Thursday, 27 November 2014

Out and about #csguk2014 #altc #sconul2014

During the last couple of weeks I have been at various conferences and events.  I enjoy attending events especially if they are one day. I'm not so keen on half days nor two/three day events as it is either too short to get involved or too long so an overload of information and networking.  But a whole day, in a good venue with nice refreshments and lunch and lots of interesting people presenting, is very appealing.  As well as finding out and learning about stuff, it's good to have an external reference point to place what you are doing in context.  It helps keep everything in perspective and frames developments.  For me, it is beneficial to talk to external people to share experiences and ask opinions.  It's equally important to have a 'safe' work place to come back to and a place that you can feel confident working in and share what you have learnt.

I attended the
Customer Services Group UK Conference #csguk2014
http://www.donlantechnologies.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/customer-services-group-uk-conference.html

SCONUL Winter Conference 2014 #sconul2014
http://www.donlantechnologies.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/sconul-winter-conference-2014-sconul2014.html


I also attended the Association for Learning Technology Trustees meeting in London at the Institute of Education.  I have been a trustee of ALT for the last four years and was on the FE Committee before that.  It is a great experience and has given me knowledge not just of learning technologies but also about policy and about committees.  It has given me the opportunity to meet and work with a variety of interesting and effective people.  





Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Reviews and staffing

A couple of weeks ago we had an Academic-Related Review of Information Services.  It involved a panel made up of external and internal people who interviewed students, academic staff and staff within the directorate about the services that we provide.  It went well, I think although we have not had the report yet so will wait and see.  A review is quite good really as it encourages you to focus on what you do and why and what the impact of the service is.
Last week I was 'out of the office' for a few days so am catching up this week especially as I'm out again Thursday and Friday.  More staffing and recruitment matters to sort out - requesting permission to recruit for an Information Assistant and changing hours and shifts for Library Assistants.
Trying to find a solution that everyone is happy with for chairs at the Library Service Desk - the problem is that they have to be suitable for a wide variety of staff to work at the desk and this means a variety of choices....  Meeting about support that we provide for the MFDs.

Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Tuesday - meetings, lost property and engineer visit.

This morning was the Academic and Learner Services meeting. It is a monthly meeting for staff in the Customer Services Team and in the Liaison Team. It is a summary of what is going on operationally and developments that are coming up. It's a good opportunity to keep up to date with what other colleagues are doing and to add a bit of detail to what we are doing in our team.
This afternoon had a meetng with Head of Security about lost property. We need to improve our procedures so that things don't get mislaid especially during hand over times especially as we have so many different teams and staff members. Anyhow he seems ok with my plan so we can start using that from next week.
A good thing that happened this afternoon was that the engineer from Bibliotheca came to mend one of our self service book kiosks. It had stopped reading the RFID tags so he replaced the reader inside the machine.

Monday, 3 November 2014

Monday - statistics and staff shortages

Mondays in November usually means that there is going to be a shortage somewhere. One of the admin assistants is off which means no lunch cover for telephonist so we have to cover from customer services. Actually it worked out ok as I volunteered and it was quiet so had an hour away from the hurly burly (and the steady stream of people coming to my office to ask me about stuff) and got quite a bit done. Plus read some articles about sustainable libraries.
This morning, collated stats - IT Helpdesk enquiries and Library enquiries.
Had a catch up meeting with my line manager and another colleague.
This afternoon, emails and weeding lists. Also trying to set up the online room booking system.
We had a last minute staff shortage this evening too....tomorrow's another day

Thursday, 9 October 2014

Semester 1 Week 4 The 'busier' perception

Week 4 already and the Semester is well underway.  The most noticeable aspect of this semester so far is that it feels busier - it seems like there are more students in the library and as if we have had more IT help enquiries.  But does it feel like that each year? Staff at universities and colleges often state in September that 'We're really busy' as if it's a surprise that thousands of students have appeared...as if by magic.
So looking at the footfall statistics into the library - Mondays are the day of greatest footfall, this year figures are much the same.  Tuesdays, however, are busier with the footfall comparable to Monday with 2400+ entries to the library. Tuesday is the new Monday, we have two very busy days a week. Footfall for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday have also increased, Saturday has remained the same and Sunday has increased.  We have an approximately 25% increase in the number of students using the library on a Sunday.
There are two other factors to take into account - we're are open 24/7 all semester and while the night times are not busy yet, evenings are and I think that the perception that the library is always there and open encourages students to 'drop by' and anytime.  The other factor is that occupancy figures are higher so that people accessing the library are staying longer.  We don't have completely accurate figures for occupancy as we rely on headcounts and some gate figures but we're concentrating on improving this measure.  The problem on a practical level, as everyone knows, when you're very busy it's difficult to collect statistics but those are the times you need them most.
The 'busier' perception is backed up by anecdotal evidence from the Students Union that last years and this years new UGs are more work focused and committed to study throughout the year.
The IT help enquiries have been comparable to last year although the difference seems to be that students want help immediately and in a face-to-face environment.  The usual categories of enquiries have been popular e.g. passwords, wifi/eduroam, emails and of course, printing.  The other difference is that students have their own devices and they want to be able to connect straight away via these devices to university systems and resources. We are seeing a greater variety of devices and different levels of skills in using them.
I think the greatest operational challenge in providing Information Services support is having the skills and knowledge to provide help to a student no matter what device they may have and no matter what level of digital literacy they possess.  The strategic challenge is in providing the learning environment and space, physical and virtual, for this to happen.


