />of responding libraries providing these services.<lb />Individual services provided by the 1981 Illinois<lb />Survey are given with percentages of libraries<lb />responding. Some services of the 1981 survey<lb />could be compared with the three categories of<lb />the 1971 survey, while others required a category<lb />of their own, oActivities Not Categorized in<lb />National Survey.�!* This category adds services for<lb />consideration for the present study and leads to a<lb />more indepth analysis of older adult services in<lb />North Carolina. Further, the addition of this cate-<lb />gory shows that services to older adults are mul-<lb />tiplying. Casey says that, in Illinois, special<lb />services to older adults grew from 40 libraries<lb />(identified by the 1971 Survey) to 219 libraries (in<lb />the 1981 Survey). In 1971 an estimated 3 percent<lb />of American public libraries were providing<lb />extension services. However, this percentage<lb />appears to have increased greatly. In the 1981<lb />Survey, 66 percent of the libraries were offering<lb />homebound service. Group programs grew from<lb />an estimated 2 percent of American public librar-<lb />ies (1971) to almost 50 percent of Illinois libraries<lb />(1981).17 Casey emphasizes the provision of<lb />information and referral, and consumer and<lb />health education programs as widespread in Illi-<lb />nois libraries by 1981, although these were not<lb />included in the 1971 study.!8<lb /><lb />Casey surmises that, because of the increase<lb />in the number of services, public libraries today<lb />are more aware of the information needs of the<lb />aging. Nevertheless, more awareness is neces-<lb />sary. That is, oa substantial majority of Illinois<lb />libraries are not fully aware of their elderly popu-<lb />lation, are not cognizant of the network of agen-<lb />cies providing services for the aged, are not<lb />providing innovative programming for the elderly,<lb />are not fully utilizing the various media to pro-<lb />mote, inform and attract this group.�°<lb /><lb />Illinois is a progressive state that Casey de-<lb />scribes as being more enlightened than other<lb />states?! regarding library services to older adults.<lb />If this is indeed true, how many and what types of<lb />services can be expected from other enlightened<lb />states such as North Carolina! That is, what per-<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0045" />
        <p>centage of public libraries in North Carolina will<lb />offer the various services? The present study<lb />seeks to address these questions.<lb /><lb />Site Descriptions<lb /><lb />Betty J. TurockTs study of Public Library Ser-<lb />vices for Aging in the Eighties�* lends significance<lb />to services chosen for the present study. She<lb />determines that since the 1971 survey, onew pro-<lb />grams have developed to serve older adults which<lb />are responsive to their needs ... 2 Her study con-<lb />centrated on collecting examples of library servi-<lb />ces. By collecting these, she sought to illuminate<lb />the character of a given service and, thus, to pro-<lb />vide a framework from which oto design new<lb />directions for library services for the aging in the<lb />emerging decade.� Her citings of specific situa-<lb />tions will be included within the context of des-<lb />cribing oServices/Programs/Activities� and will<lb />lend significance to the importance of providing<lb />such services.<lb /><lb />Services/Programs/Activities<lb />Services/Programs/ Activities to older adults<lb />will be discussed categorically: those listed by<lb />1. the 1971 National Survey include, a. Exten-<lb />sion, b. Group Programs, c. Special Materials;<lb />2. those Activities Not Categorized in the 1971<lb />National Survey but Included in the 1981 Illinois<lb />Survey; and 3. Other Services of notable impor-<lb />tance, taken largely from Betty TurockTs 1981<lb />study. Included in this last category are services<lb />listed by Celia Hales?® and Stephen Jefferies.�<lb /><lb />Extension Services<lb /><lb />Extension Services may be defined as those<lb />services initiated within the library but taken out-<lb />side the library to people who are unable to come<lb />to the library for reasons such as lack of transpor-<lb />tation, poor health, and physical disabilities; and<lb />institutions that serve older adults at locations<lb />not in the library itself (churches, senior centers,<lb />etc.).<lb /><lb />The importance of these services should not<lb />be underestimated. Wendy Robinson notes that<lb />older adults tend to be physically and psychologi-<lb />cally isolated from society.?T Isolation can cause<lb />feelings of rejection.*®<lb /><lb />Extension services can play a major role in<lb />combating isolation and feelings of rejection by<lb />keeping the older adult in touch with the world.<lb />The Adriance Memorial Library in Poughkeepsie,<lb />New York supplies materials via station wagon to<lb />shut-ins, nursing homes, drop-in centers, govern-<lb />ment sponsored meal sites, private homes, and<lb />residential housing units.2® Materials include reg-<lb /><lb />ular and large print books, magazines, music and<lb />spoken word recordings, framed art prints, and<lb />films.®° Other programs include deposit collec-<lb />tions, books-by-mail, and transportation to carry<lb />older adults to the library for programs and activ-<lb />ities. Today some libraries provide bookmobiles<lb />with hydraulic lifts to bring persons in wheel<lb />chairs into the truck to view films and borrow<lb />materials.*!<lb /><lb />Group Programs<lb /><lb />Group Programs may be defined as library<lb />programs designed to reach large groups of older<lb />adults at one time, rather than serving a single<lb />individual (e.g. bedside service). The advantage of<lb />group programming is that it provides an effec-<lb />tive way to meet information and entertainment<lb />needs,22 while being cost effective.®? Further, it<lb />alleviates the need for the older adult to oask� for<lb />information. oAsking� is often interpreted by the<lb />older person to mean odependency.�<lb /><lb />One of the most innovative programming<lb />techniques was developed by the Baltimore<lb />County Public Library (BCPL). Prepackaged pro-<lb />grams of professionally produced films and slide<lb />shows are grouped into specific programs of<lb />interest to older adults.3 Accompanying the films<lb />and slides is the manual, Gray and Growing, with<lb />step-by-step guidelines for optional scripts, dis-<lb />cussion questions, activities, and resources.*<lb />Examples of programs include: crime prevention,<lb />health, gray conciousness, nutrition, remember-<lb />ing past events, art, crafts, and sexuality.%�<lb />Recently Generations, which highlights news and<lb />events of the the BPCLTs community, was intro-<lb />duced.*8<lb /><lb />Other group programs include preretirement<lb />programming,®® book talks, book reviews, story-<lb />telling, music appreciation, poetry and creative<lb />writing, drama, religious programs, games, and<lb />bus trips.*°<lb /><lb />... the majority of services<lb />offered was largely outreach<lb />to impaired older adults.<lb /><lb />Special Materials<lb /><lb />Special Materials are primarily directed to<lb />the impaired older adult. Many reasons exist for<lb />providing services to the impaired. Public Law 89-<lb />522 says that the National Library Services users<lb />oshould have access to the same books and infor-<lb />mation made available to the non-handicapped.�*!<lb /><lb />The National Library Service (NLS), through<lb />56 regional and 102 subregional libraries, sends<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 165<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0046" />
        <p>materials to public libraries. For example, the<lb />Greensboro (North Carolina) Public Library re-<lb />ceives a deposit collection of talking books<lb />(cassettes and flexible disks) from the North<lb />Carolina Regional Library for the Blind and Phys-<lb />ically Handicapped in Raleigh, which in turn<lb />received materials from the National Library Serv-<lb />ice.<lb /><lb />Interagency cooperation is<lb />most important in meeting the<lb />comprehensive needs of the<lb />older adult.<lb /><lb />In addition to those services provided by NLS,<lb />Greensboro Public Library purchases large print<lb />books and magazines, provides replacement equip-<lb />ment to patrons while their machines (cassette or<lb />record player) are being sent to Raleigh for repair,<lb />and maintains a vertical file of information on<lb />problems of blindness available for blind patrons<lb />and their families. Large print items are also sent<lb />with the general circulating materials to the<lb />homebound.<lb /><lb />Some libraries, like BaltimoreTs Enoch Pratt<lb />Free Library, provide more in-depth service. A<lb />specially-equipped center for the visually and<lb />hearing impaired includes a Kurzweil Reading<lb />machine, a telephone/teletypewriter unit, and a<lb />Visualtek device which magnifies items.42 Radio<lb />Reading programs are popular in Seattle, Washing-<lb />ton. One program is Food Facts which presents<lb />lists of grocery advertisements of the best buys for<lb />the week.*8<lb /><lb />Activities Not Categorized in the 1971 National<lb />Survey but Included in the 1981 Illinois Survey<lb /><lb />The most pertinent activities from the 1981<lb />list of services for the present study are: Informa-<lb />tion and referral; adult basic education; and oral<lb />history programs.<lb /><lb />Information and Referral<lb /><lb />Information and referral is defined by Chil-<lb />ders as ofacilitating the link between a person<lb />with a need and the service, activity, information<lb />or advice outside the library which can meet the<lb />need.�44 The present writer interprets this to<lb />mean that public libraries cannot provide oall�<lb />information. Thus, in keeping with its philosophy<lb />of oservice to all,� the public library must tap other<lb />sources (agencies, organizations, etc.) in order to<lb />adequately serve its older adult patrons when<lb />local sources are lacking.<lb /><lb />Information and referral was mandated by<lb /><lb />166"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />law in the 1973 Amendment to the Older Ameri-<lb />cans Act to help older adults through a maze of<lb />agencies. That is, due to the numerous agencies<lb />that serve older adults, information and referral<lb />services provided by the public library can direct<lb />an older adult to the osource� that could most<lb />probably meet his needs. The Older Adult Act<lb />calls this oconvenient access.�45 An example is the<lb />Forsyth County (North Carolina) Library System<lb />that offers information and referral to link older<lb />adults to educational sources on topics like travel<lb />and death. MarylandTs public library systems pro-<lb />vide information and referral related to part-time<lb />jobs, business and restaurants offering senior citi-<lb />zen discounts, tax advice, health care, and lists of<lb />local recreational opportunities.**<lb /><lb />Online information and referral is provided<lb />by some public libraries. Turock says that, while<lb />online data bases cannot provide interpretation<lb />chelpfulness of human interaction with the librar-<lb />ian), they can provide a regular update of services<lb />and a broad information file for dissemination.<lb />Online services at Monroe County (New York)<lb />Library System provide directory of human ser-<lb />vies.*T Because of online services, Hale encourages<lb />the public library to serve as a single access point<lb />for cooperating agencies. The older adult can<lb />make one request at the library, and the compu-<lb />ter will identify all programs and services avail-<lb />able for a given older adultTs needs.*8<lb /><lb />Oral History<lb /><lb />Oral or spoken words are valuable when<lb />researching the history of a town or area. An<lb />older adult who lived through a certain time<lb />period can provide first-hand knowledge otherwise<lb />unavailable. Joint ventures of younger genera-<lb />tions with older adults can help break stereotyp-<lb />ing and show the older adults as viable resources<lb />to the community. Hale suggests interviewing the<lb />older adult.4® Certainly the younger generation<lb />could accomplish this. Taping the interview for an<lb />oral history collection could preserve information<lb />for others.<lb /><lb />Adult Education<lb /><lb />Adult education is the second pertinent<lb />activity from the 1981 Illinois Survey. In order to<lb />remain a viable resource to society, the older<lb /><lb />The library profession is not<lb />adequately training librarians<lb />in the aging process and its<lb />problems.<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0047" />
        <p>adult must have the opportunity to sharpen old<lb />skills and develop new ones.®° Whether the older<lb />adult chooses formal education through a local<lb />college, university, or community college, or<lb />whether he/she chooses the informal route of<lb />self-education, the public library should be avail-<lb />able to help. Through information and referral<lb />service, the public library can play an important<lb />role in advising and referring the older adult to<lb />the appropriate educational institution. Converse-<lb />ly, the public librarian and the older adult can<lb />jointly plan a self-paced experience via public<lb />library programs and resources.<lb /><lb />Whether learned formally or informally, cer-<lb />tain areas of notable importance should be<lb />included in older adult education. Stephen Jeffries<lb />describes some areas of need:*!<lb /><lb />1. Financial education is needed to deal with the<lb />unexpected drop in income at the time of retire-<lb />ment. Incomes can drop as much as fifty percent<lb />and continue in a downward slope as the years<lb />pass. While income drops, inflation rises, espe-<lb />cially in the areas of food, housing, medical care<lb />and transportation.�<lb /><lb />2. Work and Retirement. The older adult must be<lb />prepared for the fact that retirement omarks the<lb />end of ... a relationship between the kind of work<lb />an individual does and the kind of lifestyle and<lb />livelihood he enjoys.�** Preretirement education<lb />can help ease the change to a potentially lower<lb />standard of living.<lb /><lb />3. Health. Many older adults experience a decline<lb />in health and, consequently, a limiting of physical<lb />activities. Costs of medical care go up as the indi-<lb />vidual grows older. Common chronic illnesses<lb />afflicting the older adult include arthritis, rheu-<lb />matism, heart disease, high blood pressure, asthma,<lb />hay fever, diabetes, chronic bronchitis, and<lb />ulcers. Education about health problems can<lb />help the older adult understand and cope with<lb />them.<lb /><lb />4. Nutrition. As a class, older adults do not eat<lb />well. Reasons for not eating well include poverty,<lb />physical and mental illness, isolation (meals are<lb />associated with social activities), physical disabil-<lb />ities, immobility and lack of transportation to get<lb />to the proper foods.® Knowledge of nutritional<lb />needs may help the older adult seek transporta-<lb />tion to grocery stores or to seek such services as<lb />Meals on Wheels or meals at senior centers (the<lb />latter providing a social atmosphere).<lb /><lb />5. Consumer Fraud. Older adults should be edu-<lb />cated to protect themselves from such scams as<lb />phony medicine hustlers, land swindlers, dubious<lb />home improvement schemes, ocures� for arthri-<lb />tis, and the selection of faulty hearing aids.*®<lb /><lb />To conclude, educating the older adult is<lb />important. Knowledge of the aging process and its<lb />challenges can keep the older adult viable to the<lb />community. That is, if the older adult knows what<lb />is happening within himself (physically, men-<lb />tally,) and outside himself (the community), he<lb />can be better prepared to meet the challenges of<lb />aging. Educating the older adult can help in pro-<lb />ducing a happier, more satisfied individual with a<lb />better self-concept.®�<lb /><lb />Examples of formal educational programs<lb />for older adults include: 1) the Fromm Institute<lb />Sor Lifelong Learning, affiliated with the Univer-<lb />sity of San Francisco, which provides opportuni-<lb />ties to individuals fifty years and older to pursue<lb />academic work in the humanities and liberal arts:<lb />2) the Institute for Retired Persons of the New<lb />School in New York City, which uses retired<lb />teachers, lawyers, and doctors to conduct their<lb />own programs; and, 3) the Elder-Hostel, a net-<lb />work of over five hundred institutions in the Uni-<lb />ted States and Europe, offering low-cost, short-<lb />term residential academic programs for older<lb />adults who are at least sixty years old.°§ Programs<lb />such as these could be provided through informa-<lb />tion and referral services from the public library.<lb />Self-paced programs offered by the public library<lb />can include advice from the librarian about var-<lb />ious activities for inclusion. Examples have<lb />already been mentioned such as the Gray and<lb />Growing program provided by the Baltimore<lb />County Public Library.®®<lb /><lb />Gerontological concepts<lb />within library literature are in<lb />a stage of infancy.<lb /><lb />Other Services<lb /><lb />The final category of services for inclusion in<lb />the present survey is oOther Services.� While they<lb />are largely derived from the work of Betty Turock<lb />(Public Library Services in the Eighties), other<lb />services, notably those from TurockTs studies in<lb />Serving the Older Adult, studies by Celia Hales,<lb />and Stephen Jeffries will be included as well.<lb />These services are: bibliotherapy, inter-agency<lb />cooperation, intergenerational activities, educa-<lb />tion for service providers, career and employment<lb />information service, services to ethnic groups,<lb />and removal of architectural barriers.<lb /><lb />Bibliotherapy. Rhea Rubin defines biblio-<lb />therapy as oa program of activity based on the<lb />interactive process of media and the people who<lb />experience it. In bibliotherapy print or nonprint<lb />material, either imaginative or informational, is<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 167<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0048" />
