Sender: Public-Access Computer Systems ForumFrom: Clifford Urr Subject: How to Get Cybrarians Article To: Multiple recipients of list PACS-L ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- I've gotten slightly deluged with requests and phone messages for how to get a hold of the Cybrarian's article, part of which I posted recently. Here's the scoop: the article appeared a few weeks ago (03 or 04/93), written by Tom Peters, in his regular newspaper column. [see http://www.tompeters.com/toms_world/t1993/031293-no.asp ] Unfortunately, many of the bloody newspapers that print his columns gave it various different titles other than the one Peters wrote. Hence, the REAL title, written by Peters himself, is: "No Kidding, Cyberpunk Librarians." You can order a copy of the full article from Tom Peters' consulting firm, TPG Communications, in Palo Alto, CA. You can call there at 415-326-4496, and ask for Chris Gage. Refer to the title above when ordering. You might also want to request a sample of their splendid monthly newsletter, "On Achieving Excellence." Peters has wriiten some very interesting things about libraries in it before! P.S. - Feel free to copy this message for to anyone or other lists anywhere. Cliff Urr James Martin & Co. Library 703-715-4127 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subj: Cybrarians article Date: 20-APR-1993 17:42 Expires: 20-MAY-1993 00:00 From: MX%"Michel.Bauwens@dm.rs.ch" Description: Cybrarians article Resent-Date: Tue, 20 Apr 1993 17:42:31 EDT Date: Tue, 20 Apr 1993 14:01:00 CDT Reply-To: Public-Access Computer Systems Forum Sender: Public-Access Computer Systems Forum From: Michel.Bauwens@dm.rs.ch Subject: Cybrarians article To: Multiple recipients of list PACS-L ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Dear Pacs-l: I've just been surprised by reading a reference to an article of mine. I do not feel that the cited syndicated column article by Tom Peters, accurately represents my point of view (some of the quotes refer to what I see as management viewpoints, that does not mean I agree with them). I therefore enclose the original article, which has appeared (and is copyrighted) in Business Information Review, April 1993. An interview based on the same ideas will be published in the Internet Business Journal. Sincerely, Michel Bauwens BEGIN TEXT THE CYBRARIANS MANIFESTO Towards a new organisational model for corporate libraries? Many corporate libraries regularly face the survival challenge. The information centre (despite all the talk about 'information as a strategic resource'), is usually seen as an overhead cost and in times of recession may be an easy target. Much of the information that is provided by corporate libraries is seen to belong to the 'nice to know' category, hence not considered 'critical' to the survival of the firm in tough times. Often, the library manager is not part of senior management, and the services that are provided are 'filtered' through middlemen (junior managers, assistants, secretaries). They get the credit for the work done, not the librarian. Finally, the new philosophy of 'outsourcing' leads quite a few managers to conclude that information is not a core competence, but something that can be carried out, cheaper and in a more efficient manner, by outside information brokers. This is actually what happened in my own corporation, where the corporate centre Business Intelligence Unit, once counting a large staff exceeding 15 people, was trimmed down to one person. On a corporate-wide basis, the staff has been reduced from 200+ to less than 30, and half of those no longer perform information- related functions. This situation is echoed at other corporations too. It would be to easy to blame a 'short-sighted' management aiming at quick savings in the budget. If we cannot convince our management of our usefulness, then surely we are also responsible for this state of affairs. It is not my intention to blame anyone, but to point out that the fault may be in an outmoded organisational model that finds its expression in the existence of a central corporate library. Indeed, librarians are the only profession whose job title is linked to a building, and we are obviously emotionally tied to the product in that building, i.e. the Book. Moreover, we are the last centralists, adepts of an organisational model that sees the 'library' as an institution which is centrally located and where our customers should transport themselves to find the required information. It is time to look for a different organisational model, more in tune with the needs of our customers, and in harmony with the technological tools at our disposal. To take an analogy from the world of industry, we could say that the traditional library view is centred on the production process, rather than on the consumer. We are infatuated with the product and the source of that information (whether it is a book or an electronic database). What is objectionable about this orientation is that the means have become more important than the ends. The new view should be client-centred and process-oriented. For corporate librarians the clients should be first of all our senior management. They are, after all, those who have to make the critical decisions involving the very future of our companies. They want information that is actionable, recent, and readable, no matter where it comes from. Thus it is our task to build an information refinery, which directs the right information to the right person, while making its different origins and formats invisible to the data recipients, blending several sources in one in-house product if necessary. Client- centredness also means personal service and avoiding middlemen. The new data communications technology such as internal email allows us to cut through the hierarchy and to develop such direct contacts in a networking model. From the limited - paper-based - library we are evolving towards a potentially unlimited, virtual library based on electronic information sources. Where as traditionally we are tempted to build expensive collections 'just in case' a piece of information might be needed, we could and should focus on 'just in time' delivery of information on the basis of proven need. Books and databases are no longer sufficient to carry out our job well. The new corporate librarians could be seen in the middle of a concentric circle of cyberspace (i.e. the electronic information space or ocean), consisting not only of external databases, but also of Email, Bulletin Boards, and Computer Conferencing systems. We do not only need Dialog and FT Profile, but also the Internet and AMIX! 