Marketing is my answer.
And that is why I have Ned Potter's Library Marketing Toolkit
on my desk at work with post its sticking out all over and why I chose
to go on the Marketing Libraries: strategic and creative communications
for information professionals course.
The
first session How do you like your eggs in the morning? provided a
fascinating insight into how the University of Sunderland library market
their service. They have created a 7 step toolkit to create marketing
plans:
- Identify strategic direction
- Do SWOT analysis
- Profile customer segments
- Match offers to segments
- Transform offers into benefits
- Translate benefits into messages
- Plan communication campaign
I think that I
already do part of this unconsciously and that I would benefit more by
writing and recording it as they do at Sunderland. I especially like
the trees they used for feedback, which were visible and fun. You can
see more about their marketing campaigns on their Pinterest page.
I
have been told by my manager that he will get us (him, our e-Learning
Manager and myself) a monthly slot on the senior management team meeting
agenda, where we can promote our services and shout out about what we
do. I would like to use the 7 step toolkit to start planning which
services to promote. I therefore expect the handouts from this session
to end up on my desk alongside the Library Marketing Toolkit book.
The
second session was about Social Media Marketing for Libraries and this
session reinforced what I have read in the Library Marketing Toolkit.
Currently I have a Twitter and Facebook account for the LRC and that is
quite enough. They are not updated as regularly as they should be and I
wish to address that. I have started with Twitter by tidying it up and
tweeting more, I now need to turn my attention to the Facebook page, to
see what needs sorting and to start to use that more effectively. I know
that there are College Flickr and You Tube accounts too and hope that I
can make use of those in my social media campaigns.
The
third session was about being consistent and creative with branding. I
have spent the summer trying to do this with the current marketing
materials that we have and the few new ones that we had to do. I am
pleased with the overall effect of what has been produced, it builds on
the excellent LRC Guide that was produced last year with bite size
information and everything now has a College logo on, so that we are
aligned and a part of the College brand. This I think may go some way to
help build the reputation and value that we desire.
The final
session of the day was about marketing in small specialised libraries
(in this case York Minster Library) and looked at the library being a
place to belong not just visit. Although this session was a very
different type of marketing to what I would expect in an academic
library, it was still useful, as well as being very interesting and
excellently presented by Antonio Jiminez-Milian. What I got out of this
session was that you can promote your values and what you want to be
associated with by using status updates. To do this you retweet or like
updates from bodies, institutions etc that share your values. So I will
be reviewing my Twitter account again (and looking into this when I
review the Facebook account) and looking at following people who share
the same values as the College and LRC want to promote.
How’s the marketing campaign working out so far? I appreciate the fact that you are using technology to your advantage. Online marketing strategies are worlds apart from traditional marketing, but they have the same backbone. You are in a very good position right now; once you get the hang of online marketing, you can definitely put LRC on the map!
ReplyDeleteBryan Douglas