        <p>experienced and discussed with the aid of a facil-<lb />itator. Its goal is either insight into normal devel-<lb />opment or changes in emotionally disturbed<lb />behavior.�®! Within the public library, the librarian<lb />may lead group discussions around the problems<lb />of aging which can lend insight into what is onor-<lb />mal behavior� for elders. If a patron is emotion-<lb />ally disturbed, the librarian contributes as part of<lb />a clinical team of therapists and other mental<lb />health workers in hope of changing the odisturbed<lb />behavior.� The Santa Clara County (California)<lb />Public Library provides bibliotherapy services as<lb />an outreach service to older adults in convales-<lb />cent hospitals.<lb /><lb />Interagency Cooperation. According to John<lb />Balkema, interagency cooperation includes two<lb />major components: coordinated service delivery<lb />systems and liaison between agencies to develop<lb />and run programs. Coordinated service delivery<lb />ois a network of community agencies and organi-<lb />zations linked together so that individuals, using<lb />the agency of their choice, will receive any needed<lb />guidance and help in finding and choosing<lb />appropriate services in the community ... to meet<lb />the spectrum of their personal needs.� The goal<lb />of coordinated services is to look at the older<lb />adult as a whole person with a variety of needs<lb />that interconnect. One example is the coordi-<lb />nated services of public libraries and senior cen-<lb />ters. oCenter literature and publicity are dissemi-<lb />nated from the library and the library serves both<lb />the needs of the centerTs patrons and the profes-<lb />sional information needs of the staff�66<lb /><lb />In regard to liaison and developing programs,<lb />othe public library may be a resource for pro-<lb />grams to other agencies; it may develop programs<lb />using resources of other agencies; or it may col-<lb />laborate with other agencies to develop and oper-<lb />ate programs in liaison.�67 One example of the<lb />latter is the Daniel Boone Regional Library in<lb />Columbia, Missouri, which became the advisor to<lb />an information and referral service set up by the<lb />Council on Aging.® The library advised the agency<lb />on how to locate service agencies, the type of<lb />information needed from these agencies, and the<lb />organization of information for ease of access.®<lb /><lb />Another example of liaison and cooperative<lb />programming is the BRAVO program, oBringing<lb />Reading to the Aging through Volunteer Out-<lb />reach,T in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. More than<lb />fifty volunteers are mobilized to provide services,<lb />including library services, to over three hundred<lb />homebound individuals.� The service is publi-<lb />cized through librarians accompanying home de-<lb />livered meal programs to talk to potential patrons<lb />about the integrated service programs, and<lb /><lb />168"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />through advertisements on radio, newspaper, bil-<lb />Iboards, window displays, and civic events.7! In<lb />Brooklyn, New York, the Public LibraryTs project<lb />SAGE (Services to the Aging) is part of the cityTs<lb />coordinated delivery system. Books and other<lb />materials are delivered through othe Friendly Vis-<lb />itor� and oMeals on Wheels� programs.� Intera-<lb />gency cooperation is most important in meeting<lb />the comprehensive needs of the older adult. No<lb />one agency can do it all. Good relationships<lb />between cooperating agencies is essential in order<lb />to provide adequate services and programs for<lb />the elderly.<lb /><lb />Intergenerational Activities. Intergeneration-<lb />al activities are those activities performed when<lb />various age groups act together. In the case of the<lb />older adult, programs utilizing their services can<lb />help promote these individuals as viable resour-<lb />ces to the community. One example is found in<lb />the Newton (Kansas) Public Library where the<lb />older adult is used as an expert resource person<lb />for childrenTs interest groups, motherTs discussion<lb />seminars, adult literature programs, and puppet<lb />making.�? In helping to promote oaging aware-<lb />ness� by youth, a mock trial on the statute requir-<lb />ing registration of eighteen and nineteen year olds<lb />was sponsored by VISTAS (Volunteers in Service<lb />to Area Seniors) in the Birmingham-Bloomfield<lb />library system in Michigan.� The jury was com-<lb />posed of high school students and retirees.�<lb /><lb />Education for Service Providers. The library<lb />profession is not adequately training librarians in<lb />the aging process and its problems. Turock cities<lb />studies by Kanner and Ferstl. The former gave oa<lb />continued indictment of the failure of the library<lb />profession to adequately absorb and integrate<lb />gerontological (aging process) knowledge into<lb />service provision.� Gerontological concepts within<lb />library literature are in a stage of infancy. Be-<lb />cause of the lack of combining gerontology and<lb />library training, the stereotyping of older adults<lb />remains a distinctive problem. According to<lb />Ferstl, librarians are no different from the general<lb />American public in stereotyping older adults.�<lb />Education of service providers needs more atten-<lb />tion in the eighties.<lb /><lb />Career and Employment Information Serv-<lb />ice. Career and Employment Information Service<lb />is important in providing the older adult with the<lb />opportunity to seek the means to a second or<lb />even third career. With inflation rising, especially<lb />in the costs of health care, food, and transporta-<lb />tion, the older adult may need additional income<lb />above his retirement monies. Besides increased<lb />income, there are other positive benefits of being<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0049" />
        <p>employed at an elderly age. These include com-<lb />panionship, gratification, enjoyment, and a sense<lb />of value.�<lb /><lb />An example of career and employment serv-<lb />ice is a successful network of Job Information<lb />Centers (JIC) in New York State. Located in twen-<lb />ty-two library systems, the network provides basic<lb />services such as supplying the libraries with com-<lb />puterized daily job listings on microfilm.� The<lb />libraries in turn, according to local conditions,<lb />post job listings from private agencies and display<lb />classified advertisements from local newspapers.<lb /><lb />Services to Ethnic Groups. Turock says that<lb />programs are targeted to ethnics as an overall<lb />group. In attendance, however, the groups often<lb />include older adults.�® Through these programs,<lb />older ethnic adults have access to bilingual pro-<lb />grams and services and to outreach programs<lb />emphasizing information, education, survival<lb />skills, cultural pride, and communication oppor-<lb />tunities.�9 It is important to remember that these<lb />individuals have a double challenge. They have to<lb />deal with the aging process, and they have to deal<lb />with problems in an English speaking environ-<lb />ment (language barrier). Especially important to<lb />these adults is the maintenance of ties with their<lb />own cultures and countries. The Asian Commu-<lb />nity Library in California has a bilingual project<lb />for its ethnic population. Within the project, bilin-<lb />gual books, magazines, and films become special<lb />to its older adults in preserving these ties.®° Other<lb />examples of library service include large print<lb />cards with phone numbers of community services<lb />(for a Spanish speaking population in Texas),®!<lb />and the provision of skilled translators and inter-<lb />pretors.®<lb /><lb />Removal of Architectural Barriers. The last<lb />area of the oOther Services,� category is concern<lb />for architectural barriers which have the poten-<lb />tial to limit or prevent physical access to the<lb />library building itself by older adults, especially<lb />the impaired. Turock says, owhile legislation has<lb />mandated attention to removing architectural<lb />barriers in public buildings, lack of funds has<lb />limited all but recently constructed libraries and<lb />a handful of others from fulfilling that mandate.�®*<lb />There are some libraries that do offer special help.<lb />Turock cites the Montgomery (Alabama) Library<lb />which provides sliding doors, rounded corners,<lb />and furniture tested for safety.*4 She also men-<lb />tions the need for ramps, elevators, automatic<lb />doors and specially designed restroom facilities.®<lb /><lb />Summary of Literature<lb />Betty Turock says that there is an oabsence of<lb /><lb />comparable current data on the status of service�<lb />when studying the needs of older adults. Data<lb />consists of isolated site cases. While progress has<lb />been made in the number of services offered,<lb />(since the 1971 and 1981 surveys), the services are<lb />not widespread. Further, she says, the library pro-<lb />fession has failed to adequately absorb geronto-<lb />logical knowledge into librarianship. Knowledge<lb />of the aging process can aid in breaking down the<lb />stereotyping of older adults, and can promote<lb />these adults as viable resources to the commu-<lb />nity. Turock does believe that public libraries are<lb />headed in the right direction. That is, they are<lb />beginning to use older adults as resources.<lb />Further, libraries are beginning to provide older<lb />adults with information, programs, and materials<lb />necessary to keep them in the omainstream� of<lb />life.<lb /><lb />Casey says that even with the increase in the<lb />total number of services, a substantial majority of<lb />libraries (in the case of the Illinois Survey) are not<lb />fully aware of their elderly population; and agen-<lb />cies providing services to older adults do not pro-<lb />vide innovative programming, and do not fully<lb />utilize media to advertise their services. It is the<lb />intent of the present survey to provide informa-<lb />tion on services to older adults in North Carolina<lb />in the hope that library directors will provide<lb />innovative programs for this needy patron class.<lb /><lb />Services Offered by North Carolina Public<lb />Libraries<lb /><lb />As noted above, Casey felt that the 1981 Illi-<lb />nois Survey accomplished in-depth for one state<lb />what an update of the 1971 National Survey might<lb />have accomplished.®T That is, the Illinois survey<lb />showed a significant increase in services to older<lb />adults since the 1971 survey. The present survey<lb />will serve to reinforce this observation of in-<lb />creased services in North Carolina (1986).<lb /><lb />Of the 108 public libraries surveyed in the<lb />state of North Carolina, 93 or 86 percent provide<lb />services to older adults. Although this figure<lb />represents multiple responses per library, it is<lb />representative of the fact that a majority of public<lb />libraries participate in providing services to their<lb />elderly clientele.<lb /><lb />Table 1 lists in order services that are most<lb />frequently offered and those least offered to older<lb />adults in North Carolina public libraries. Only five<lb />services received responses from over half of the<lb />libraries. Four of these, large print books, ramps,<lb />bookmobile service, and talking books, appear to<lb />address impaired older adults. One may consider<lb />asimilar situation noted by Casey, that extension<lb />services of the 1971 National Survey generally<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 169<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0050" />
        <p>TABLE 1<lb />Percentage of Libraries in North Carolina State Providing Service<lb /><lb />SE NT SE IE ES SI RE LE EE ES PRN L TEE P  TT A UE  EPS  E<lb /><lb />% of Libraries<lb /><lb />Service Provided Providing Service<lb />Large print books 95%<lb />Community agencies files 66%<lb />Ramps 59%<lb />Bookmobile service 59%<lb />Talking books 56%<lb />Library sponsored visits to nursing homes, etc. 49%<lb />Genealogy searches 47%<lb />I &amp; R to other agencies offering informational courses 47%<lb />Home delivery service 43%<lb />Storytelling 43%<lb />Job Listings 41%<lb />Newspaper advertising of services 40%<lb />Rooms with climate control mechanisms 35%<lb />Nursing homes (coordinated service delivery) 32%<lb />Deposit collections 30%<lb />Community activities files 29%<lb />Senior citizen clubs (coordinated service delivery) 28%<lb />I &amp;R to universities/colleges offering formal courses 26%<lb />Other programs 22%<lb />Provide educational opportunities for staff on OA needs 22%<lb />Craft programs 20%<lb />Prepackaged programs of films, slide shows, etc. 20%<lb />Nutritional programs (coordinated service delivery) » 20%<lb />Booktalks 18%<lb />Meeting rooms with high intensity lighting 18%<lb />Books by mail 16%<lb />Music programs 16%<lb />Financial programs 16%<lb />OA participation in planning services 16%<lb />Council on Aging (coordinated service delivery) 15%<lb />Survey OA patrons for their preferences in services 15%<lb />oHow to use the libraryT programs 14%<lb />Funding agencies files for OA services 14%<lb />Current events programs 13%<lb />GED programs (educational) 13%<lb />How often OA were surveyed for preferences 13%<lb />Intergenerational programming 11%<lb />Oral history programs 11%<lb />Consumer education programs 11%<lb />Poetry and Creative Writing programs 10%<lb />Other extension services 10%<lb />Special telecommunications devices for the deaf 10%<lb />Travelogues 9%<lb />Other ways of advertising , 9%<lb />Health programs 8%<lb />Nutritional education programs 8%<lb />Advisory service 8%<lb />Large print items in a foreign language 6%<lb />Bibliotherapy 6%<lb />Other OA educational opportunities 5%<lb />Other facilities 5%<lb />Aging process (gerontology) programs 4%<lb />Translators/interpretors for OA in special ethnic groups 4%<lb />Drama programs 3%<lb />Other Career and Employment Information for OATs 3%<lb />Other services for OATs in special ethnic groups 3%<lb />Other coordinated service delivery with other agencies 3%<lb />Transportation for OATs to the library 2%<lb />Religious programs 2%<lb />Games 2%<lb />Work and retirement programs 2%<lb />Other files 2%<lb />Radio reading programs 1%<lb />NN ee<lb />170"Fall 1988<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0051" />
        <p>addressed the impaired®® and that, in fact, two-<lb />thirds of the responding libraries in both the 1971<lb />and 1981 studies emphasized extension to the<lb />homebound or to institutionalized older adults.®<lb />Based on the above services, it appears that North<lb />Carolina public libraries are following the same<lb /><lb />trend.<lb />By integrating extension and special mate-<lb /><lb />rials one may see that, of the top four services to<lb />the impaired, homebound/institutionalized, large<lb />print books, talking books, and bookmobile serv-<lb />ices are generally provided by all sizes of public<lb />libraries in North Carolina (Table 2 and Table 3).<lb />To be more specific, over half of all public libraries<lb />offer large print books, and over half of the large<lb />and medium libraries offer talking books and<lb /><lb />Congress) via the State Library in Raleigh. This<lb />may account for the fact that even small libraries<lb />with limited operating funds and staff are able to<lb />provide large print books and talking books to<lb /><lb />their elderly. It is also notable that the small<lb />libraries can provide at least some bookmobile<lb />service.<lb /><lb />Indeed, from the above information, North<lb />Carolina is following the trend noted in the pre-<lb />vious surveys in emphasizing extension service to<lb />the impaired. The importance of emphasizing this<lb />service is that many impaired elderly may not<lb />potentially become as physically and psychologi-<lb />cally removed from society. In extension areas<lb />not integrated with special materials, North<lb />Carolina (1986) is actually offering more services<lb />than Illinois in 1981. This shows that libraries, at<lb />least in North Carolina, are beginning to become<lb />more aware of older adult needs in the area of<lb />extension. Special materials, (e.g., talking books<lb />and large print books) not integrated with exten-<lb />sion, are generally well represented in the 1971<lb />National Survey (2.8 percent of all U.S. libraries,<lb />Appendix B). Among North Carolina public<lb />libraries not integrating extension service, large<lb /><lb />TABLE 2<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Extension Services, Cross Analyzed by the LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Extension Service Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb />Bookmobile service 12 (30%) 16 (76%) 26 (84%) 55 (59%)<lb />Library sponsored visits to nursing homes 9 (23%) 13 (62%) 23 (74%) 46 (49%)<lb />Home delivery service 10 (25%) 9 (43%) 21 (68%) 40 (43%)<lb />Deposit Collections ie (18%) 10 (48%) 10 (32%) 28 (30%)<lb />Books by mail 3 (8%) 3 (14%) 9 (29%) 15 (16%)<lb />Other library extension services such<lb />as: house to house visits: programming<lb />in nursing homes: visits to hospitals:<lb />films at location 2 (5%) 1 (5%) 6 (19%) 9 (10%)<lb />Transportation for older adults to the<lb />library 2 (5%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 2 (2%)<lb /><lb />Coordinated service delivery with other<lb />agencies such as:<lb /><lb />Nursing homes 8 20%<lb />Senior citizen clubs/centers 8 20%<lb />Nutrition programs 3 8%<lb /><lb />Council on Aging 5%)<lb /><lb />38% 13 (42%) 30 (32%<lb />24%) 13 42%) 26 (28%)<lb />(19% 10 (32%) 18 (19%)<lb />5%) Il (35%) 14 (15%)<lb /><lb />TB] OU OO<lb /><lb />Other service delivery such as:<lb />adult day care: cooperation with<lb /><lb />the department of social services f (3%)<lb /><lb />0 (0%) 2 (6%) 3 (3%)<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"171<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0052" />