'If you're not on the net, you're not in the know' (dixit the Economist's year-end issue). Or as stated in the Times Literary Supplement recently: 'Researchers with access to these forms of communication are making progress while other researchers, still awaiting information through more traditional slower channels, have not yet begun to work'. Initiatives such as the Data Mail BBS for translators point to the online services of the future, which permit a dialogue between information users and information providers. From our very own desktop we can now send email (text and data files), faxes, telexes and even ordinary mail. Automated fax broadcast systems such as recently instituted by Dunsprint free us from the worry of waiting in line for a fax to be sent. More and more fulltext is available online, and new document delivery initiatives such as CARL's UNCOVER, Epic's ArticleFirst / ContentsFirst service, and Faxon Finder, promise 24-hour delivery times of faxed copies. The material that is downloaded electronically can be send to the information requesters through email and can be integrated in their PC packages. A productivity tool such as Information Partner automates the search procedure to the point that no human has to be present. It also reformats the material in a high quality DTP newsletter -- all this in a matter of minutes with a few keystrokes. Personal scanners with ICR are now available, allowing us to eliminate paper and routine procedures even further. This description is not science fiction, but the way an information centre can work today. Such an electronic library, what we could call 'a total electronic environment' is in place in my corporation (without the scanner though). But these advances in productivity come with a price: if we can do more, less of us are needed. Other trends may be working in that direction too, such as the increase in the number of end- users and the emergence of information brokers. On the other hand, the ever increasing availability of information, accessible in ever more ways, argues for the future of our profession. However, we will perhaps be judged, not by the amount of information that we deliver, but by the amount of information that we filter out? Our success would then be determined by the amount of 'information seeking' time that we save our executives from performing themselves. The new technology makes us location-independent. Thus instead of huddling together amongst colleagues in a central location (the old model), or working at home (teleworking) as some other have suggested, we should use the telepresence technologies to be closer to our customers, working in the ad hoc working teams that are increasingly common in modern corporations, hot-desking if need be! That way we are closely integrated into the corporate fabric and gain an intimate knowledge of the individual information needs. The new informational model thus becomes clear. A corporation that is serious about its information needs may contemplate having at its disposal a network of cybrarians (i.e. librarians able to navigate in 'cyberspace'), strategically located throughout the company. These well-trained, IT literate individuals will be integrated into management teams. They will be networked in a three-fold manner: first of all amongst each other, second with the teams mentioned above, third to a network of outside information providers (other cybrarians and experts on the Internet, information brokers). Using the Infomapping techniques, such as those developed by Woody Horton, these cybrarians will manage the network of information and knowledge that exists within the company, i.e. the various data collections but also the human experts. They will not only be information providers, but also the gatekeepers (some prefer the term gateway) to internal and external expertise, and as such they will be an indispensable institutional memory, that corporations will hate to miss. Such a model would be very flexible, as the different networked librarians could specialise themselves or be re-assigned as new needs and teams arise. Thus, such an organisational model, fits the 'necessary disorganisation' model, which Tom Peters claims to be vital for rapid and continuous adaptation in a 'chaotic' world. As stated before, we believe that such a vision does not belong to the domain of science fiction, but that it is a real possibility. It requires well-trained librarians with very high ethical standards. Indeed what we must strive for is to become obsolete. By rigorously eliminating all the tasks that can be better performed by others, and by automating the routine information provision, we will paradoxically achieve the opposite effect, i.e. we will be entrusted by the high-quality 'added- value' work that will ensure high professional status. Thus eliminating the routine drudgery, so often associated with our job, we free our creative capabilities even more and become real agents of constant innovation. Peter Drucker sees the future corporation as a symphony orchestra, in which the conductor is in direct contact with a core group of experts, and surrounded by temporary workers. The challenge facing corporate librarians is indeed to which category to belong? We believe that the proposed model of a strategic network of cybrarians to be a way forward for integrating ourselves in such a network of experts. It requires from us a new attitude, centred on serving our clients and an openness both to technology and to people, as expressed in the concept of networking. The model is probably not applicable in all circumstances: I am not implying that all central libraries should be abolished. Rather, I see a new role for them: not as the centre of the information world, but in a supporting role vis-a-vis the networked cybrarians: providing back-up for difficult queries, managing contracts with information providers, offering technological support as a testing centre for the evolving information and communications technology. Thus, and this is a crucial difference, in this model the periphery (the cybrarians) becomes the centre, and the centre (the central corporate library) becomes the periphery. The Cybrary Network model is a potentially powerful alternative, as it incorporates modern management practices to the information domain: cfr. its focus on working in teams, networking, outsourcing, business process redesign (i.e. don't use IT to automate your work, but rethink your working practices in harmony with the new possibilities), core competencies (i.e. we focus on our strength, thus allowing our management to focus on their competence, i.e. decision-making). When applying these principles, we achieve a 'lean and mean' organisational model, already 'right-sized', that will be able to resist much better the onslaughts against overhead. Close to our customers, we achieve the necessary human 'bonding' with our management. Instead of nameless clerks, we have become crucial partners and colleagues. END TEXT Bauwens, Michel. "The Cybrarians Manifesto: Towards a new organisational model for corporate libraries?" Business Information Review (April 1993). Bauwens argues that the organization of the traditional corporate library and its process of collecting and disseminating information has been made obsolete by technology. As information becomes less dependent on location, and industries require information on a more timely basis and in formats that are readily usable, cybrarians must take the place of librarians. Bauwens also believes that this model will created a better job for the information professional by focusing on the most professional aspects of the job and thereby "free[ing] our creative capabilities even more and become real agents of constant innovation." - DR