Monday, 22 September 2014

Semester 1 Week 1

Semester 1 Week 1 achieved successfully.
The alterations and improvements to the library space were finished on time albeit it last minute. The new group study pods are proving popular and we haven't had anyone eating or sleeping in them so far.
The new Service Desk is operating well so far although staff need time to get used to it and we need to review our work flows and processes to match the new set up. The chairs for staff at the Service Desk need changing as they don't have foot rests and don't lift up high enough. Also we need more storage but seeing as it was a major change, it's ok. We've also changed the room booking system which is work in progress - operational though which I'm pleased about.
We've been busy with IT enquiries - mainly account details, passwords, email set up and wifi/eduroam connections. There was an issue with some of the account set ups and this caused problems at the IT Helpdesk as quite a few accounts had to be set up manually - this seems to be solved now.
The printers, as ever, are temperamental - when they work they are great but MFDs do have a tendency to have intermittent, inexplicable faults along with the usual paper jams.
All in all it has been a good week and I like it when it is busy and we are responding to students queries and issues and most importantly, resolving them. Our success rate, despite any unavoidable beginning of term hiccups, is good.

Saturday, 16 August 2014

Up-skilling and cross-skilling - staff training

Up-skilling and cross-skilling 
The strategic aim is something along the lines of ensuring that all of the customer services team are cross skilled, can be co-located and record all issues and enquiries. Therefore the overarching plan is that all of the library assistants (daytime, weekend, evening), information assistants and IT Helpdesk staff would be able to work anywhere on the integrated service desk. A member of the Customer Services Team would be able to provide a front line, first line service wherever and whenever they are based.
So, how is this going to work in practice and how are we going to get there. In the Customer Services Team there are approximately 35 staff who were, in the past, either Library or IT staff apart from the information Assistants. The Information Assistants posts were new last September and to some extent bridge the gap but at a lower level. Many of the staff are skilled and have in-depth experience. The important thing, from my point of view, is that we don't lose that knowledge but that we keep it, ensure it is relevant, develop it and add to it. As the saying goes- we don't want to lose specialisms, but want to add generalisms.
All of this is fairly standard for university libraries especially in those integrated and converged with IT services.  Much of the change is driven by the demands and needs of the users. Students and staff, in general, want one place to go for help. If they visit the library, physically or virtually, they want assistance in accessing resources online and on the shelves.  They want to be able to access information on their own devices as well as the institution owned machines, they want to connect to systems and to wifi 24/7.
In general library assistants do want to increase their knowledge of IT systems and the distinction is sometimes a false one. When you work on a service desk on a library, you are using IT the majority of the time so it is a matter of formalising some of this, filling in the gaps and often increasing confidence. One difference is that IT staff work along the lines of giving something a go and if it doesn't work, try something else - technology is like that, trial and error or finding an alternative means of getting what you want done. In the past library systems were exact, if you do A you get B, a specified method of doing something.
Some of the training happens naturally between staff - if you have an integrated service desk with library and IT staff based there, then you share skills and pick up bits and pieces as you go along. This is useful but not enough as it doesn't ensure that everyone has the same skills base. Also it is dependent on a particular issue cropping up and being solved so that the incident can be shared.
Documentation, help sheets, guides, staff manuals are essential - you need somewhere to refer to when you are asked an enquiry or have to solve an issue. It is also important to have consistency so that everyone is providing the same service.
Structured training sessions are important and we are running a series of these over the summer. They include a session delivered by Subject Librarians which focuses on  Enquiries, the Website, Books and Journals, Discovery and Copyright - the latest developments in each of these areas. This session is repeated four times between June and September.
 There are three other sessions:
1. Printing / MFDs, Wifi-Eduroam, Word, Outlook, Google form / statistics
2. 'Getting Started' webpages, Vision (Blackboard), SharePoint, Kayako (ITHelpdesk system)
3. Service Desk changes, Staff manual and procedures, Voyager, Printing /MFDs
These sessions are delivered by the Helpdesk co-ordinator, the Service Desk supervisor or me.  At the end of each session we have a Customer Services team update.
We hold the sessions at different times and encourage semester only staff to attend (they get paid to do so). The sessions include practical elements so staff get experience of different systems and programmes. There are copies of the presentations or notes from the sessions available for those that can't attend and these reflect the information on the staff and service manual.

So far, so good. The sessions have been well attended and have meant we have a baseline of what should be common knowledge. If everyone knows what is covered in these sessions then we can build on that. Library staff and IT staff need to share each others skills base. We weren't starting from staff without knowledge or skills but it was difficult to know who knew what and how this could be quantified. We can add to the programme as new developments happen and build a cross-skilled, technology enhanced, knowledge base to provide an effective customer service.