        <p>libraries did, however, provide some service<lb />(Table 3).<lb /><lb />An area of need is in the realm of programs<lb />for older adults. Programming for the elderly is<lb />important in order to reach more adequately a<lb />large number of individuals, thereby providing<lb />them with one way of integrating themselves<lb />socially. Entertainment and informational needs<lb />can be met in a supported communal atmos-<lb />phere, thus aiding the fight against feelings of iso-<lb />lation and rejection that often come with older<lb />adult living.<lb /><lb />Of the three surveys, none indicated that over<lb />half of their libraries provided programming ser-<lb />vices. This may indicate that over half of their<lb />libraries provided programming services. This<lb />may indicate the need for improving services.<lb />Casey, however, does see a growing trend in<lb />increasing service. She said that ogroup programs<lb />offered in 1971 by two percent of all U.S. public<lb />libraries were provided by almost fifty percent of<lb />Illinois libraries in 1981.� North Carolina (forty-<lb />three percent) statistics remain consistent with<lb />IllinoisT. Furthermore, because North Carolina has<lb />maintained this consistency, growth in providing<lb />programming has not significantly diminished<lb />since 1981 (Table 4).<lb /><lb />oActivities Not Categorized in National Sur-<lb />vey� category in the 1981 Illinois Survey was a<lb />potpourri of services offered in that state.<lb />Appendix B includes a variety of new services not<lb />given in the 1971 study, an indication of new<lb />interests in services to older adults. Although the<lb />present study does not match this category item<lb /><lb />for item (Tables 5-10), general trends can be eval-<lb />uated and lend credence to the statement that<lb />North Carolina has continued the trend of becom-<lb />ing more aware of older adult needs in varied ser-<lb />vices than the previous surveys.<lb /><lb />Information and referral (I&amp;R) services,<lb />unlike the 1971 study, were present in both the<lb />Illinois and North Carolina surveys. I&amp;R is impor-<lb />tant in helping older adults through a maze of<lb />organizations/agencies in order to effectively put<lb />the elderly in contact with resources the library<lb />itself does not provide. Illinois reported a thirty-<lb />nine percent response for its category of I&amp;R.<lb />The North Carolina study, (Table 5), divided this<lb />category into: 1) Career and Employment (the<lb />greatest response to a service in this area by the<lb />state, 42 percent); 2) Adult education (the grea-<lb />test response to a service in this area by the state,<lb />47 percent); and 3) Files of various community<lb />items (the greatest response to a service by the<lb />state, 66 percent). Although the categories can-<lb />not be compared exactly between the 1981 and<lb />1986 surveys, it can be stated generally that North<lb />Carolina is providing more I&amp;R services.<lb /><lb />Regarding library sizes in North Carolina, the<lb />larger the library, (especially those with more<lb />operating expenses and staff), the more I&amp;R serv-<lb />ices were offered. Conversely, the small libraries<lb />with limited funding and staff provided less serv-<lb />ice.<lb /><lb />Service to older adults in special ethnic<lb />groups is a new survey category in 1986 and was<lb />recognized as important in retaining ethnic ties<lb />with each individualTs culture and country.�<lb /><lb />TABLE 3<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Special Materials, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />i ee<lb /><lb />Special Materials Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />and Equipment No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb />Large print 35 (88%) 21 (100%) 31 (100%) 88 (95%)<lb />eee<lb />Talking books 14 (35%) 15 (71%) 23 (74%) 52 (56%)<lb />ee<lb />Genealogy searches 16 (40%) 7 (33%) 21 (68%) 44 (47%)<lb /><lb />Orr<lb /><lb />Other special materials and equipment<lb />such as: circulating collection of<lb />hearing assistive devices; information<lb />on special materials offered by the<lb />State; enlarging machines; table top<lb />magnifiers 3 (8%) 6 (29%) 2 (6%) ll (12%)<lb /><lb />"_"_"_"_"_"""""""""""""""<lb /><lb />Special telecommunication devices<lb />for the deaf 0 (0%) 2 (10%) + 4 (23%) 9 (10%)<lb /><lb />SS SSS SSS SSS SSS<lb /><lb />172 "Fall 1988<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0053" />
        <p>Although service was provided by less than half of<lb />the North Carolina libraries, the presence of some<lb />services indicates a beginning awareness of the<lb />need to serve this class of older adults (Table 6).<lb />That is, all sizes of libraries are providing a little<lb />service to older adults in ethnic groups, and from<lb />the comments given, some libraries are taking<lb />advantage of the North Carolina Foreign Lan-<lb />guage Center at the Cumberland County Public<lb />Library and Information Center in Fayetteville to<lb />serve their patrons. The large libraries with better<lb />funding and staff provide the most service to<lb />older adult ethnics.<lb /><lb />Another new service, bibliotherapy, is helpful<lb />in treating emotionally disturbed older adults.<lb />Table 7 indicates a beginning awareness of inter-<lb />est in this area. A few libraries of all sizes in North<lb />Carolina were represented as providing biblio-<lb />therapy service; the large libraries provided the<lb />most.<lb /><lb />Facilities was a new category (Table 8). All<lb /><lb />libraries provided rooms with climate control<lb />mechanisms, and generally provided more facili-<lb />ties than the medium and small libraries.<lb /><lb />TABLE 4<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Programs, Cross Analyzed by the LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Programs Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb />Storytelling 16 (40%) 10 (48%) 13 (42%) 40 (43%)<lb />Other programs such as: films (in house<lb />and at remote locations): book<lb />discussion groups; summer and<lb />seasonal entertainment programs:<lb />slide shows; story hour (meet the<lb />author); cultural enrichment<lb />programs; aerobic class; teas<lb />sponsored by Friends of the library 6 (15%) 5 (24%) 9 (29%) 20 (22%)<lb />Craft programs 5 (13%) 3 (14%) 10 (32%) 19 (20%)<lb />Booktalks 1 (3%) 4 (19%) 12 (39%) 17 (18%)<lb />Music programs " 4 (10%) 3 (14%) 8 (26%) 15 (16%)<lb />oHow to use the library� programs 3 (8%) 4 (19%) 6 (19%) 13 (14%)<lb />Current events programs 2 (5%) 3 (14%) i, (23%) 12 (13%)<lb />Intergenerational programs 4 (10%) 0 (0%) 6 (19%) 10 (11%)<lb />Oral history programs 1 (3%) 1 (5%) 8 (26%) 10 (11%)<lb />Poetry and creative writing programs 0 (0%) 5 (24%) 4 (13%) 9 (10%)<lb />Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />Travelogues 0 (0%) 5 (24%) 3 (10%) 8 (9%)<lb />Drama programs 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 3 (10%) 3 (3%)<lb />Religious programs 1 (3%) 0 (0%) i (3%) 2 (2%)<lb />Games 2 (5%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 2 (2%)<lb />Prepackaged programs of films, slide<lb />shows, discussion questions,<lb />activities and resources on particular<lb />topics of interest to older adults 4 (10%) 3 (14%) 10 (32%) 18 (19%)<lb />Locally prepared programs such as:<lb />Financial programs 1 (3%) 2 (10%) 12 (39%) 15 (16%)<lb />Consumer education programs 1 (3%) 0 (0%) 9 (29%) 10 ( 11%)<lb />Health programs 1 (3%) 2 (10%) 4 (13%) or (8%)<lb />Nutritional programs of (3%) 2 (10%) 4 (13%) 7 (8%)<lb />Other programs such as: gardening<lb />local history, entertaining 3 8% 1 5% 1 3% 5 (5%<lb />ing process 0 0% 0 0% 4 (13%) 4 4%<lb />Work and retirement 0 0% 0 0%) 2 6%) 2 2%<lb />Radio reading programs (special ;<lb />programs for the visually impaired) ir (3%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) A (1%)<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 173<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0054" />
        <p>TABLE 5<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Information and Referral Services, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />SPE SSS SSS SSS SSS ST SSS<lb /><lb />I&amp;R Services Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb /><lb />KKK neni<lb /><lb />I&amp;R to Career and Employment<lb />Inforamtion:<lb /><lb />Job Listings ui (18%) 12 (57%) 20 (65%) 39 (42%)<lb />Advisory service 3 (8%) 1 (5%) 3 (10%) 7 (8%)<lb /><lb />Other career and employment<lb />information such as: civil service<lb />test books; microfiche of job<lb />openings 2 (5%) 1 (5%) 0 (0%) 3 (3%)<lb /><lb />nn<lb /><lb />I&amp;R to Adult Education opportunities:<lb />I&amp;R to other agencies offering<lb /><lb />informal courses 12 (30%) 8 (88%) 23 (74%) 43 (46%)<lb />I&amp;R to universities/colleges 10 (25%) 3 (14%) ll (35%) 24 (26%)<lb /><lb />GED (General Educational<lb />Development programming) 6 (15%) 2 (10%) 4 (13%) 12 (13%)<lb /><lb />"_"_"_"_"_""_"" eee -::_OCO nn nm mk "_"<lb /><lb />I&amp;R Files:<lb /><lb />Community agencies 19 (48%) 15 (71%) 27 (87%) 61 (66%)<lb />Communities activities 8 (20%) 3 (14%) 16 (52%) 27 (29%)<lb />Funding agencies 2 (5%) 2 (10%) 9 (29%) 13 (14%)<lb /><lb />Other I&amp;R files such as: community<lb />directory for I&amp;R; government<lb />addresses; club rosters;<lb /><lb />Elderhostels; travel advice 0 (0%) 1 (5%) 1 (3%) 2. (2%)<lb /><lb />Facilities service is an area of need. Proper Marketing or advertising library services to the<lb />access to and through the library building can elderly was a new category. Many older adults<lb />increase use by the elderly who otherwise would may be unaware of services available from their<lb />avoid the physical inconvenience of steps and local library. Table 9 indicates the need for<lb />other physical barriers. Turock said that olack of increased awareness by library directors in mak-<lb />funds has limited all but recently constructed ing their services visible. The need is made evident<lb />libraries� from removing architectural barriers.%2 by the fact that advertising in the newspaper was<lb />Clearly North Carolina has overcome this diffi- the only marketing service provided by over half<lb />culty in some libraries, but further improvements of the well funded, large libraries. The remaining<lb />could still be made. services were provided by less than half of all sizes<lb /><lb />TABLE 6<lb /><lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Services to Older Adults in Special Ethnic Groups, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />SSS<lb /><lb />Services to Ethnic Groups Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb /><lb />OO)<lb /><lb />Large print items in a foreign<lb /><lb />language 1 (3%) 0 (0%) 5 (16%) 6 (6%)<lb />err OC rr<lb />Translator/interpretors 0 (0%) 1 (5%) 3 (10% 4 (4%)<lb /><lb />eee<lb /><lb />Other services to older adults in<lb />special ethnic groups such as: refer<lb />special language need to or ILL<lb />from the Foreign Language Collection<lb />in Fayetteville, NC; depository<lb />collection from the Foreign Language<lb />Collection 0 (0%) 2 (10%) Lt (3%) 3 (3%)<lb /><lb />SSS st<lb /><lb />174"Fall 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0055" />
        <p>TABLE 7<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Bibliotherapy Service to Older Adults, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Bibliotherapy Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb />UE UEE EEE EEE IEEEESEReT<lb />Bibliotherapy t (8%) 2 (5%) 4 (13%) 6 (6%)<lb />RS SL PT NP EE ERS SD MN A ATT RATT TT TEA EE ID<lb />TABLE 8<lb /><lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Facilities to Older Adults, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Facility Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb />eS<lb />Ramps 21 (53%) 13 (62%) 21 (68%) 55 (59%)<lb />a EEE<lb />Rooms with climate control mechanisms 8 (20%) 6 (29%) 19 (61%) 33 (35%)<lb /><lb />Sn ee UU EI EE I UIE EER DR SEEEEEEE SESS SESE<lb /><lb />Meeting rooms with high intensity<lb />lighting 7 (18%) 2 (10%) 8 (26%) 17 (18%)<lb /><lb />Other facilities such as: library<lb />structure iself designed for the _<lb />handicapped (designed for wheel<lb />chairs, restrooms, etc.) 0 (0%) 1 (5%) 4 (13%) 5 (5%)<lb /><lb />Automatic doors 0 (0%) 1 (5%) 3 (10%) 4 (4%)<lb /><lb />TABLE 9<lb />Number of Libraries Marketing their Services to Older Adults, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Marketing Service Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb />No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (83%) 93 (86%)<lb />ee<lb />Newspaper advertising 9 (10%) 8 (38%) 20 (65%) 37 (40%)<lb />a<lb />Radio advertising 4 (10%) 3 (14%) 14 (45%) 21 (23%)<lb /><lb />Older adult participation in planning<lb />for their own services 5 (13%) 3 (14%) 7 (23%) 15 (16%)<lb /><lb />Mail advertising 3 (8%) 1 (5%) 10 (32%) 14 (15%)<lb /><lb />Surveying older adults library users<lb />for their prefrences in<lb />programming/services 4 10% 3 14% 7 23% 14 15%<lb /><lb />Indicated frequency of surveying<lb />older adults for preferences<lb />(ex. twice a yr; annually, etc.) 4 (10%) 2 (10%) 6 (19%) 12 (13%)<lb /><lb />Television advertising 0 (0%) 1 (5%) 9 (29%) 10 (11%)<lb /><lb />Other advertising such as: word of<lb />mouth; brochures; librarian speaking<lb />at club programs; monthly<lb />newsletters 3 (8%) 1 (5%) 4 (13%) 8 (9%)<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "175<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0056" />
        <p>TABLE 10<lb />Number of Libraries Providing Various Continuing Education Opportunity on the Needs of Older Adults for Staff Members<lb />Who Work with This Age Group, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb /><lb />Continuing Education Small Libraries Medium Libraries Large Libraries Total Libraries<lb /><lb />Service No. (%) No. (%) No. (%) No. (%)<lb />40 (43%) 21 (23%) 31 (33%) 93 (86%)<lb /><lb />Continuing education for staff 4 (10%) 0 (0%) 16 (52%) 20 (23%)<lb /><lb />of libraries. Most advertising services surveyed,<lb />however, did receive some response. Libraries in<lb />North Carolina are beginning to offer this service.<lb /><lb />The last category for interpretation was con-<lb />tinuing education opportunities for library staff<lb />members on older adult needs. Staff training is<lb />important to insure understanding of older adult<lb />problems and concerns. Table 10 reveals that a<lb />few libraries in North Carolina are beginning to<lb />offer this service and that, in fact, over half of the<lb />large libraries are educating their staffs.<lb /><lb />Why Are Some Libraries Providing Better<lb />Service to Older Adults?<lb /><lb />The answer to the above question requires<lb />the recognition of factors which influence librar-<lb />ies to positively respond to providing services to<lb />older adults. For reference, libraries serving<lb />70,000+ persons were considered to be large;<lb />those serving 35,000 to 70,000 persons were con-<lb />sidered to be medium sized; and those serving<lb />under 35,000 persons, small. Of the ninety-three<lb />libraries responding, forty (43 percent) were<lb />small; twenty-one (23 percent) were medium<lb />sized; and thirty-one (33 percent) were large<lb />(Table 11.)<lb /><lb />TABLE 11<lb />Number of Libraries Responding (93),<lb />Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size<lb />NET SN ALDER TENE KPMG LOS AOC E DEO 8 ZORA OAT RTE ACME RPS NN<lb /><lb />Size of Number of ~Percent of<lb />Population Served Libraries Libraries<lb />Small"under 35,000 40 43%<lb />Medium"35,000-70,000 21 23%<lb />Large"over 70,000 31 33%<lb />Unidentified l! 1%<lb /><lb />TN FR AC OPT ST CR<lb /><lb />Although these three categories present a<lb />fairly equal representation of responses per<lb />library size, the survey deduced that the large<lb />libraries provided more services to their elderly.<lb />Increased library size was the first factor asso-<lb />ciated with a higher level of service to older<lb />adults. In fact, several other factors of library size<lb />and wealth were associated with the provision of<lb />service to older adults; staff size, operating<lb />expenses, and collection size. Based on a sample<lb /><lb />176"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />group from the ninety-three libraries that re-<lb />sponded, (those with the most, medium, and least<lb />responses of all the questions from the survey),<lb />these other factors will be discussed.<lb /><lb />TABLE 12<lb />Average Number of Professional and<lb />Nonprofessional Staff of Sample<lb />Libraries, Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size*<lb /><lb />Average Number Average Number<lb />of Professional of Professional<lb />Library Staff (FTE) Staff (FTE)<lb />Small ai 25 " 88<lb />Medium 3.0 9.4<lb />Large 11.6 33.0<lb /><lb />Factor number two was the number of pro-<lb />fessional and nonprofessional staff members each<lb />library had. The survey found that the larger the<lb />library, the moreT professional and nonprofes-<lb />sional staff members were provided and the more<lb />services to older adults were offered. Table 12<lb />shows that of the sample libraries which re-<lb />sponded and are providing services to older<lb />adults, more professional and nonprofessional<lb />staff members were present in the large libraries.<lb /><lb />TABLE 13<lb />Average Amount of Operating Expenses of Sample Libraries,<lb />Cross Analyses by LibraryTs Size*<lb /><lb />Average Responses<lb /><lb />Library from Sample Libraries<lb />Small 59,570.8 **<lb />Medium 315,962.5<lb />Large 1,238,040.7<lb /><lb />The third positive factor for providing more<lb />services to the elderly was the amount of operat-<lb />ing expenses spent by each library. Table 13 shows<lb />clearly that the large libraries had the most oper-<lb />ating expenses from which to extract funds<lb />needed for resources/services for older adults. A<lb />fourth factor, total volumes (collection size), con-<lb />tributed to providing more services. Table 14 indi-<lb />cates that the large libraries provided more books<lb />than the medium or small libraries. Other factors<lb />such as age,�"� percentage of adult books (collec-<lb />tion size), volumes per capita (collection size),<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0057" />
