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Tag Archive | "reference"

Running with the Red Queen

Running with the Red Queen

by Hal Kirkwood, Indiana Chapter, Business & Finance, Competitive Intelligence Divisions

‘Alice remarked in great surprise, “Why, I do believe we’ve been under this tree the whole time! In our country, you’d generally get to somewhere else if you ran very fast for a long time.”’

“A slow sort of country!” replied the Queen. “Now, here you see, it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that.”

An article that I have kept and reread over and over is by Arnold Hirshon in Advances in Librarianship entitled ‘Running with the Red Queen: Breaking New Habits to Survive in the Virtual World’. In this article he talks about reinventing reference, meeting increased customer expectations, changing strategic directions, changing our physical spaces, changing how we collaborate, coping with the speed of technological change, and integrating technology effectively.

This article was written in 1996.

These issues are as relevant now as they were 15 years ago. The competition from Google, the multitude of technological options available, the need for building information literacy skills, the necessity to change our physical spaces and how we connect with our constituents are all challenges we as information professionals must face today. We must define our role. We must create the future. To remain relevant we have to run twice as fast to get anywhere, this is what Future Ready means to me.

Hal Kirkwood is the Associate Head of the Roland G. Parrish Library of Management & Economics at Purdue University. He is a past-chair of the Business & Finance Division.
Hal is currently running for one of the two Director positions on the SLA Board. He can be reached at kirkwood@purdue.edu.

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The Reference Desk Usurped? Q & A Websites Revisited

The Reference Desk Usurped? Q & A Websites Revisited

by Alexander Feng, Cincinnati Chapter, Competitive Intelligence and Pharmaceutical & Health Technology Divisions

An interesting article came up this morning on USA Today, highlighting the rise of Q&A websites such as Quora and Stack Exchange and how they are “going to be the reference section of the library, where you can reach experts and get definitive answers.”

Yikes!

Is this a direct frontal assault on reference services?  The final death knell of the librarian, laid to rest by question and answer websites?

Maybe not.  Here’s why.

A while back, we wrote about the question and answer services kgb and chacha, which pay their consultants to do a Google/Bing search and relay answers to questions posed via cell phone – paid at the rate of roughly 3 cents per answer, or roughly minimum wage.  As one might expect, these answers are often incorrect – but as a question asker, if it’s free to ask, that might be ok.

(One could make a convincing argument that Google voice search has usurped a large part of this market in any case.)

The difference between sites like kgb / chacha, which are “horizontal sites,” (wide in focus, anyone can ask / answer questions) and Stack / Quora, termed “vertical sites,” is that Quora / Stack are narrower in focus, with experts providing the answers.  Purportedly, this leads to better answers, but still crowdsourced and free.

Coincidentally, today Vivek Wadwha, an entrepreneur turned academic at UC Berkeley, Harvard, and Duke,  posted a blog entry on TechCrunch entitled “Why I Don’t Buy the Quora Hype.”  His point?   Quora will be an excellent resource if “the same people who have been hyping it, and who have been invested in it, keep posting their thoughtful answers.”  But – the excess hype “is also destined to make Quora a victim of its own press.  The quality of answers will decline.  The people whose opinion I value, such as Quora’s #1 respondent, Robert Scoble, will simply stop posting on the site when they get drowned out by the noise from the masses.”

He continues:  ”What is more likely to happen and make far more sense is that a new generation of private, gated communities will grow and evolve.  This is where people with common interests will gather and exchange ideas.  For example, for people seeking legal advice, there is LawPivot, and for business looking for experts, there is Focus.  For techies, there are sites like StackOverflow, Slashdot, Hacker News;  for children, there is Togetherville;  for business students, there is PoetsandQuants;  for entreprenurs in India, there is StartupQnA; for Indian accountants, there is CAClubIndia;  and China has its own groups, and so do many other countries.”

If this is to be the case, sounds to me that there still will need to be information experts who keep abreast of all these information sources and know which is the best source to help point people in the right direction and get answers.

Gee, that sounds a lot like… a… librarian?

(information professional?)

Alex Feng is the Chair-Elect of SLA’s Pharmaceutical & Health Technology Division and writes for the division blog at http://phtd.wordpress.com/.

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FutureReady365 is a community blog focused on sharing knowledge, ideas and insights on how we are prepared for the future. The intention of the blog is to have a different information professional post every day in 2011. Please contribute!

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