        <p>TABLE 14<lb />Average Total Volumes (Size of Collection)<lb />of Sample Libraries,<lb />Cross Analyzed by LibraryTs Size*<lb /><lb />| PBS LEAL IS LET AT II EP AIL OO NATE LEE ETE ICTS ST MERTEN EARL TO<lb />Average Volumes<lb /><lb />Library from Sample Libraries<lb />Small 21,581.31 2<lb />Medium 70,923.5<lb /><lb />Large 217,833.3<lb /><lb />| EE SS NR DA EIRP<lb /><lb />and per capita income were considered and<lb />found insignificant in providing increased serv-<lb />ices to the elderly. That is, there was no signficiant<lb />differences between: 1) small, medium, and large<lb />sample libraries as to percentages of their popu-<lb />lations that were sixty-five and over (4 percent -<lb />11 percent), or 2) percentage of adult books<lb />within a collection (70 percent - 74.7 percent)<lb />and increased library size. Volumes per capita did<lb />not influence providing materials. In fact, small<lb />libraries which provided the least services had the<lb />most volumes per capita (4.2) as opposed to<lb />medium (1.6) and large (1.5) libraries. Per capita<lb />income was not a factor. Small libraries offering<lb />less service were provided the most per capita<lb />income (12.29) while the large (8.39) and medium<lb />(7.10) libraries provided less.<lb /><lb />Conclusion<lb /><lb />In conclusion, it appears that public libraries<lb />in North Carolina are providing more services (68<lb />percent) to older adults than the National 1971<lb />Survey (20 percent of the total U.S. public libraries<lb />responding)® or the Illinois 1981 Survey, (37 per-<lb />cent).% Although there were differences in sur-<lb />veying procedures (for example: the National<lb />Survey included only public libraries that were<lb />thought to offer services to older adults;%� Illi-<lb />nois® and North Carolina surveyed all public<lb />libraries in their states; Illinois surveyed more<lb />services than in 1971; North Carolina surveyed<lb />more services than both previous surveys), trends<lb />could be ascertained that can give insight on pub-<lb />lic library service to older adults since 1971. There<lb />is a trend of increasing services to older adults in<lb />the areas of extension, special materials, and<lb />information and referral. New services were<lb />added from the 1971 to the 1981 survey, and<lb />increased in the 1986 study (such as services to<lb />ethnic groups, bibliotherapy, facilities, marketing<lb />libraries, and educating staff to older adult needs).<lb />Service in the area of programming increased<lb />from 1971, remained constant from 1981 through<lb />1986, and is an area that generally needs more<lb />attention. Moreover, those libraries that were<lb />large, had more professional and nonprofessional<lb /><lb />staff members, more operating expenses, and<lb />more total volumes, provided more services than<lb />medium or small libraries in North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Appendix A<lb />QUESTIONNAIRE<lb /><lb />Does your library offer/provide regularly the following ser-<lb />vices/programs/materials for older adults? (Check only the<lb />items that apply to your library).<lb /><lb />1. Extension Services (Outreach) such as<lb />_"_" Home delivery service<lb />"" Books by mail<lb />____ Transportation for older adults to the library<lb />_"_" Bookmobile service<lb />____ Library sponsored visits to nursing homes, senier cen-<lb />ters, churches, etc.<lb />_"_" Deposit collections<lb />"+_ Other<lb /><lb />2. Programs: Does your library offer regularly scheduled pro-<lb />grams such as:<lb />____ Intergenerational programming (e.g. those involving<lb />older adults and children).<lb />"" Booktalks<lb />"__ Crafts programs<lb />"" Storytelling<lb />"" Music programs<lb />__" Poetry and Creative Writing programs<lb />"" Drama<lb />____ Current events programs (speakers, etc.)<lb />"_" Religious programs<lb />"_" Games<lb />____ Oral history programs<lb />_____ oHow to use the library� programs<lb />"_" Travelogues<lb />= Other<lb /><lb />3. Special Materials: Do you provide:<lb />____ Talking books for the visually handicapped<lb />____ Large print items for the visually handicapped<lb />"" Genealogy searches<lb />____ Special telecommunications devices for the deaf<lb />___ Radio Reading programs<lb />"" Other<lb /><lb />4. Other: Do you provide special programs such as:<lb />A. Adult Education opportunities for older adults:<lb /><lb />Formal:<lb /><lb />____ Information and referral to universities/colleges,<lb />etc.<lb /><lb />____ GED (General Educational Development<lb />programming)<lb /><lb />Informal (non-diploma oriented):<lb /><lb />____ Information and referral to other agencies offering<lb />informal courses (e.g. YMCA, churches, etc.)<lb /><lb />____ Prepackaged programs of films, slide shows,<lb />discussion questions, activities, and resources on<lb />particular topics of interest to older adults (e.g.<lb />nutrition, finance, aging process, etc.)<lb /><lb />Locally prepared programs of interest such as:<lb />"" Financial programs<lb />"" Work and retirement programs<lb /><lb />" Aging process (gerontology) programs<lb />"_ Health programs<lb /><lb />"" Nutritional programs<lb />"_" Consumer education programs<lb />"" Other<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"177<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0058" />
        <p>B. Career and Employment Information for older adults<lb />such as:<lb />"" Job listings<lb />"_" Advisory service<lb />ean 011) eee onal seine as ae Oe PME See ee<lb />C. Services to older adults in special ethnic groups such as:<lb />"_" Large print items in a foreign language<lb />"_" Translators/interpreters (e.g. bilingual staff<lb />members)<lb />wea OUNCY Ss Serengeti sue eho tps<lb />D. Bibliotherapy for the mentally ill and emotionally<lb />disturbed.<lb />ites "_".No<lb />E. Coordinated service delivery with other agencies such<lb />as:<lb />"_" Nursing homes<lb />"" Council on Aging<lb />"" Senior citizen clubs/centers<lb />"" Nutrition programs for older adults (e.g. Meals on<lb />Wheels)<lb />"_ Other<lb />F. Facilities for older adults such as:<lb />~__. Automatic doors<lb />"__. Ramps<lb />"" Meeting rooms with high intensity lighting<lb />""_" Rooms with climate control mechanisms (e.g. heat,<lb />air-conditioning, humidity, draft control, etc.)<lb />"._.. Other<lb /><lb />G. Do you advertise your services directly to older adults in<lb />areas such as:<lb />"_" Newspapers<lb />ai Radio<lb />soe,<lb />"" Mail (to older adults and/or to other agencies that<lb />serve them)<lb />"" Other<lb /><lb />H. Do you survey older adult library users for their pre-<lb />ferences in programming/services:<lb />ide NOS su2/NG How Often?<lb /><lb />I. Do you maintain files on:<lb />"" Community agencies (e.g. phone numbers,<lb />addresses, types of services, materials offered)<lb />"" Community activities (speakers, events)<lb />"" Funding agencies for older adult programming,<lb />materials services.<lb />2 Other<lb /><lb />J. Do your older adults participate in planning for their<lb />own services (e.g. serve on advisory committees):<lb />Abas YOR 25 NO<lb /><lb />K. Do you provide continuing education opportunities on<lb />the needs of older adults for staff members who work with<lb />this age group (e.g. workshops, programs, forums):<lb />es uLiNo<lb /><lb />Appendix B.<lb />eae eeeee errr eS SSS SSS ESS SS<lb />Services Offered by Public Libraries Surveyed in National (1971)<lb /><lb />and Illinois (1981) Studies<lb />centennial<lb /><lb />Percentage of Libraries<lb />Activities in Sample Offering Service<lb /><lb />National Illinois<lb />(1971) (1981)<lb /><lb />Extension 54% (211)<lb />(Est. 3% of<lb />all U.S.<lb />Public<lb />Libraries)<lb />Homebound service 66% (161)<lb />Delivery to nursing homes for aged 56% (137)<lb />Deposit collections 23% (56)<lb />Books by mail 13% (81)<lb />Take books to senior citizens meetings ~<lb />&amp; other such sites 1% (3)<lb />Senior citizens transportation to<lb />library 4% (1)<lb />Group Programs 48% (190)<lb />(Est. 2.7%<lb />all US.<lb />Public<lb />Libraries)<lb />Book Talks, reviews, discussion groups 26% (63)<lb />Movie and slide programs 44% (106)<lb />Crafts 12% (29)<lb />Storytelling 5% (12)<lb />Music appreciation 5% (11)<lb />Poetry and creative writing 2% (6)<lb />Drama 2% (5)<lb />Current events 4% (9)<lb />Religious programs 2% (4)<lb />Games 2% (6)<lb />Health programs 1% (2)<lb />Bus trips SoG)<lb /><lb />Percentage of Libraries<lb /><lb />Activities in Sample Offering Service<lb /><lb />National Illinois<lb />(1971) (1981)<lb /><lb />Special materials 51% (200)<lb />(Est. 2.8%<lb />of all U.S.<lb />Public<lb />Libraries)<lb />Talking books and other services of the<lb />division for blind and handicapped (44)<lb />Large-print books 5% (11)<lb />Art loans (including sculpture) 39% (95)<lb />Genealogy searches 4% (1)<lb />Activities Not Categorized in National<lb />Survey<lb />Information and referral 39% (95)<lb />Oral history 9% (23)<lb />Consumer education 8% (19)<lb />Adult basic education 7% (16)<lb />Art and other classes 2% (5)<lb />Public library as site for fuel aid<lb />programs 4% (3)<lb />Friends of the library 4% (1)<lb />Radio programs 4% (1)<lb />GED classes 4% (1)<lb />Annual conference 4% (1)<lb />Mean Number of Activities per<lb />Respondent 2.46 4<lb /><lb />SSAA SS ATC EE SE MES ES EE PE SAREE TS a, ee<lb /><lb />178 "Fall 1988<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0059" />
        <p>References<lb /><lb />1. Cleveland Public Library, National Survey of Library Serv-<lb />ices to the Aging (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Office of Education,<lb />1971).<lb /><lb />2. Illinois State Library Task Force for Library Service to the<lb />Aging. Service for the Elderly in Illinois Public Libraries: A<lb />Survey. Report no. 6 (Springfield, Illinois: State Library, 1981).<lb /><lb />3. Betty J. Turock, Public Library Services for Aging in the<lb />Eighties. A 1981 White House Conference on the Aging Back-<lb />ground Paper. (Washington, D.C.: White House Conference on<lb />Aging, 1981). ERIC ED 215 285:26.<lb /><lb />4. Ibid.<lb /><lb />5. National Survey, 1971. :<lb /><lb />6. Illinois State Library, Service for the Elderly, 1981.<lb /><lb />7. National Survey, 1971.<lb /><lb />8. Genevieve M. Casey, Library Services for the Aging.<lb />(Hamden, Connecticut: Library Professional Publications, 1984),<lb />4l.<lb /><lb />9. Ibid., 42.<lb /><lb />10. Ibid., 43.<lb /><lb />11. Ibid., 46.<lb />_12. Ibid., see chart; 47-48.<lb /><lb />13. Ibid., 45.<lb /><lb />14. Ibid.<lb /><lb />15. Ibid., 47-48.<lb /><lb />16. Ibid., 48.<lb /><lb />17. Ibid., 53.<lb /><lb />18. Ibid.<lb /><lb />19. Ibid.<lb /><lb />20. Ibid., 54, quotes from Illinois State Library Task Force,<lb />Services for the Elderly in Illinois Public Libraries:<lb />A Survey. 25.<lb /><lb />21, Casey, 53.<lb /><lb />22. Turock, 4.<lb /><lb />23. Ibid.<lb /><lb />24. Ibid.<lb /><lb />25. Celia Elaine Hales, oPlanning for the Information Needs of<lb />the Aging: A Delphi StudyT (Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State<lb />University, 1982).<lb /><lb />26. Stephen R. Jeffries, A Model For Service to the Elderly By the<lb />Small/Medium Sized Public Library (Denton, Texas: Center for<lb />Studies in Aging, North Texas State University, 1977).<lb /><lb />27. Wendy Robinson, oMeeting the Psychological and Social<lb />Needs of Older Adults: The Library's Role,T Drexel Library<lb />Quarterly 15, (April 1979): 5.<lb /><lb />28. Ibid.<lb /><lb />29. Turock, cites Esther K. Odescalchi, oLibrary Extension Serv-<lb />ices for Older Adults,� Catholic Library World 50. (February<lb />1979): 290-291.<lb /><lb />30. Ibid.<lb /><lb />81. Turock, 21.<lb /><lb />32. Barbara Webb, oGray and Growing: Programming with Older<lb />Adults� Drexel Library Quarterly 15 (April 1979): 45.<lb /><lb />33. Turock, 60.<lb /><lb />34, Webb, 45.<lb /><lb />35. Turock, 60.<lb /><lb />36. Ibid.<lb /><lb />37. Webb, 49-50.<lb /><lb />88. Turock, 61.<lb /><lb />39. Hale, Appendix One.<lb /><lb />40. Casey, 47.<lb /><lb />41.American Library Association. Association of Specialized and<lb />Cooperative Library Agencies, oAppendix C) Revised Standards<lb />and Guidelines of Service for the Library of Congress Network of<lb />Libraries for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, 1984<lb />(Chicago: American Library Association, 1984), p. 35 discusses<lb />Public Law 89-52.<lb /><lb />42. Turock, p. 19 cites oEnoch Pratt Opens Center for the Handi-<lb />capped, Library Journal 105 (February 15, 1980): 462.<lb /><lb />43. Turock, cites Serving Citizens with Special Needs. Back-<lb />ground Paper for the White House Conference on Library and<lb />Information Services (New York: New York Public Library,<lb />1980).<lb /><lb />44, Thomas Childers, oTrends in Public Library and Information<lb />and Referral Services,� Library Journal 104 (October 1,<lb />1979): 2036.<lb /><lb />45. Hale, 39.<lb /><lb />46. Turock, cites Roger DeCrow, New Learning for Older Ameri-<lb />cans (Washington, D.C.: Adult Education Association of the<lb />USA, 1974).<lb /><lb />47. Turock, p. 57, cites oInformation and Referral Services in the<lb />Public Library,T Drexel Library Quarterly 104 (October 1, 1979).<lb />Entire Issue.<lb /><lb />48. Hale, Appendix One.<lb /><lb />49. Hale, 30,<lb /><lb />50. Turock, 28.<lb /><lb />51. Jeffries, 21.<lb /><lb />52. Ibid.<lb /><lb />53. Ibid.<lb /><lb />54, Ibid., 23.<lb /><lb />55. Ibid., 27.<lb /><lb />56. Ibid.<lb /><lb />57. Turock, 31.<lb /><lb />58. Casey, p. 20, cites Ruth Weinstock, The Graying of the Cam-<lb />pus: A Report From EFL (New York: Educational Facilities<lb />Laboratories, 1978).<lb /><lb />59. Turock, 60.<lb /><lb />60. Turock, Serving the Older Adult: A Guide to Library Pro-<lb />grams and Information Sources (New York: R.R. Bowker, 1982).<lb />61. Turock, ibid., p. 137-138 cites Rhea Rubin, ed., Bibliotherapy<lb />Sourcebook (Phoenix: Oryx Press, 1978), 3.<lb /><lb />62. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, 138.<lb /><lb />63. Ibid.<lb /><lb />64. Turock, Public Library Services for Aging in the 80's, 18-19,<lb />65. John B. Balkema, oInteragency Cooperation for Services to<lb />Older Adults, Drexel Library Quarterly 15 (April 1979); 32.<lb /><lb />66. Ibid., p. 35 cites Betty Ransom Shepherd and John Bal-<lb />kema, oThe Public Library: Another Community Resource,T<lb />Senior Center Report 1, (December 1978); 4-6.<lb /><lb />67. Balkema, 35.<lb /><lb />68. Balkema, cites Larry D. Weitkemper, oA Library Cooperates<lb />with a Triple A Information and Referral Program.� Paper given<lb />at the Annual Conference of the National Council on Aging,<lb />1978.<lb /><lb />69. Balkema, 36.<lb /><lb />70. Turock, Public Library Services for the Aging in the 80's, 23.<lb />TI, Aids<lb /><lb />72. Ibid.<lb /><lb />73. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, 112, cites Serving Citizens<lb />with Special Needs. Background Paper for the White House Con-<lb />ference on Library and Information Services (New York: Public<lb />Library, 1980), p. 6.<lb /><lb />74, Casey, 63.<lb /><lb />75. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, p. 10 cites Elliot E. Kanner,<lb />oThe Impact of Gerontological Concepts on the Principles of<lb />Librarianship� (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madi-<lb />son, 1972).<lb /><lb />76. Turock, ibid., cites Kenneth Ferstl, oPublic Librarians and<lb />Service to the Aging: A Study of Attitudes� (Ph.D. dissertation,<lb />Indiana University, 1977).<lb /><lb />77. Turock, Public Library Services for Aging in the 80's, 49<lb />cites Ruth Jacobs, oRe-Employment and Unemployment in Old<lb />Age� Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 11 (1978), 79-80.<lb /><lb />78. Turock, ibid., 49.<lb /><lb />79. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, 112.<lb /><lb />80. Ibid.<lb /><lb />81. Turock, ibid., p. 112 cites Serving Citizens with Special<lb />Needs. Background paper for the White House Conference on<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"179<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0060" />
        <p>Library and Information Services (New York: Public Library,<lb />1980), 26.<lb /><lb />82. Hale, Appendix 1.<lb /><lb />83. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, 114.<lb /><lb />84. Ibid., 115.<lb /><lb />85. Ibid.<lb /><lb />86. Ibid., 114-115.<lb /><lb />87. Casey, 45.<lb /><lb />88. Ibid., 43.<lb /><lb />89. Ibid., 52.<lb /><lb />90. Appendix C lists extension services surveyed by the Illinois<lb />study.<lb /><lb />91. Casey, 53.<lb /><lb />92. Turock cites descriptions of services to older adults in spe-<lb />cial ethnic groups, p. 17 of the present paper.<lb /><lb />93. Turock, Serving the Older Adult, 114.<lb /><lb />94. Age information from the sample libraries was averaged<lb />from U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census, 1980<lb />Census of Population (Washington D.C.: GPO, 1983). Other sta-<lb />tistics were averaged from the Statistics &amp; Directory of North<lb />Carolina Public Libraries, July 1, 1984-June 30, 1985 and where<lb />reports were unavailable from Statistics &amp; Directory of North<lb />Carolina Public Libraries, July 1, 1983-June 30, 1984. Some<lb />statistics were unavailable and were omitted from the averages.<lb /><lb />of the United States<lb />in order to...<lb />establish Justice ...<lb /><lb />The DN. GRights<lb /><lb />IV.<lb /><lb />ne people tebe<lb /><lb />Caldecott Honor winner Ann Grifalconi has created a full-<lb />color, 25 inch x 37% inch Bill of Rights mural for the ChildrenTs<lb />Book CouncilTs celebration of the bicentennial of the Bill of<lb />Rights. For a full-color brochure that includes price and or-<lb />dering information, send a stamped (1 oz. postage), self-<lb />addressed, #10 envelope to: CBC, P.O. Box 706, 67 Irving Place,<lb />New York, NY 10276.<lb /><lb />180" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />95. Casey, 45.<lb />96. Ibid.<lb /><lb />97. Ibid., 46.<lb />98. Ibid.<lb /><lb />*Tables 12, 13, and 14. Statistics and Directory .. . July 1,<lb />1984-June 30, 1985, ibid.<lb />**Tables 12, 13, and 14. Ibid., July 1, 1984-June 30, 1985; Ibid.<lb />July 1, 1983-June 30, 1984. Some statistics were unavailable and<lb /><lb />were omitted from the average. al<lb />(ae<lb /><lb />ER SRI A ME SA STI a FP ON ME SSO<lb />Instructions for the Preparation<lb /><lb />of Manuscripts<lb /><lb />for North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />1. North Carolina Libraries seeks to publish articles, book<lb />reviews, and news of professional interest to librarians in<lb />North Carolina. Articles need not be of a scholarly nature, but<lb />they should address professional concerns of the library<lb />community in the state.<lb />Manuscripts should be directed to Frances B. Bradburn, Edi-<lb />tor, North Carolina Libraries, Joyner Library, East Carolina<lb />University, Greenville, N.C. 27858.<lb />Manuscripts should be submitted in triplicate on plain white<lb />paper measuring 8%� x 11�.<lb />Manuscripts must be double-spaced (text, references, and<lb />footnotes). Manuscripts should be typed on sixty-space lines,<lb />twenty-five lines to a page. The beginnings of paragraphs<lb />should be indented eight spaces. Lengthy quotes should be<lb />avoided. When used, they should be indented on both mar-<lb />gins.<lb /><lb />The name, position, and professional address of the author<lb /><lb />should appear in the bottom left-hand corner of a separate<lb /><lb />title page.<lb /><lb />Each page after the first should be numbered consecutively<lb /><lb />at the top right-hand corner and carry the author's last name<lb /><lb />at the upper left-hand corner.<lb /><lb />Footnotes should appear at the end of the manuscript. The<lb /><lb />editors will refer to The Chicago Manual of Style, 13th edition.<lb /><lb />The basic forms for books and journals are as follows:<lb /><lb />Keyes Metcalf, Planning Academic and Research Li-<lb />brary Buildings. (New York: McGraw, 1965), 416.<lb /><lb />Susan K. Martin, oThe Care and Feeding of the MARC<lb />Format,� American Libraries 10 (September 1979): 498.<lb /><lb />8. Photographs will be accepted for consideration but cannot be<lb />returned.<lb /><lb />9. North Carolina Libraries is not copyrighted. Copyright rests<lb />with the author. Upon receipt, a manuscript will be acknowl-<lb />edged by the editor. Following review of a manuscript by at<lb />least two jurors, a decision will be communicated to the wri-<lb />ter. A definite publication date cannot be given since any<lb />incoming manuscript will be added to a manuscript from<lb />which articles are selected for each issue.<lb /><lb />ge<lb /><lb />Lam<lb /><lb />om<lb /><lb />a<lb /><lb />mt<lb /><lb />Issue deadlines are February 10, May 10, August 10, and<lb />November 10.<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0061" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />and the ConstitutionTs Bicentennial:<lb />Building Relationships for Our Library<lb /><lb />Barbara L. Anderson<lb /><lb />oYou couldnTt be undertaking a more timely,<lb />more vital project because the Constitution is in<lb />jeopardy"it is under attack.� So remarked one<lb />Winston-Salem alderman in her 1986 letter of<lb />inquiry to the Federal Commission for the Consti-<lb />tutionTs Bicentennial, which was routed to the<lb />North Carolina Commission and then on to our<lb />library. Months before communities across the<lb />nation began to plan for local Constitution pro-<lb />grams, the Forsyth County Public Library became<lb />a leading institution in the promotion of public<lb />programming for the Bicentennial.<lb /><lb />The Forsyth library system, comprising a<lb />headquarters library and eight branches, serves a<lb />county of 267,000. Forsyth County uniquely<lb />blends urban and rural elements. Headquarters<lb />Library, centrally located in Winston-Salem on<lb />the edge of a revitalized downtown and a reno-<lb />vated historic residential area, is considered the<lb />entire county's library, and serves as the site of<lb />our community-wide programs.<lb /><lb />For the past two years our library has been at<lb />the center of Forsyth CountyTs celebration of the<lb />Constitution and in the forefront of North Caro-<lb />linaTs Bicentennial initiatives. The Bicentennial<lb />has presented our library with an opportunity to<lb />promote itself as a place to talk about books and<lb />ideas; as a place to turn for varied delights; and, of<lb />course, as Forsyth County's first information<lb />resource.<lb /><lb />We have secured speakers, respondents,<lb />actors, and funding support; planned at length<lb />with community leaders; promoted our projects<lb />with vigor; filled punch cups; managed complex<lb />seating and lighting arrangements, and found the<lb />right costume miles away; faced the public to tell<lb />them Magna Carta exhibit tickets were all given<lb />out before noon; ordered new books and pre-<lb />pared bibliographies; and built new bridges in our<lb />community.<lb /><lb />Barbara L. Anderson is Reference Librarian at the Forsyth<lb />County Public Library in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Fall 1986 Program Series"Forsyth County<lb />Celebrates the Constitution<lb /><lb />In October 1986 the library presented its first<lb />Constitution project, oForsyth County Celebrates<lb />the Constitution.� This project was not only one of<lb />the earliest in the nation to commemorate the<lb />Bicentennial, but also has been used as a model by<lb />the N.C. Commission on the Bicentennial of the<lb />Constitution. Extending for five weeks, weekly<lb />programs of lecture and discussion on contem-<lb />porary and historical issues opened and closed<lb />with historical dramatizations. These events<lb />broke all past attendance records for a library<lb />program series. Official auditorium seating capa-<lb />city is 150 persons. October 1986 audiences<lb />ranged from 150 to 250, with countless other citi-<lb />zens aware of these events.<lb /><lb />Openness to new ideas and cooperation with<lb />our colleagues and with friends outside the<lb />library profession marked the beginnings of the<lb />1986 program series. Above all, we wanted the<lb />library to make a mark in the community. We<lb />proceeded with the freedom to explore new<lb />alliances and try for significant results.<lb /><lb />Early in 1985, we began to explore a program<lb />at the library dealing with issues of church and<lb />state. We received materials and advice from<lb />Diane Sasson, who was coordinating the oNorth<lb />Carolina Dialogue on Church, State, and the First<lb />Amendment� at the University of North Carolina<lb />at Chapel Hill. We felt the library could make an<lb />uncommon addition with a program outside the<lb />university.<lb /><lb />Before we began to organize our church-state<lb />thinking into a definite library program, Dr. How-<lb />ard Barnes, a history professor at Winston-Salem<lb />State, came by one day to ask, oWould you con-<lb />sider a cooperative program on the Constitution,<lb />to be held at the public library?� The idea<lb />appealed to us instantly, and church-state issues<lb />later became a significant component of the fall<lb />1986 project.<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "181<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0062" />
        <p>Wanting our programs to have as diverse and<lb />as large an audience as possible, we knew that<lb />having other organizations invest in the project<lb />would be good for its success. Therefore, we con-<lb />vened a community-wide planning committee.<lb />Individuals representing the League of Women<lb />Voters, the N.C. School of the Arts, Salem College,<lb />Wake Forest University, the Winston-Salem Jour-<lb />nal, Winston-Salem State University, and Con-<lb />gressman Steve Neal's office came together with<lb />us to create a program series. Later outreach into<lb />the community for all manner of program sup-<lb />port built on that initial coalition.<lb /><lb />In the publicity for our series, we constantly<lb />emphasized that we would cover issues that<lb />touched peopleTs lives. We covered North Caro-<lb />linaTs delayed ratification of the Constitution,<lb />including concern for state and individual rights;<lb />attempts to change the Constitution, including<lb />the politicization of the personal abortion issue;<lb />the ConstitutionTs omission of blacks and women,<lb />including the drastic economic implications for<lb />all those left out; and American pride in religious<lb />diversity uncomfortably coexisting with the spe-<lb />cial status of the favored religion. In a dramatic<lb />close, we presented a personal view of the Con-<lb />stitutional era through the experience of elder<lb />statesman Benjamin Franklin. RespondentsT com-<lb />ments and audience questions turned each even-<lb />ing into a true public dialogue. Several programs<lb />had identifiable special-interest audiences. We<lb />chose subjects that covered the range of high<lb />interest Constitutional issues.<lb /><lb />Inviting individuals from our<lb />community to participate in<lb />library programs has been a<lb />choice course of action.<lb /><lb />Speakers and respondents represented the<lb />black community, the Catholic Church, our local<lb />elected officials, freelance writers, the judiciary,<lb />the newspaper media, and, of course, our local<lb />universities. Our Constitution project was local in<lb />the points of view expressed each evening as well<lb />as in its conception and planning. Unexpected<lb />talent that emerged from all parts of our county<lb />was indispensable to our program series.<lb /><lb />To make the project truly memorable for our<lb />audiences, the series opened and closed with<lb />dramatization. Major Joseph Winston, Revolu-<lb />tionary War hero for whom the town of Winston<lb />was named, and Dr. Benjamin Franklin were on<lb />stage in authentic dress. Winston, played by local<lb />veteran actor Jim Austin, changed his mind<lb /><lb />182"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />between the Hillsborough and Fayetteville con-<lb />ventions and decided to endorse the new federal<lb />Constitution. Franklin, played by School of the<lb />Arts Design and Production Dean John Snedon,<lb />commented broadly on the debate over the Con-<lb />stitution and the new world created by independ-<lb />ence. Local historian Sam Brownlee wrote the<lb />Winston dramatization; local teacher Julia<lb />Sneden prepared the Franklin vignette.<lb /><lb />In Forsyth County, which has one daily<lb />newspaper and many special interest groups<lb />competing for public attention, publicity is a chal-<lb />lenge. Publication for the 1986 project, as with all<lb />further Bicentennial programs, was done with the<lb />personal touch. Unofficial channels turned out to<lb />be as important as the major media. The library<lb />staff directed a barrage of publicity. There is<lb />never too much publicity.<lb /><lb />Newspaper coverage included standard calen-<lb />dar and press releases, a Sunday front page piece<lb />on Ben Franklin, editorials, and day of the event<lb />reporting in the weekly newspapers, including the<lb />influential black weekly. Radio provided public<lb />service announcements and key 5 P.M. reminder<lb />announcements, featuring a program participant<lb />or the librarian, on program evenings.<lb /><lb />Announcements were made at meetings of<lb />the Daughters of the American Revolution, the<lb />League of Women Voters, the Bar Association,<lb />and a number of civic groups, including Rotary<lb />and Kiwanis. When these organizations had news-<lb />letters, they also published the announcement.<lb />Many of our churches promoted the church-state<lb />program.<lb /><lb />The newspapers, the radio, and the leader-<lb />ship of community organizations established<lb />decidedly friendly contacts that conveyed the<lb />community importance of the events. They were<lb />part of the team making the program.<lb /><lb />This Constitution programming came at a<lb />time when we had just attended American<lb />Library Association programs on marketing and<lb />the library's graphic image. That experience gave<lb />us a great boost in seeking out the director of our<lb />hometown Sawtooth Center for Visual Design for<lb />consultation. Our Design Director led us by the<lb />hand through the execution of a brochure that<lb />incorporated the Old Salem coffeepot and the<lb />Liberty Bell, and photography from the newly ac-<lb />quired Frank Jones collection. Photographs sug-<lb />gested the content of each program. The result<lb />was excellent, much better than previous graphic<lb />efforts. In addition to announcing the details of<lb />the upcoming series and the statement of library<lb />purpose, we chose to devote space to the Wake<lb />Forest University Tocqueville lectures on the Con-<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0063" />
        <p>stitution, to be held soon after the library pro-<lb />grams.<lb /><lb />It happened that library programs for the<lb />general public preceded WFUTs more academic<lb />programming on the Constitution. (Wake Forest<lb />was well represented in the planning of our ser-<lb />ies.) The library and the University efforts com-<lb />plemented each other, and our colleagues at Wake<lb />Forest judged our use of the Tocqueville Forum<lb />mailing list, for well-targeted publicity, most<lb />appropriate.<lb /><lb />Community participation even on small de-<lb />tails makes us nostalgic as we look back. Mapping<lb />Dr. FranklinTs dramatic entrance, finding Major<lb />WinstonTs shoes, and the last minute brilliant<lb />replacement for an absent clergy respondent, all<lb />were communal accomplishments.<lb /><lb />Our efforts to secure funding brought us one<lb />grant from the North Carolina Humanities Coun-<lb />cil, and another from the Winston-Salem Founda-<lb />tion for substantial additions to the library's<lb />collection of Constitution-related materials.<lb /><lb />Planning meetings, voluminous correspon-<lb />dence and telephone calls made for us a new<lb />niche in the minds of the community. Gradually,<lb />our public came less to expect the librarianTs call<lb />to be about an overdue book.<lb /><lb />Convening of County Committee<lb /><lb />The October 1986 series brought our library a<lb />completely unexpected community role. The N.C.<lb />Commission on the Bicentennial had taken note<lb />of our efforts, even as we planned, and turned to<lb />the library to convene the new Forsyth Commit-<lb />tee. The library staff built upon its strong plan-<lb />ning committee assembled for the 1986 project<lb />and on instincts, developed from years of refer-<lb />ence conversations, for trying to make everyone a<lb />friend of the library. We attempted to identify all<lb />those individuals and groups in the community<lb />whose talents and interests would strengthen<lb />ForsythTs Constitution effort. Widespread con-<lb />tacts were infused with an extra dose of credibil-<lb />ity by virtue of the librarys completed Con-<lb />stitution series.<lb /><lb />Dr. Jack Noffsinger, then Pastor of Knollwood<lb />Baptist Church and long-time civil rights advo-<lb />cate in Forsyth County, agreed to serve as chair-<lb />man. On February 5, 1987, the new committee<lb />was convened at the library. On April 13, 1987,<lb />the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners rec-<lb />ognized the committee as its official designee for<lb />the Bicentennial; subsequently, both the state and<lb />federal commissions recognized the county com-<lb />mittee.<lb /><lb />sit 4<lb /><lb />Local actor John Sneden played Benjamin Franklin in the For-<lb />syth County Fall 1986 program series celebrating the Constitu-<lb />tion.<lb /><lb />To date, the library has organized and hosted<lb />Constitution Committee meetings and co-spon-<lb />sored with that committee further Constitution-<lb />related programs. In April 1987, Wallace Carroll,<lb />former editor and publisher of the Winston-Salem<lb />Journal and Sentinel and foreign policy advisor<lb />to the President and State Department during the<lb />Cold War, delivered an address, oOur Constitu-<lb />tional Heritage; Guide to a Sane Foreign Policy.�<lb />The text of CarrollTs address was later published<lb />in the Winston-Salem Journal, the Richmond<lb />Times-Dispatch, and the American Thought<lb />Leader.<lb /><lb />Most recently, Sam Ervin, III, U.S. Court of<lb />Appeals Judge and son of the late Senator Sam<lb />Ervin, Jr., visited Forsyth County to dedicate the<lb />Kate B. Reynolds Oak at Tanglewood Park as the<lb />StateTs first Bicentennial tree and to spend an<lb />oEvening on the Constitution with the People� at<lb />the public library.<lb /><lb />Magna Carta<lb />When the Forsyth County Committee was<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 183<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0064" />
        <p>asked by the U.S. Constitution Council and the<lb />N.C. Bicentennial Commission to host the Win-<lb />ston-Salem stop of the American Express/Magna<lb />Carta tour, it turned to the library for sponsor-<lb />ship and assistance.<lb /><lb />We recognized the magnitude of the event<lb />and invited Old~Salem to serve as the site and to<lb />co-sponsor the outdoor exhibit. The event re-<lb />quired coordinating efforts with Old Salem, Salem<lb />Congregation, local government officials, and a<lb />vast network of organizations and individuals.<lb /><lb />On avery hot August 18, 1987, Salem Square<lb />was packed with thousands for the magnificent<lb />Magna Carta opening ceremonies, which featured<lb />the Army Signal Corps Band, the City Police Color<lb />Guard, dignitaries, and children in Moravian cos-<lb />tume. Remarks by Judge Sam Ervin, who was<lb />then making the first of his two Bicentennial visits<lb />to our county, preceded the Magna Carta ribbon<lb />cutting and a picnic lunch on the Square. The free<lb />admission tickets for the day-long exhibit were<lb />gone even before the opening ceremonies com-<lb />menced.<lb /><lb />In the planning of the Magna Carta event,<lb />meetings and calls to our colleagues in county<lb />and city government were frequent. The govern-<lb />ment contributions as well as contributions from<lb />organizations such as the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco<lb />Company, the English Speaking Union, the Cham-<lb />ber of Commerce and the Girl Scouts were signifi-<lb />cant. Vital, though, was the libraryTs ability to<lb />converge these many entities and act as our<lb />intermediary. With the library and Old Salem at<lb />the center, the cooperative undertaking reflected<lb />the genuine community spirit.<lb /><lb />Public Forum with Our Congressman"TodayTs<lb />Constitution: Loyal or Disloyal to Its Beginnings<lb /><lb />Several of the events especially demonstrated<lb />principles of community relations we learned dur-<lb />ing the 1986 project. On September 16, 1987, the<lb />evening before the Bicentennial of the Constitu-<lb />tionTs signing, Congressman Steve Neal met with<lb />community leaders at the library in a round table<lb />discussion on contemporary issues. Respondents<lb />included a Wake Forest politics professor, a city<lb />alderman, an attorney with judicial experience<lb />and a conservative constitutional perspective,<lb />and a prominent black leader. Each one had his<lb />following; each spoke from a decidedly different<lb />community vantage point.<lb /><lb />Inviting individuals from our own community<lb />to participate in library programs has been a<lb />choice course of action. There is greater likelihood<lb />the library will be successful in finding the right<lb /><lb />184" Fall 1988<lb /><lb />community person to accept its invitation and a<lb />better possibility of producing a larger audience.<lb />Prominent individuals draw their friends and<lb />backers and often these individuals gain from<lb />new exchanges across political, intellectual, and<lb />institutional lines. These public programs on the<lb />Constitution have brought our speakers, re-<lb />spondents, and planning partners closer to their<lb />library and to the countyTs quarter million resi-<lb />dents.<lb /><lb />Local university faculty appreciated invita-<lb />tions to participate and to bring their knowledge<lb />to out-of-school adults. Lay presenters brought<lb />their own fresh insights and life experiences. We<lb />have attempted in almost all of our Constitution-<lb />related efforts to include presenters from both<lb />the academic and non-academic sectors to con-<lb />vey the real-life content and ogeneral audience�<lb />quality of our programs.<lb /><lb />Congressman NealTs forum was an occasion<lb />for typical community support. Our locally-based<lb />Piedmont Airlines actually delayed the evening<lb />flight from Washington, D.C. for a few minutes so<lb />that our Congressman could meet his public<lb />library commitment after a day of critical House<lb />votes. The community-centered publicity was,<lb />again, effective. Our public radio station featured<lb />a lengthy interview with two panel members, the<lb />politics professor and the alderman, on the Sat-<lb />urday morning (a peak listening time) before the<lb />event. Our community, though large, has enough<lb />small-town qualities to ensure that interviewers<lb />will receive fan phone calls from our public soon<lb />after the broadcast. Our black newspaper fea-<lb />tured a front-page advance story on the event,<lb />which focused on the black participantTs strong<lb />views.<lb /><lb />The role of Winston-SalemTs weekly black<lb />newspaper raises a significant issue for library<lb />program planners. Black participation in the<lb />Bicentennial commemoration of the Constitution<lb />has been low at the national and state levels. Yet<lb />in Forsyth County where blacks make up twenty-<lb />six percent of the population, the library and<lb />later the Forsyth Bicentennial Committee aimed<lb />at fully integrated citizen support, and in fact<lb />achieved a good degree of success. In retrospect,<lb />we were most effective in solving this issue by<lb />incorperating the minority point of view into our<lb />fall 1986 program on blacks and women. oThose<lb />Left Out� featured a widely respected black<lb />Superior Court Judge expressing his profound<lb />disappointment with the limitations of the Con-<lb />stitution. Again in the Congressman Neal pro-<lb />gram, the black respondent rejected any sug-<lb />gestion that the ConstitutionTs framers intended<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0065" />
        <p>unity. Private conversations with black commun-<lb />ity colleagues bore out our belief that the asser-<lb />tion of a oblack point of view� in an integrated<lb />setting gave to that view more universal persua-<lb />siveness than would have been achieved in an all-<lb />black setting. And participation by black Forsyth<lb />residents ensured a more diverse and reflective<lb />discussion of the ConstitutionTs impact two<lb />hundred years ago and today.<lb /><lb />A Historical Dramatization"Major Joseph Win-<lb />ston and the New Federal Constitution: Novem-<lb />ber 3, 1787.<lb /><lb />Our events built upon each other. The brief<lb />Joseph Winston monologue that opened the<lb />October 1986 Constitution series was so well<lb />received that we produced at our library a fuller<lb />dramatization.<lb /><lb />The drama, oMajor Joseph Winston and the<lb />New Federal Constitution: November 3, 1787,�<lb />was presented at our library on Election Night,<lb />November 3, 1987. We saw reenacted, with cos-<lb />tumed cast, a public meeting actually called by<lb />Revolutionary War hero and state assemblyman<lb />Joseph Winston to air views over the new federal<lb />Constitution. Several current Forsyth residents<lb />created colorful and contentious characters for<lb />the town meeting. The production covered timeless<lb />Constitutional issues, with an accent on local his-<lb />tory.<lb />The entire effort, the public event of the even-<lb />ing and the work before and after November 3,<lb />made a beautiful showcase for what the library<lb />stands for in the community. The production<lb />opened with the usual warm library welcome,<lb />which emphasized that our library was a place to<lb />talk about books and ideas and a place for further<lb />direction from the reference staff. We provided<lb />bibliographies of the best books on the Constitu-<lb />tion available at the library. This was followed by<lb />the dramatic presentation. Following the drama,<lb />the audience was uninhibited in its questioning.<lb />The evening ended with a reception given by the<lb />Col. Joseph Winston Chapter of the DAR. DAR<lb />support of our Constitution programs has been<lb />unfailing. In the midst of the reception, the<lb />Library Director was able to report on the suc-<lb />cessful library bond vote of that day. The produc-<lb />tion was judged of such value that we arranged<lb />for a two-camera videotaping, several months<lb />later, of a second performance before a live<lb />audience.<lb /><lb />A Future Project for Forsyth and Guilford Coun-<lb />ties<lb /><lb />Neighboring Guilford County became aware<lb /><lb />of ForsythTs successful Bicentennial efforts and,<lb />through one of its county commissioners, con-<lb />tacted the library to review our programs and<lb />methods and to explore the possibility of a joint<lb />effort. A Triad (Greensboro, High Point, Winston-<lb />Salem) Bicentennial Committee has formed to<lb />plan a major event to be held in November 1989,<lb />on the anniversary of North CarolinaTs ratification<lb />of the Constitution. Our library is taking a major<lb />role in developing this event.<lb /><lb />Our Bicentennial project has taught us<lb />approaches that we will turn to again and again.<lb />We have learned to avoid preset formulas, and to<lb />stay flexible and open to the content and<lb />methods that will bring us the most project suc-<lb />cess in the eyes of our community. The content of<lb />our five-part 1986 project was outlined gradually,<lb />with a sense of group purpose that carried us<lb />along. Contemporary Constitutional crises, for<lb />instance, with judicial appointments; church-<lb />state conflicts; minority rights"all these were<lb />readily identifiable and had their audiences in our<lb />community. Speakers and respondents again<lb />were chosen with program success in mind; we<lb />wanted the range of presenters to represent the<lb />diversity of Forsyth County. When we convened<lb />the county committee or when we sought assist-<lb />ance with program details, we assumed we were<lb />paving the way for further contacts.<lb /><lb />We learned to include elements that would be<lb />considered exciting by our community at large. In<lb />the case of our Constitution project, dramatiza-<lb />tion brought to life personalities that shaped our<lb />history and encouraged the audience to imagine<lb />what it was like in the 1780s. We emphasized<lb />audience discussion, sometimes a concluding<lb />reception, and the assortment of personalities on<lb />stage. We could always say ahead of the event<lb />that this would not be a dry academic lecture.<lb /><lb />We would always aim to appeal to all seg-<lb />ments of the community. Reaching out at the<lb />start to make selected library patrons our plan-<lb />ning colleagues has helped us to succeed.<lb />Through this approach, a greater number of indi-<lb />viduals gain a stake in our success. We always<lb />seek out the opportunity to display our new<lb />alliances publicly. The community recognizes the<lb />non-librarian colleagues and sometimes has<lb />greater trust in the worth of the project.<lb /><lb />One of the successes of the 1986 project was<lb />the diversity of citizenry who supported us. Our<lb />neighboring universities could never boast such a<lb />mix of citizenry at their programs, nor could the<lb />League of Women Voters, the Black Kiwanis Club,<lb />the DAR, or the Bar Association. Unlike the<lb />library, these organizations cater to specific con-<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "185<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0066" />
        <p>stituencies. The public library, our community's<lb />neutral ground, has the leading edge.<lb /><lb />The ConstitutionTs Bicentennial has been a<lb />powerful vehicle for communicating the library's<lb />mission to the community. Because of our work<lb />with the Constitution, our library has been<lb />instrumental in bringing people together in For-<lb />syth County. Our public programs have consider-<lb />ably raised our visibility as the peopleTs university.<lb />The ConstitutionTs Bicentennial has given us the<lb />opportunity to take the initiative in our commun-<lb />ity. The community now looks to the public library<lb />for civic leadership and responsibility as well as<lb />for outstanding programs that teach and delight.<lb />As we have brought our public to the library for<lb />our Bicentennial Series and enticed them to<lb />return for our everyday library services, we have<lb />persuaded them that their library is an impor-<lb />tant, concerned institution, worthy of their trust<lb />and support.<lb /><lb />EditorTs Note: Barbara Anderson has coordinated the Forsyth<lb />County Public LibraryTs Bicentennial efforts and has received<lb />the Council for the Advancement of CitizenshipTs Award for<lb />Outstanding Contribution to the Commemoration of the Bicen-<lb />tennial.<lb /><lb />SELA Conference Announced<lb /><lb />Catch oThe Creative Spirit� at the SELA/VLA<lb />annual conference in Norfolk, Virginia, October<lb />26-29, 1988.<lb /><lb />oThe Creative Spirit: Writers, Words and<lb />Readers� will emphasize books and authors<lb />throughout the conference. Rita Mae Brown<lb />(Rubyfruit Jungle, High Hearts), Pat Conroy (The<lb />Prince of Tides, The Lords of Discipline), and<lb />Clyde Edgerton (Raney, Walking Across Egypt),<lb />accomplished at the spoken as well as the written<lb />word, will appear as conference speakers.<lb /><lb />Preconferences will be held October 25-26.<lb />Preconference topics include telefacsimile, inter-<lb />viewing, the public library planning process, and<lb />organizational impact of integrated library sys-<lb />tems.<lb /><lb />The conference committee is planning tours<lb />of area attractions and libraries to give you a<lb />complete picture of Virginia hospitality. A special<lb />conference poster and t-shirt will be available for<lb />sale.<lb /><lb />For information on conference programs,<lb />contact Patricia Thomas, Tidewater Community<lb />College/Chesapeake Campus Library, 1428 Cedar<lb />Road, Chesapeake, VA 23320. For other confer-<lb />ence information, contact Harriet Henderson,<lb />Newport News Public Library System, 2400<lb />Washington Avenue, Newport News, VA 23607.<lb /><lb />186"Fall 1988<lb /><lb /> eee ipa Sa<lb />oon, ON Ss ats<lb /><lb />a<lb /><lb />Putra ser eR CH TEBLASTVIMINRAAAania ewes)<lb />Oo MOM TT<lb /><lb />ACTA CATA<lb />CTT AN<lb /><lb />TATOO ON<lb /><lb />TOA<lb /><lb />TTI<lb /><lb />ATT<lb />| ly<lb /><lb />in<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />go for it!<lb />use your library<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0067" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />Robert Anthony, Compiler<lb /><lb />Ron Morris, with John Feinstein, Barry Jacobs,<lb />and Dick Herbert. ACC Basketball: An Illus-<lb />trated History. Chapel Hill: Four Corners Press<lb />(P.0. Box 793, 27514), 1988. 320 pp. $39.95. ISBN<lb />0-9609548-9-9.<lb /><lb />ACC Basketball is a lavishly produced,<lb />extensively researched, and generally well-writ-<lb />ten, straightforward account of Atlantic Coast<lb />Conference basketball from the founding of the<lb />conference in 1953 through the 1988 Final Four.<lb />As the title suggests, the book relies heavily and<lb />effectively on photographs, many in color, mostly<lb />taken from the files of local newspapers or uni-<lb />versity sports information departments. It also<lb />has, however, a strong narrative component.<lb />Morris provides a vivid year by year running<lb />account of the leagueTs history, augmented by<lb />sidebars on selected coaches and players. Several<lb />of the sections are written by guest contributors<lb />Feinstein, Jacobs, and Herbert, all authorities on<lb />college basketball. Despite the dominance of the<lb />league by North Carolina teams, Morris is scrupu-<lb />lously evenhanded, devoting roughly equal cover-<lb />age to the non-North Carolina ACC teams. He also<lb />adds a comprehensive statistical appendix and<lb />an index of names.<lb /><lb />Morris is a journalist by trade. He writes a<lb />popular, non-academic history on which the out-<lb />side world of student protests, Civil Rights, and<lb />Vietnam intrudes only lightly. His history is<lb />apparently sculpted largely from contemporary<lb />newspaper accounts, supplemented with recent<lb />interviews. Morris uses quotations often but,<lb />inasmuch as the book contains no bibliographical<lb />information, it is not always clear when and<lb />where the quotations originate. Although focus-<lb />ing on the ACCTs outstanding teams, players, and<lb />coaches, Morris, to his credit, does not avoid the<lb />unsavory aspects of the leagueTs history. Point<lb />shaving, recruiting violations, fights, and racial<lb />segregation are all covered in some detail.<lb /><lb />There are several ways ACC Basketball<lb />could have been improved. The most glaring<lb />deficit is the absence of any discussion of womenTs<lb />basketball in the ACC. Surely Kay Yow deserves at<lb />least a mention. Less serious is the handful of<lb /><lb />typographical and factual errors that was allowed<lb />to slip through. For example, Morris refers to a<lb />non-existent 1954 Civil Rights Act (p.108); places<lb />Vic Bubas at Duke in 1958 (p.55); and garbles the<lb />narrative of UNC's famous 1974 comeback against<lb />Duke (p.175). Nonetheless, considering the scope<lb />of MorrisTs task, the bookTs errors are few in<lb />number and minor in impact. Within the given<lb />parameters, the authors have done a consider-<lb />able amount of work and produced a virtually<lb />authoritative account of a popular subject. It is<lb />suitable for public and school libraries and is not<lb />likely to gather dust at either.<lb /><lb />Jim L. Sumner, North Carolina Division of Archives and His-<lb />tory<lb /><lb />William C. Harris. William Woods Holden: Fire-<lb />brand of North Carolina Politics. Baton Rouge:<lb />Louisiana State University Press, 1987. 332 pp.<lb />$35.00. ISBN 0-8071-1325-5.<lb /><lb />William Woods Holden is one of the great rid-<lb />dles of North Carolina politics, and William Har-<lb />ris, professor of history at North Carolina State<lb />University, has taken up the task of solving that<lb />riddle"or at least reducing it to manageable size.<lb /><lb />HoldenTs political career was remarkable<lb />even by the standards of nineteenth-century<lb />American politics. Apprenticed to a printer at the<lb />age of nine or ten, Holden learned not only print-<lb />ing but journalism as well. He first came to public<lb />attention in the 1830Ts writing for the Raleigh<lb />Star, a newspaper affiliated with the Whig party<lb />which then dominated politics in North Carolina.<lb />He soon made the first of many leaps in his career,<lb />purchasing the North Carolina Standard and<lb />embracing the Democratic party whose interests<lb />the Standard supported. As editor of the Stan-<lb />dard, Holden displayed impressive gifts for politi-<lb />cal invective and maneuver as well as sound skills<lb />in newspaper management. Through the paper he<lb />made himself one of the most prominent voices of<lb />the Democratic party in the State and gained<lb />recognition far outside of North Carolina. He was<lb />narrowly defeated for the Democratic nomination<lb />for governor in 1858.<lb /><lb />Fall 1988" 187<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0068" />
        <p>North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />The stress of Civil War and Reconstruction<lb />produced amazing twists in HoldenTs political life.<lb />In the late 1850s he championed Southern rights,<lb />but insisted that such rights could best be secured<lb />within the Union. Initially he drew back from<lb />secession, but ended up supporting North Caro-<lb />linaTs break with the United States. With the com-<lb />ing of war, Holden professed his loyalty to the<lb />Southern cause, but almost immediately began<lb />organizing dissidents"many of whom were for-<lb />mer Whigs"into a faction in opposition to the<lb />secessionist Democrats who controlled the state.<lb />By 1862 this faction had become the Conservative<lb />party whose candidate, Zebulon Baird Vance, won<lb />election as governor. Holden steadily moved<lb />further into opposition to the Confederacy until<lb />by 1863 he had helped organize a peace move-<lb />ment which launched him unsuccessfully for the<lb />governorship in 1864. At the end of the war, Pres-<lb />ident Andrew Johnson appointed Holden provi-<lb />sional governor of North Carolina, charged with<lb />carrying out the president's fairly mild form of<lb />Reconstruction. Later Holden repudiated John-<lb />son, embraced the Congressional plan of Recon-<lb />struction, helped organize the Republican party<lb />in North Carolina, and was elected Republican<lb />governor in 1868. As governor he worked to<lb />secure the fledgling Republican party and took<lb />active measures to suppress the Ku Klux Klan<lb />which was, for all practical purposes, the terrorist<lb />arm of the old Democrats. After the oredemption�<lb />of North Carolina by conservative Democrats in<lb />1870, Holden was impeached, removed from<lb />office, and driven briefly from the state. He later<lb />returned to his home in Raleigh where he died in<lb />1892.<lb /><lb />As Harris points out, this important figure in<lb />North Carolina politics has never received proper<lb />historical consideration. Generations of North<lb />Carolinians, including more than one professional<lb />historian, stereotyped Holden as the apostate<lb />scalawag whose talents, twisted by overweening<lb />ambition, brought calamity on his state. The revi-<lb />sion of Reconstruction history during the last<lb />quarter century has produced studies kinder to<lb />Holden, and recently sympathetic biographies<lb />have appeared by Edgar E. Folk and Horace W.<lb />Raper. Harris is the first, however, to deal with<lb />HoldenTs career in its entirety. While he is alert to<lb />HoldenTs failings, Harris is careful to set HoldenTs<lb />public life in the context of the hyperbole and<lb />overheated controversy which was as natural to<lb />American politics of the mid-nineteenth century<lb />as it is foreign today. Above all, Harris is fair to<lb />Holden, giving thoughtful and serious considera-<lb />tion to HoldenTs explanations for his actions. Har-<lb /><lb />188 " Fall 1988<lb /><lb />ris rejects class consciousness as an overall<lb />explanation for HoldenTs behaviour and gives<lb />equally short shrift to the notion that Holden<lb />sought success to compensate for his illegitimate<lb />birth. For all his careful detailing of HoldenTs<lb />career, however, Harris is unable to close with the<lb />essential William Holden, probably because Holden<lb />left so little behind that would reveal his inner<lb />self. Harris has thus laid before us the riddle of<lb />William Holden with accuracy, thoroughness, and<lb />balance, leaving all those interested in American<lb />political history to speculate on the force or com-<lb />bination of forces that drove this fascinating<lb />North Carolinian.<lb /><lb />Harry McKown, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />Peggy Payne. Revelation. New York: Simon and<lb />Schuster, 1988. 314 pp. $18.95. ISBN 0-671-65252-<lb />4.<lb /><lb />What is a man to do when he gets what he<lb />asks for but not exactly what he thinks he wants?<lb />This question summarizes the dilemma of Swain<lb />Hammond, the intellectual and reserved pastor of<lb />a liberal Presbyterian congregation in Chapel Hill.<lb />After years of earnestly seeking some sign of GodTs<lb />visible presence in the world, Swain actually hears<lb />the voice of God. When he decides to share his<lb />revelation with his flock, a year of troubles"but<lb />also one of spiritual growth"begins.<lb /><lb />After years of free-lance writing for news-<lb />papers and magazines, Wilmington native and<lb />Duke University graduate Peggy Payne has crafted<lb />a remarkable first novel. The novelTs sense of place<lb />is strong, and the plot is well developed. One<lb />scene flows easily into the next, and the pacing is<lb />appropriate. Exceptional care has been taken to<lb />develop the large cast of characters inhabiting<lb />Revelation. While the story is told primarily from<lb />SwainTs point of view, the reader does receive cru-<lb />cial pieces of information from other characters<lb />as well.<lb /><lb />Like all good novels, Revelation operates on<lb />several different levels. It tells the story of a per-<lb />sonTs struggle for faith given a world of doubts. It<lb />tells the story of a childTs valiant battle to cope<lb />with the results of a freak accident which leaves<lb />him blind in both eyes. It tells the story of mar-<lb />riages beset by stress and midlife crisis. It tells the<lb />story of a churchTs struggle to understand and<lb />finally to minister to the one it had chosen to be<lb />its minister.<lb /><lb />The world Peggy Payne has drawn for us is<lb />filled with love and hate, pain and joy, sin and<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0069" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />redemption. Swain Hammond begins this book as<lb />someone who became a preacher onot because of<lb />any belief he could actually pin down,� but<lb />because of the desire for othere to be more to life<lb />than he himself had seen or felt so far"some-<lb />thing to ease his chronic vague dissatisfaction,<lb />something to subdue the irritation which he had<lb />always reined in.� When the book concludes,<lb />Swain has confronted and dealt with many of his<lb />personal demons. He has forgiven his parents, his<lb />wife, his congregation, and God for not being<lb />exactly as he would have them be. Swain has<lb />accepted himself and begun to experience joy.<lb /><lb />Revelation is a moving, thoughtful novel<lb />appropriate for adult fiction collections in any<lb />type of library. Ms. Payne has a considerable<lb />talent. I look forward to her future novels.<lb /><lb />Nancy Massey, Hyconeechee Regional Library<lb /><lb />® Alexander R. Stoesen. Guilford College: On the<lb />Strength of 150 Years. Greensboro: The Board of<lb />Trustees, Guilford College, 1987. 148 pp. $35.00.<lb />No ISBN. [May be ordered from Guilford College,<lb />College Relations Office, 5800 W. Friendly Avenue,<lb />Greensboro,N.C. 27410]<lb /><lb />Practicality, usefulness, and balance in all are<lb />among those virtues in the Quaker tradition used<lb />by Stoesen in describing Guilford College, which<lb />was established in 1888 and evolved from the New<lb />Garden Boarding School founded in 1837. While<lb />this book is written in celebration of the sesqui-<lb />centennial anniversary of the educational institu-<lb />tion, the emphasis is on the one hundred-year<lb />history of the college.It brings up-to-date an ear-<lb />lier history by Dorothy Gilbert Thorne, Guilford:<lb />A Quaker College, which highlighted the institu-<lb />tionTs centennial anniversary in 1937. Stoesen dis-<lb />cusses the relationship between the Quaker<lb />school and the Society of Friends throughout, as<lb />well as GuilfordTs ties to the Greensboro com-<lb />munity.<lb /><lb />The book is divided into sections based on the<lb />terms of office of the collegeTs presidents, such as<lb />oThe Years of Lewis Lyndon Hobbs� and oThe<lb />Years of Thomas Newlin.� A final page describes<lb />what Stoesen sees as the turning points in the<lb />collegeTs history. It would have been helpful had<lb />the span dates of each presidentTs term of office<lb />been given as part of the section titles. Instead,<lb />one sometimes has to read into the text to find<lb />the beginning and ending dates of a president's<lb />term.<lb /><lb />Each section is further broken down into top-<lb />ics that are then briefly discussed. Topics focus<lb /><lb />North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />primarily on people, issues, and publications that<lb />were of significance during that particular presi-<lb />dentTs tenure. They range in scope from the adop-<lb />tion of a core curriculum in 1928 to flagstone<lb />walks. The bookTs extensive index makes it possi-<lb />ble to find information about specific subjects<lb />quickly and easily. The book, however, does not<lb />include a bibliography; and, while it is implied, it<lb />could have been explained more clearly that the<lb />collegeTs Friends Historical Collection supplied<lb />substantial background material for the work.<lb /><lb />Guilford College is heavily illustrated with<lb />black-and-white photographs of people, the cam-<lb />pus, and memorabilia, the result being a book in<lb />the coffee-table tradition. The photographs would<lb />indicate a more benign history of the college than<lb />that which is actually presented in the text. The<lb />history is not only a recounting of the collegeTs<lb />good times, but also some of its troubled times.<lb />Efforts to modernize facilities, to increase the<lb />number of Ph.D.Ts on the faculty, to revise the cur-<lb />riculum, and to up-date fundraising endeavors<lb />are among the concerns delineated.<lb /><lb />Student life is described, including how stu-<lb />dents have celebrated various holidays such as<lb />May Day. Pride is taken in the fact that students<lb />of varying abilities and religious faiths are wel-<lb />comed at the school. The rise and demise of stu-<lb />dent debating societies and the relaxation of rules<lb />relating to studentsT dress and behavior during<lb />the 1960s serve to reflect the collegeTs history<lb />against society's concerns and interests.<lb /><lb />Stoesen states in the preface that his selec-<lb />tion of topics has been odesigned to capture as<lb />much as possible the essence of Guilford College's<lb />past while tying it to the present.� It is a charge<lb />that he has fulfilled very well. The book is recom-<lb />mended for North Carolina public and academic<lb />libraries, and especially for alumni of the college<lb />and for those students who think they might be<lb />interested in attending Guilford College. On the<lb />collegeTs history faculty since 1966, Stoesen is also<lb />the author of A Celebration of Guilford County<lb />Since 1890, Part Il of A History of Guilford<lb />County published in 1981.<lb /><lb />Janie Morris, Duke University Library<lb /><lb />© Marianne Gingher. Teen Angel, and Other<lb />Stories of Young Love. New York: Atheneum,<lb />1988. 209 pp. $17.95. ISBN 0-689-11967-4.<lb /><lb />Teen Angel is Greensboro writer Marianne<lb />GingherTs first publication after her novel Bobby<lb />RexTs Greatest Hit, which was named by the<lb />American Library Association as one of the Best<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 " 189<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0070" />
        <p>North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />Books for Young Adults for 1986. Like Bobby Rex,<lb />the ten stories that make up Teen Angel may be<lb />read and enjoyed by young adults, but their<lb />appeal is not limited to a younger audience. They<lb />are largely about the trials of young love in all its<lb />forms"love for boyfriends, teachers, present and<lb />absent parents, and even babies lost to the adop-<lb />tion agency. This collection will appeal to the<lb />memories and nostalgic feelings of aging baby<lb />boomers.<lb /><lb />Some of the strongest stories, the oTeen<lb />Angel� of the title, oWearing Glasses,� and oAurora<lb />Island,� deal with coming of age in the late 1950s<lb />and early 1960s. Gingher describes the world of<lb />teased hair, harlequin glasses, and Pure Oil Sta-<lb />tions without sentimentality. This may be wel-<lb />come to the young reader in particular, who may<lb />be familiar with this era only through films like<lb />Dirty Dancing. Through the focusing lens of the<lb />past, her characters experience crushes on the<lb />English teacher, the separation of parents, and<lb />the delicious mystery of exploring families unlike<lb />oneTs own"all the processes by which young men<lb />and women define for themselves a sense of self.<lb /><lb />The,stories set in the present, oThe Magic Cir-<lb />cle,� oThe Hummingbird Kimono,� andoToy Paris,�<lb />deal with the same themes"the difficulty of deal-<lb />ing with oneTs troubled parents and with families<lb />that seem to be crazy in general. For the most<lb />part, these stories lack the immediacy of the sto-<lb />ries set in the past. The exception is oCamouflage,�<lb />the story of a high school girl who has decided to<lb />give up her baby for adoption. Gingher describes a<lb />young womanTs love for the child she saw briefly,<lb />and how she searches for a way to replace the<lb />love she surrendered with love for her family and,<lb />failing that, for a dying and unwanted pet. It is<lb />one of the most moving stories in the group.<lb /><lb />Readers who enjoyed Bobby Rex will note<lb />that in oNo News,� Bobby RexTs younger brother<lb />Leon is allowed to tell his own story"his feelings<lb />after Bobby Rex has left home for the first time.<lb />The first story, oThe Kiss,� is the oddest and the<lb />weakest. It has a fairy tale-like unreality com-<lb />pared with the realism.of the other stories. Teen<lb />Angel would be an appropriate selection for<lb />either a young adult or a general fiction collec-<lb />tion.<lb /><lb />Roberta Engleman, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />~William L. Carpenter and Dean W. Colvard.<lb />Knowledge Is Power: A History of the School of<lb />Agriculture and Life Sciences at North Caro-<lb />lina State University, 1877-1984. Raleigh: North<lb />Carolina State University, 1987. 527 pp. $16.00. No<lb /><lb />190"Fall 1988<lb /><lb />ISBN. [Order from Agricultural Communications,<lb />Campus Box 7603, North Carolina State Univer-<lb />sity, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7603. }<lb /><lb />In GulliverTs Travels, Jonathan Swift wrote<lb />that the man who doubled the yield for grain and<lb />grass was more useful than othe whole race of<lb />politicians.� Knowledge is Power is the story of<lb />one institution"the School of Agriculture and<lb />Life Sciences at North Carolina State University"<lb />that has done much more in little over a century<lb />than even Swift could have envisioned.<lb /><lb />Carpenter, a member of the Department of<lb />Communication at NCSU for over thirty years,<lb />and Colvard, head of the Department of Animal<lb />Science and dean of the School of Agriculture at<lb />NCSU, are personally familiar with the key per-<lb />sonalities and development of the school's story.<lb />In addition, Colvard, as president of Mississippi<lb />State University and chancellor of the University<lb />of North Carolina at Charlotte, has had firsthand<lb />experience in how state institutions of higher<lb />education operate.<lb /><lb />Knowledge is Power has four sections: the<lb />founding, the maturing, the blossoming, and the<lb />projected future of the school. The first two sec-<lb />tions, covering the period from the 1870s through<lb />World War II, speak of the origins, development,<lb />and consolidation of the three agencies that even-<lb />tually formed the school"the agricultural exper-<lb />imental station, the department of agriculture at<lb />NCSU, and the agricultural extension service. It is<lb />a story of fits and starts caused by the force of<lb />events within and outside the agencies.<lb /><lb />The last two sections, extending from 1945 to<lb />1985, tell of the triumphs and the promise of the<lb />institution. After an account of the leadership's<lb />development after the Second World War, the<lb />book follows with a topical account of the major<lb />areas of contribution in this period. The cumula-<lb />tive effect was the transformation of the school<lb />into a modern research, teaching, and extension<lb />facility that aided the agricultural revolution in<lb />North Carolina.<lb /><lb />The authors, personally familiar with many<lb />sources at NCSU, relied upon tape-recorded inter-<lb />views with sixty-four longtime leaders of the<lb />school as well. The book also contains over 135<lb />black-and-white photographs, a complete index,<lb />and a guide to sources. The last is incomplete, but<lb />the chapter notes provide access to an extensive<lb />bibliography.<lb /><lb />Knowledge Is Power is a comprehensive and<lb />thorough history of the School of Agriculture and<lb />Life Sciences at NCSU. Since it focuses on a nar-<lb />row base, it has limited use as a reference book in<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0071" />
        <p>academic and public libraries. It could, however,<lb />make a fine contribution to collections on North<lb />Carolina agriculture and higher education in the<lb />general collection.<lb /><lb />James Rogerson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte<lb /><lb />Reynolds Price. Good Hearts. New York: Athe-<lb />neum, 1988. 275 pp. $18.95. ISBN 0-689-11973-9.<lb /><lb />The main characters in Reynolds PriceTs novel<lb />Good Hearts are Rosacoke and Wesley Beavers,<lb />whom Price created in his first novel, A Long and<lb />Happy Life. That earlier novel, published in 1962,<lb />concerns their courtship and marriage. This<lb />latest book picks up when they have been married<lb />for twenty-eight years. Essentially, it deals with<lb />what happens to them when Wesley, at fifty, dis-<lb />covers that he is not destined for greatness. The<lb />novel describes Wesley's flight from home and<lb />RosaTs efforts to end her dependence on her hus-<lb />band and only love. Both of them are forced to<lb />confront their unfulfilled dreams.<lb /><lb />Three weeks after Wesley leaves without a<lb />word, Rosa is assaulted in her own house by a<lb />rapist. She retreats to her childhood home to re-<lb />cover. Meanwhile, Wesley has begun a relation-<lb />ship with a young woman in Nashville. The voice<lb />of the novel alternates between RosaTs diary<lb />(addressed to Wesley, if he should ever come<lb />back) and WesleyTs encounters and thoughts, and<lb />eventually incorporates the viewpoints of several<lb />other characters. These other people turn out to<lb />be far more surprising and interesting than the<lb />protagonists. RosaTs supposedly dimwitted<lb />younger brother, with the unlikely name of Rato,<lb />is a favorite. Another is a mind-reading waitress<lb />with pink hair and a sad story in a roadside diner<lb />outside of Asheville.<lb /><lb />The resolutions of RosaTs and WesleyTs crises<lb />are not particularly surprising or'satisfying, but<lb />there are some unexpected twists in the story as a<lb />whole. The interest in the story, for this reviewer,<lb />was mainly in the minor characters. Rosa and<lb />Wesley just were not convincing.<lb /><lb />PriceTs style is somewhat self-conscious. For<lb />example, he introduces ths book with a sort of<lb />prologue in which he tells the reader that Rosa<lb />and Wesiey have ohearts as good as any you've<lb />met.� But in the story that unfolds, they seem<lb />pretty ordinary. Maybe that is PriceTs point. And<lb />maybe that is why they are so unconvincing.<lb /><lb />Good Hearts is Reynolds PriceTs sixth novel.<lb />He has also written several volumes of stories, two<lb />books of poetry, a volume of essays, and a play.<lb />With his novel, Kate Vaiden, Price won the<lb /><lb />North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />National Book Critics Circle Award for best novel<lb />of 1986. He is a North Carolina native and a grad-<lb />uate of Duke University, where he has been teach-<lb />ing English since 1958.<lb /><lb />Those who like PriceTs fiction will certainly<lb />want to read Good Hearts, and fans of his first<lb />novel will be eager to see what he does with this<lb />sequel. His credentials as a North Carolinian and<lb />as a prize-winning author make this a necessary<lb />purchase for most libraries in the state.<lb /><lb />Elizabeth White, Asheville-Buncombe Library<lb /><lb />t Other Publications of Interest<lb /><lb />The ClimberTs Guide to North Carolina, by<lb />Thomas Kelley, is sure to please those adventure-<lb />some souls who scale mountains and cliffs for<lb />pleasure. This 257-page, paperbound book is not a<lb />manual for the beginner but a detailed guide to<lb />sites in the Tar Heel state for the experienced<lb />climber. oTopos� (essentially impressionistic climb-<lb />ing oroad maps�) are provided for the various<lb />sites. Symbols, numbers, and abbreviations indi-<lb />cate pitches, a subjective rating as to difficulty,<lb />estimated length of time to complete, and other<lb />site characteristics. For some sites, topos are<lb />supplemented by written descriptions and black-<lb />and-white photographs. (Earthbound Books, P.O.<lb />Box 3445, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27515-3445, $19.95, no<lb />ISBN, paper).<lb /><lb />Jf John F. Blair, Publisher, has reprinted The<lb /><lb />American Indian in North Carolina, by Douglas<lb />L. Rights, a work considered by many to be a clas-<lb />sic in North Carolina historiography. First pub-<lb />lished by Duke University Press in 1947 and<lb />reissued by Blair in 1957, but out-of-print for the<lb />past ten years, the book traces the history of<lb />Indian tribes in what is now North Carolina. Con-<lb />centrating on the period from initial contact with<lb />Europeans (with Spanish explorers led by Her-<lb />nando de Soto and English colonists attempting<lb />to settle Roanoke Island) through the forced<lb />removal of the Cherokee during the infamous<lb />oTrail of Tears,� Rights provides much information<lb />on Indian folklore, mythology, habit, and customs.<lb />The 298-page, indexed book also contains over a<lb />hundred black-and-white photographs of projec-<lb />tiles, utensils, archaeological sites, depictions of<lb />Indians, and maps. (John F. Blair, Publisher,<lb />$14.95, ISBN 0-89587-066-5, paper).<lb /><lb />Blair has also recently issued a revised and<lb />updated paperback edition of Island, Capes,<lb />and Sounds: The North Carolina Coast, by |<lb />Thomas J. Schoenbaum. (333 pp., $12.95, ISBN<lb />0-89587-059-2, paper). First published by Blair in<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"191<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0072" />
        <p>:<lb /><lb />North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />1982, the book is an entertaining account for the<lb />general reader of the history, geology, and ecology<lb />of the coastal region, combined with a thoughtful<lb />discussion of environmental issues. [For a full<lb />review, see North Carolina Libraries 40<lb />(1982):273-374. |<lb /><lb />Early maps and mapping are the subject of<lb />the latest publication sponsored by AmericaTs<lb />Four Hundredth Anniversary Committee. Map-<lb />ping the North Carolina Coast: Sixteenth-Cen-<lb />tury Cartography and the Roanoke Voyages, by<lb />William P. Cumming, is a detailed and extensively<lb />footnoted study of maps that were or may have<lb />been available to the planners of ill-fated English<lb />settlements during the 1580s on Roanoke Island.<lb />Cumming discusses how the inaccuracies and<lb />mistaken assumptions in contemporary maps<lb />misled these planners and the explorers and col-<lb />onists they sponsored to expect vastly different<lb /><lb />geographic conditions than those actually en-<lb />countered, with significant implications for the<lb />colonizing efforts. Maps described range from the<lb />earliest dated and surviving one of the New<lb />World, drawn in 1500 by Juan de la Cosa who<lb />accompanied Christopher Columbus on the lat-<lb />terTs second voyage in 1493-94 and who made<lb />three later voyages, to the more accurate maps of<lb />the North Carolina coast that resulted from<lb />knowledge gained during the Roanoke Island col-<lb />onizing attempts. Illustrations of twenty-eight<lb />maps or sections of maps are included in this<lb />scholarly but readable work. (Published for the<lb />Committee by Historical Publications Section,<lb />North Carolina Division of Archives and History,<lb />109 E. Jones Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27611, 143 pp.,<lb />$10.00 plus $1.50 postage and handling, ISBN 0-<lb />8652-232-2, paper). a<lb /><lb />C<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Book Week<lb /><lb />November 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb />Would<lb /><lb />you<lb />call<lb />Mother<lb />Goose<lb /><lb />a<lb />bigot?<lb /><lb />BANNED<lb />BOOKS<lb /><lb />WEEK<lb />SEPTEMBER 24-<lb />OCTOBER 1, 1988<lb /><lb />192" Fall 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0073" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />NCLA Minutes<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb />Minutes of the Executive Board<lb /><lb />April 8, 1988<lb />Barbara Anderson Patricia Langelier<lb />Barbara Baker Howard McGinn<lb />Doris Anne Bradley Gloria Miller<lb />Waltrene M. Canada Caroline Shepard<lb />Geneva Chavis Marti Smith<lb />Melanie Collins Carol Southerland<lb />Honorable Patric Dorsey Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin<lb />Patrice Ebert Jerry Thrasher<lb />David Fergusson Susan Turner<lb />Ray Frankle Jane Williams<lb />Janet Freeman Lauren Williams<lb />Irene P. Hairston Art Weeks<lb />Patsy Hansel Kieth Wright<lb />Susan Janney Maury York<lb /><lb />The Executive Board of the North Carolina Library Associa-<lb />tion was called to order by President Patsy Hansel at 9:30 a.m.,<lb />March 8, 1988. The above members were present in Room C-216<lb />of the Walker Physical Education Complex at North Carolina<lb />Central University. Dr. Benjamin Speller, host and Dean of the<lb />School of Library and Information Science, brought greetings.<lb /><lb />Minutes of the January 22, 1988 meeting were approved<lb />with no corrections.<lb /><lb />President Hansel reported for treasurer Nancy Fogarty. The<lb />public accountantTs audit report confirmed information pro-<lb />vided in the TreasurerTs Report covering January 1, 1987 -<lb />December 31, 1987.<lb /><lb />Proposals for special projects will be accepted for a portion<lb />of the profit from the 1987 NCLA Biennial Conference. In addi-<lb />tion, $20,000 will be used for the Charlotte conference. Barbara<lb />Baker noted that section chairs have identified contacts, and<lb />prospective speakers have been identified for the October 11-13,<lb />1989 conference in Charlotte.<lb /><lb />After the pros and cons of proposed sites were discussed, it<lb />was moved by Barbara Baker and seconded by Jerry Thrasher<lb />that the oNCLA hold its 1991 conference in High Point.� The<lb />motion carried after assurance that there were adequate hotel/-<lb />motel facilities in the city and enough meeting rooms at the<lb />Market Square Convention and Trade Center.<lb /><lb />Kieth Wright, ALA Council Representative, requested that<lb />information needing to go to Council should reach him no later<lb />than May 31. He also stated that sections and committees could<lb />exhibit samples at the ALA Council Chapter Booth.<lb /><lb />Jerry Thrasher reported on the October 26-29, 1988 South-<lb />eastern Library Association Conference activities in Norfolk,<lb />Virginia. He gave dates for future SELA conferences: December<lb />5-9, 1990 (Nashville); March 17-21, 1992 (New Orleans); and<lb />May, 1994 (Florida).<lb /><lb />Before Howard McGinn reported for North Carolina<lb />Libraries editor Frances Bradburn, brief comments were made<lb />by Secretary Dorsey and Jane Williams. The Editorial Board will<lb />examine topics, themes, and issues beginning with Spring 1990.<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services, Community and Junior College, and<lb />Junior Members Round Table sections did not report.<lb /><lb />Program highlights and registration details for the April 29,<lb />1988 program on oCD-ROM Promises and Pitfalls� was presented<lb />by Marti Smith of the College and University Section.<lb /><lb />The Documents SectionTs May 8, 1988 workshop at the Dur-<lb />ham County Library will focus on international trade, since<lb />there have been changes in the way the Federal government<lb />provides services to businesses and in international trade publi-<lb />cations distributed by the government. Patricia A. Langelier also<lb />reported that the surveys, sent to agencies by the Legislative<lb />Research Commission Study on State Agency Publishing, are<lb />being tabulated to find out which agencies are using alkaline<lb />paper for publications.<lb /><lb />REMCo met in March and heard a report on the status of<lb />librarianship. Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin will plan the REMCo pro-<lb />gram for the NCLA 1989 Conference.<lb /><lb />Carol Southerland reported program plans for the biennial<lb />work conference of NCASL October 27-28, 1988 in Winston-Sa-<lb />lem. oInformatin Power: Building Partnerships for Tomorrow� is<lb />the theme tied to INFORMATION POWER, the new AASL/AECT<lb />guidelines for school media programs.<lb /><lb />Irene Hairston reported on the Public Library Trustees<lb />AssociationTs Conference May 12-13, 1988 at Research Triangle<lb />Park, Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Towers. Bill Summers and<lb />others will examine roles, responsibilities, and status under<lb />state and local law of the public library trustee.<lb /><lb />The Public Library Section distributed the Planning Council<lb />minutes of their March 11, 1988 meeting in Winston-Salem and<lb />announced the establishment of an automated services commit-<lb />tee.<lb /><lb />Barbara Anderson, reporting for Reference and Adult Ser-<lb />vices, noted that the May session had been changed to Sep-<lb />tember.<lb /><lb />Harry Tuchmeyer was absent; however, President Hansel<lb />reported on a meeting of the Research and Technical Services<lb />Section in Southern Pines on September 29-30, 1988.<lb /><lb />Patrice Ebert, representing the Round Table on the Status<lb />of Women in Librarianship, mentioned the workshop oBecome a<lb />More Effective Communicator� for at least 20 participants in<lb />Fayetteville and Winston-Salem on June 3 and June 10 respec-<lb />tively. In addition, The Round Table will conduct a survey to find<lb />out what women librarians want from their jobs and careers.<lb /><lb />The Archives Committee, under the leadership of Maury<lb />York, is rearranging the archives of the first 80 years of the<lb />Association. Records are being refiled in acid-free folders and<lb />placed in boxes, and retention and distribution schedules will be<lb />established.<lb /><lb />Sylvia Sprinkle-Hamlin discussed a recruitment package to<lb />publicize careers in librarianship and a resource list of librar-<lb />ians to participate in career days, currently under development<lb />by the Recruitment Committee.<lb /><lb />President Hansel reported that paraprofessionals may want<lb />to establish a round table. Surveys were sent to public, aca-<lb />demic, and community college libraries by the committee on<lb />Paraprofessional Participation; results look positive.<lb /><lb />Jane Williams reported that the annual conference of the<lb /><lb />Fall 1988 "193<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0074" />
        <p>NCLA Minutes<lb /><lb />High School Library Association was held during February for<lb />about 250-300 students, 80% coming from rural libraries. How-<lb />ard McGinn raised the question should we assume a more for-<lb />mal association with HSLA. Since HSLA does not have a by-laws<lb />affiliation, NCASL will look into the matter. Janet Freeman and<lb />Howard McGinn will look into the ramifications and report to<lb />Carol Southerland.<lb /><lb />The first item of new business related to special collections.<lb />Maury York shared concerns that historical materials were not<lb />being collected, preserved, and made available. He further<lb />stated that 124 signatures had been collected in support of a<lb />round table.<lb /><lb />Jerry Thrasher moved that oa Special Collections Round<lb />Table be approved for NCLA contingent on verification of at<lb />least 100 NCLA membersT signatures on the submitted petition.�<lb />The motion was seconded by Patrice Ebert. Discussion followed<lb />on the role of the round table which will focus on management<lb />of collections that are reference in nature, e.g., oAmerican In-<lb />dians� in Pembroke and orailroading� in Rockingham.<lb /><lb />UPON &amp; BOOK<lb />BOOK WEEK: NOVEMBER 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb />Twenty-seven individuals signed up for the Legislative Day<lb />briefing, and Nancy Bates encouraged participants to visit with<lb />legislators and talk about issues such as postal rates and de-<lb />regulation.<lb /><lb />President Hansel announced the appointment of a Task<lb />Force on Ethical Issues; she also identified members of the Task<lb />Force who will meet in a couple of weeks.<lb /><lb />Doris Anne Bradley indicated that she will be requesting<lb />information from section and committee chairs on their mission<lb />for the Constitution, Codes, and Handbook Revision Committee.<lb /><lb />Howard McGinn is working on marketing the profession<lb />and the skills librarians bring to the community.<lb /><lb />President Hansel discussed the room sales contract with<lb />the Sheraton Appalachian Inn and reminded the Board of the<lb />July 29, 1988 meeting in Boone.<lb /><lb />There being no further business, the meeting was adjourned<lb />at 11:35 a.m.<lb /><lb />Gloria Miller, Secretary<lb />In|<lb /><lb />SUENA EN UN LIBRO<lb /><lb />BOOK WEEK: NOVEMBER 14-20, 1988<lb /><lb />Full-color 17 x 22�, Wish Upon a Book older reader posters by Jerry Pinkney with the theme in either English or Spanish for<lb />National ChildrenTs Book Week, November 14-20, 1988, sponsored by the ChildrenTs Book Council. For an illustrated Book Week<lb />brochure that includes prices and ordering information, send a first-class-stamped, self-addressed, #10 envelope to CBC: 67 Irving<lb />Place, P.O. Box 706, New York, NY 10276-0706, Attn: Book Week Brochure.<lb /><lb />194" Fall 1988<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0075" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />About the Authors...<lb /><lb />Barbara L. Anderson<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Goucher College; M.L.S., Univer-<lb />sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />Position: Reference Librarian, Forsyth County<lb />Public Library, Winston-Salem, N.C.<lb /><lb />Helen Causey<lb /><lb />Education: B.A. Campbell University; M.L.S.,<lb />Emory University<lb /><lb />Position: Director, Moore County Public Library,<lb />Carthage, N.C. Formerly Sales Representa-<lb />tive, New York Times Company's Microfilming<lb />Corporation of America.<lb /><lb />Howard F. McGinn<lb />Education: B.A., Villanova University; M.S.LS.,<lb />Drexel University; M.B.A., Campbell Univer-<lb /><lb />sity.<lb /><lb />Position: Assistant State Librarian, State Library<lb />of North Carolina. Formerly General Man-<lb />ager, New York Times Company's Microfilm-<lb />ing Corporation of America and Manager, AV<lb />Sales, J. B. Lippincott Publishing Company.<lb /><lb />Barry K. Miller<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Wake Forest University; M.LS.,<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />Position: Manager, Marketing Research Intelli-<lb />gence Center, RJR Tobacco USA, RJR Nabisco,<lb />Winston-Salem, N.C. Formerly, Director of<lb />Library, World Headquarters, RJR Industries.<lb /><lb />Charles F. Montouri<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Adelphi University; M.A., SUNY -<lb />Stoneybrook; M.L.S., Queens College.<lb /><lb />Position: Business/Adult Services Librarian, State<lb />Library of North Carolina. Formerly in insur-<lb />ance sales and real estate development in<lb />New York State.<lb /><lb />Carol Myers<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Hood College; M.L.S., University<lb />of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. ©<lb /><lb />Position: Head, Technical Services, Public Library<lb />of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, Char-<lb />lotte, N.C.<lb /><lb />Nancy Rountree<lb />Education: B.S., East Carolina University; M.L.S.,<lb />East Carolina University.<lb /><lb />Position: Assistant Librarian, Coastal Carolina<lb />Community College, Jacksonville, N.C.<lb /><lb />Diane W. Strauss<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., University of Wisconsin, Mil-<lb />waukee; M.L.S., University of Wisconsin, Mad-<lb />ison.<lb /><lb />Position: Head, Business Administration/Social<lb />Science Reference Department, Davis Library,<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb />Author of the recently published Handbook<lb />of Business Information, (Littleton, Colo-<lb />rado, Libraries Unlimited, 1988. ISBN: 0-<lb />87287-607-1)<lb /><lb />Diane Thompson<lb /><lb />Education: B.M., University of Alabama; M.M.,<lb />University of North Carolina at Greensboro;<lb />M.LS., University of North Carolina at Greens-<lb />boro.<lb /><lb />Position: Circulation Assistant, Greensboro Pub-<lb />lic Library, Greensboro, N.C.<lb /><lb />Bernard Vavrek<lb /><lb />Education: B.S., California University of Pennsyl-<lb />vania; M.L.S., Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh.<lb /><lb />Position: Professor, College of Library Science;<lb />Director, Center for the Study of Rural<lb />Librarianship, Clarion University of Pennsyl-<lb />vania, Clarion, PA.<lb /><lb />Upcoming Issues<lb /><lb />Winter 1988 " Reference Services<lb />Ilene Nelson, Guest Editor<lb />Spring 1989 " Economics of Librarianship<lb />Larry Alford, Guest Editor<lb />Summer 1989 " Public Libraries<lb />Bob Russell, Guest Editor<lb />" Technology<lb />April Wreath, Guest Editor<lb />Winter 1989 " Conference Issue<lb /><lb />Fall 1989<lb /><lb />Unsolicited articles dealing with the above<lb />themes or on any issue of interest to North<lb />Carolina librarians are welcomed. Please follow<lb />manuscript guidelines delineated elsewhere in<lb />this issue.<lb /><lb />Fall 1988"195<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027321_0076" />
        <p>Editor<lb /><lb />FRANCES BRYANT BRADBURN<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858<lb />(919) 757-6076<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />HOWARD F. McGINN<lb />Division of State Library<lb />109 East Jones Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27611<lb />(919) 733-2570<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb /><lb />ROSE SIMON<lb />Dale H. Gramley Library<lb />Salem College<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27108<lb />(919) 721-2649<lb /><lb />Book Review Editor<lb />ROBERT ANTHONY<lb />CB#3930, Wilson Library<lb />University of North Carolina<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599<lb /><lb />(919) 962-1172<lb /><lb />Advertising Manager<lb />HARRY TUCHMAYER<lb />New Hanover County Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(919) 763-3303<lb /><lb />Editor, Tar Heel Libraries<lb />HOWARD F. McGINN<lb />Division of State Library<lb />109 East Jones Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27611<lb />(919) 733-2570<lb /><lb />EDITORIAL STAFF<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />BONNIE FOWLER<lb />237 Arrowleaf Drive<lb />Lewisville, NC 27023<lb />(919) 945-5236<lb /><lb />College and University<lb /><lb />JINNIE Y. DAVIS<lb />Planning and Development<lb />D.H. Hill Library<lb />North Carolina State University<lb />Box 7111<lb />Raleigh, NC 27695<lb />(919) 737-3659<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College<lb />BEVERLY GASS<lb />Guilford Technical<lb />Community College<lb />Box 309<lb />Jamestown, NC 27282<lb />(919) 292-1101<lb /><lb />Documents<lb /><lb />LISA K. DALTON<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858<lb />(919) 757-6533<lb /><lb />Junior Members Round Table<lb />DOROTHY DAVIS<lb />Public Services Librarian<lb />New Hanover County Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(919) 763-3303<lb /><lb />N.C. Association of School Librarians<lb />KATHERINE R. CAGLE<lb />R.J. Reynolds High School<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27106<lb />(919) 727-2260<lb /><lb />Address all correspondence to Frances Bryant Bradburn, Editor<lb />Joyner Library, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858.<lb /><lb />Public Library<lb /><lb />BOB RUSSELL<lb />Elbert Ivey Memorial Library<lb />420 Third Street NW<lb />Hickory, NC 28601<lb />(704) 322-2905<lb /><lb />Reference/Adult Services<lb />ILENE NELSON<lb />Duke University Library<lb />Durham, NC 27706<lb />(919) 684-2373<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services<lb />GENE LEONARDI<lb />Shepard Library<lb />North Carolina Central Universit<lb />Durham, NC 27707<lb />(919) 683-6220<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic/ Minority<lb />Concerns<lb />EUTHENA NEWMAN<lb />North Carolina A &amp; T University<lb />F.D. Bluford Library<lb />1601 E. Market Street<lb />Greensboro, NC 27411<lb />(919) 379-7782<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of<lb />Women in Librarianship<lb />ELIZABETH LANEY<lb />CB¥3360, 100 Manning Hall<lb />University of North Carolina<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3360<lb />(919) 962-8361<lb /><lb />Trustees<lb /><lb />MRS. ERNEST M. KNOTTS<lb />Route 2, Box 505<lb />Albemarle, NC 28001<lb />(704) 982-7434<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries, published four times a year, is the official publication of the North Carolina<lb />Library Association. Membership dues include a subscription to North Carolina Libraries. Membership<lb /><lb />information may be obtained from the treasurer of NCLA.<lb /><lb />Subscription rates for 1987 are $32.00 per year, or $10.00 per issue, for domestic subscriptions; $50.00<lb />per year, or $15.00 per issue, for foreign subscriptions. Backfiles are maintained by the editor. Microfilm<lb />copies are available through University Microfilms. North Carolina Libraries is indexed by Library<lb />Literature and publishes its own annual index.<lb /><lb />Editorial correspondence should be addressed to the editor; a<lb /><lb />be addressed to the advertising manager. Articles are juried.<lb />North Carolina Libraries is printed by Meridional Publications, Wake Forest, NC.<lb /><lb />dvertisement correspondence should<lb /><lb />Issue deadlines are February 10, May 10, August 10, and November 10.<lb /></p>
      </div>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI>