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Scroll down to read the 236th issue of FreePint, which was published 30 August 2007.
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30th August 2007
No.236
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Contents
Print-friendly (PDF) version
- Editorial
By Monique Cuvelier
- My Favourite Tipples
Tim Buckley-Owen
- FreePint Bar
In Association with Factiva, from Dow Jones
- Jinfo :: Jobs in Information
- Assistant Librarian Central London
- Pre Lib/Graduate Information Assistant
- Business Information Librarian
- Head of Shared Understanding / Knowledge Manager
- Research Consultant
- Researcher
- Information Manager
- Manager and Head, Library and Archives
- Information Management Analyst
- Corporate Knowledge Manager
- Subscription co-ordinator
- Information and Training Assistant
- Tips Article
"A Primer: The Wonderful World of Internet Advertising"
By David Sarokin
- Review
"The Virtual Reference Handbook: Interview and Information Delivery
Techniques for the Chat and E-mail Environments"
Written by Diane Kovacs
Reviewed by Laura Suttell
- Feature Article
"Search Trails: Back to the Future"
By Nigel Hamilton
- Events, Gold and Forthcoming Articles
- Contact Information
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About FreePint
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FreePint is a global network of people who find, use, manage and share work-related information. Members receive this free twice-monthly newsletter, packed with tips, features and resources.
Joining FreePint is free at <http://www.freepint.com/> and connects information practitioners around the world with resources, events and answers to their tricky research and information questions at the FreePint Bar, our free online forum: <http://www.freepint.com/bar/>.
Please share FreePint with others by forwarding this message. The FreePint Newsletter is available online in several formats and can be read, saved and forwarded at <http://www.freepint.com/issues/>.
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Editorial
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By Monique Cuvelier
One of my favourite hobbies is scanning magazines, newspapers and the
things people say for cultural themes. It's an occupational hazard of
being a journalist. For years I've noticed Americans are absorbed with
a 'spoil yourself' mentality, a trait I'm certain has led to expanding
waistlines and the proliferation of beauty spas.
Recently I've seen a curious word crop up again and again:
'obsession'. It's appeared in movie titles, book titles, headlines and
radio shows, and nobody seems embarrassed by it.
Doctors used to prescribe Prozac to cure obsessions, but now it's a
freely embraced and nurtured state of mind. You're allowed to be
obsessed with Japanese anime, food, Vespa scooters or Viggo Mortensen.
We've all come to love grasping a notion and focusing on it to the
point of worship.
When obsessions control your behaviour, it can be a bad thing, such as
when you're washing your hands every five minutes or stalking poor
Viggo. But obsessions also create exploration and innovation. Little
ideas can become big movements when they become fixations.
For information professionals, search is an obsession. It hurts when
you spend too long hunting for information you can't find (see my Bar
posting on how to measure the amount of information online). But it
can also spark new ideas, such as Trexy's technology that uses the
search patterns of others to create useful paths of information, which
Nigel Hamilton reports on. Or new opportunities, such as search-driven
advertising tools from Google, Yahoo! and MSN, which our frequent
contributor David Sarokin covers. Laura Suttell nurses her own
obsession with books by reviewing "The Virtual Reference Handbook".
What are your obsessions? I'd love to know, and if it seems like a
shared obsession, we'll cover it here. Sincerely,
Monique Cuvelier Editor, FreePint
e: monique.cuvelier@freepint.com
w: <http://www.onopoly.com/ support/team/>
FreePint is a Registered Trademark of Free Pint Limited (R) 1997-2007

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Insight on Data and Service Providers
Newly published: D&B and Hoover's, Alacra
Company Portfolio Series puts all the relevant information in a single file: product reviews, news and essential-facts overview.
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Author Stephanie Taylor puts her popular workshop in workbook format: Understand users, write clear step-by-step guides and gather feedback to make your project handbook as useful as possible. Includes 7 hands- on worksheets
Instant online access with credit card purchase:
<http://web.freepint.com/go/shop/ report/project-handbook/>
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My Favourite Tipples
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By Tim Buckley-Owen
Here's a confession: my favourite Tipple by far is a printed one: The
Economist magazine. It's great to sit in the pub, with a real tipple
to hand, leafing through its pages, relishing the writing, frequently
disagreeing with its views, but always enjoying the serendipity - far
better than focusing on just a handful of stories selected online.
However, there are a few sites to which I constantly return, looking
for good material for stories and features.
- OUT-LAW <http://www.out-law.com> from law firm Pinsent Masens has
7000 pages of free legal news and guidance, updated regularly. It
takes in IT as well as a range of associated information
developments.
- Although I can never afford to buy their reports, another site I
can't afford to ignore is Outsell <http://www.outsellinc.com>. It
incorporates the UK-based EPS, bringing together the two key
research and consultancy firms for the information industry.
- Provocative, iconoclastic and sometimes infuriating, The Register
<http://www.theregister.co.uk> is a good read and a rich source of
leads. 'Biting the hand that feeds IT' is its strapline, as well as
other information-related hands as well.
- ContentBlogger <http://www.shore.com/commentary/weblogs/>, from
publishing consultancy Shore Communications Inc, reproduces vast
quantities of news and commentary on electronic and print publishing
from a prodigious range of (mostly US) sources - plenty of it of
interest to info pros.
- The Chartered Institute of Library & Information Professionals'
weekly e-bulletin
<http://www.cilip.org.uk/enquiryandsearch/newsbulletin> is great
for the big-picture approach on what the UK media are saying about
information issues. Membership required.
Tim Buckley Owen is an independent information industry commentator
who writes for a range of library and information publications and
runs practical training courses on information skills
<buckley.owen@virgin.net>.
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Analyst Research, Securities Filings and Company Docs
August's VIP provides in-depth reviews of products from Northern
Light, 10-K Wizard and D&B, plus analysis of the news.
Purchase the issue, or subscribe today: <http://www.vivavip.com/>
Request a sample issue, and evaluate VIP for your professional
library: <http://www.vivavip.com/sample.html>
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Learn the Art of Successful eNewsletters
in a Free Webcast from Dow Jones' InfoPro Alliance
Join Mary Ellen Bates on 6th September at 11.00am US EST
as she shares highlights from her new eBook, The Art of E-Newsletters.
Register now at <http://infopro.ed10.net/t/A2WF/ 0TOL/W1/HYQ>
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FreePint Bar
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In Association with Factiva from Dow Jones
By Monique Cuvelier
<http://www.freepint.com/bar>
From the conference equivalent to movies at Cannes to a simple yet
perplexing question about the amount of information online, the
FreePint Bar is humming with ideas and suggestions. Read summaries
below and then hop over to <http://www.freepint.com/bar/> to join in
the fun.
- Cannes is known for its film festival, but is any place in Britain
known for its conferences? One FreePint Bar member is wondering what
the de rigueur place is for hosting large-scale conferences.
Birmingham pops up a couple times in the discussion, as do
Manchester and London. Where do you go for UK-based events?
<http://www.freepint.com/go/b171558>.
- Age and librarianship is a common topic in the FP Bar, and a
'mature' student librarian relocating from Europe to Newcastle is
wondering how she can go about finding a job. Of course, she can
start by combing the listings on Jinfo <http://www.jinfo.com/>, but
many others have additional ideas. Check them out:
<http://www.freepint.com/go/b165872>.
- Look at a related conversation about how to find regional
organizations or networking opportunities in the Midlands
<http://www.freepint.com/go/b169041>.
- Yes, the FreePint crew needs research help sometimes, even your
humble editor. When I asked a perplexing question - how much
information is there online? - I received several helpful leads for
more research. See what gems this line of questioning dug up:
<http://www.freepint.com/go/b170349>.
- One 'Pinter is looking for help with Microsoft Excel in a way that
looks quite a bit like a maths problem. The question has spurred a
rich dialogue about how to compare figures across worksheets and
columns. Pick up some helpful tips and strategies
<http://www.freepint.com/go/b170005>.
Stymied by your own research question? Ask at the Bar and then
subscribe to twice-weekly email digests to see who's responded
<http://www.freepint.com/subs/>.
Monique Cuvelier is editor of the FreePint Newsletter. She has edited, launched and written for many magazines, newspapers and websites in the US and UK. Learn more about her at http://www.onopoly.com/support/team/.
The FreePint Bar is where you can get free help with your tricky research questions <http://www.freepint.com/bar>
Help with study for information-related courses is available at the FreePint Student Bar <http://www.freepint.com/student>.
Subscribe to the twice-weekly email digests at <http://www.freepint.com/subs/>.
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** NEW: Project Handbook Report and Tool Kit
Create documentation for project success
Author Stephanie Taylor puts her popular workshop in workbook format: Understand users, write clear step-by-step guides and gather feedback to make your project handbook as useful as possible. Includes 7 hands- on worksheets
Instant online access with credit card purchase:
<http://web.freepint.com/go/shop/ report/project-handbook/>
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Jinfo - Jobs in Information
|
<http://www.jinfo.com/>
The Jinfo service enables you to search and advertise information- related job vacancies.
The Jinfo Newsletter now features CV Makeovers, in which a job seeker's CV is critiqued and revised by specialists in the field as well as career tips for all experience levels. Read the latest edition and subscribe free at <http://www.jinfo.com/newsletter/>.
Jinfo Jobs in the FreePint Newsletter are supported through our partnership with Quantum2, an innovative skills development programme offered by Thomson Scientific. Learn more at <http://www.thomsonscientific.com/quantum2/>
Here is a selection of the latest featured entries in the Jinfo database:
- Assistant Librarian Central London
Role available within a legal library of a government organisation
based in central London starting as soon as possible.
Recruiter: Aslib, The Association for Information Management
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7482>
- Pre Lib/Graduate Information Assistant
An exciting opportunity for an enthusiastic Pre Library School or
Graduate to join this Legal Information Services team.
Recruiter: Weekes Gray Recruitment
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7207>
- Business Information Librarian
Experience of business research within a legal firm? Magic circle firm
needs your skills!
Recruiter: Sue Hill Recruitment and Services Limited
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7225>
- Head of Shared Understanding / Knowledge Manager
HM Customs & Excise requires Senior Knowledge Manager to work in new
position in Central London offices. Closing Date: 21st Sept 2007.
Recruiter: Glen Recruitment
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7323>
- Research Consultant
To provide business research and information services to a wide
range of client companies.
Recruiter: Tribal
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7348>
- Researcher
Develop timely and dependable intelligence on which clients
can base critical decisions.
Recruiter: Capcon-Argen Limited
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7352>
- Information Manager
Information Manager - Communications Team - providing expertise
and guidance to support our specialist programmes.
Recruiter: WRAP (Waste & Resources Action Programme)
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7354>
- Manager and Head, Library and Archives
Responsible for managing and providing efficient Library, Archival
and Records Management services for the Commonwealth Secretariat.
Recruiter: The Commonwealth Secretariat
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7375>
- Information Management Analyst
Do you have knowledge, experience and skills in the good practice
organisation of information in our progressive environment?
Recruiter: TMP Worldwide
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7479>
- Corporate Knowledge Manager
Are you broadly experienced in knowledge management and ready to
take on a high profile challenge within a large, complex council?
Recruiter: TMP Worldwide
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7480>
- Subscription co-ordinator
Leading press cuttings agency seeks help in maintaining
subscription renewals.
Recruiter: Durrants
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7481>
- Information and Training Assistant
Carrying out research enquiries on behalf of lawyers and other
professionals in the organisation.
Recruiter: TFPL
Country: United Kingdom
<http://www.jinfo.com/go/j7492>
[The above jobs are paid listings]
NB: These are just a selection of information-related jobs in the Jinfo database <http://www.jinfo.com/>. Receive the latest job listings weekly with the free Jinfo Update. Free to subscribe at <http://www.jinfo.com/>
Develop Your Strengths with Quantum2

For a wide array of hands-on training and resource materials, turn to Quantum2, an innovative skills development programme provided *free* by Thomson Scientific. The programme helps information professionals:
- Expand your services through strategic and business competencies
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Discover best practices, *plus* the know-how to implement them.
Free monthly newsletter and further information at:
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Subscribe to the free Weekly update of the latest jobs,
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Jinfo -- the best place for information-related job vacancies.
- JOB SEARCHING?
-- Free search and sign up to the Jinfo Newsletter
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-- Complete the form and advertise a vacancy for just GBP195 <http://www.jinfo.com/recruit/> -- 10% discount for agencies -- 50% discount for registered charities
Find out more today at <http://www.jinfo.com/>
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On the Ticker: Use DocuTicker for Full-Text Resources <http://www.docuticker.com/>
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- New Report: Who's Still Smoking [in NYC]
Subscribe to the weekly ResourceShelf Newsletter for highlights, capture the DocuTicker RSS feed, or visit daily.
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Join the Job Seekers
Information-related jobs at Jinfo can put you in a new position by
summer. 30,000 job views last month -- search the database at:
<http://web.jinfo.com/jobs/search/>
Subscribe to the free Weekly update of the latest jobs,
plus the monthly newsletter with career tips:
<http://www.jinfo.com/subs/>
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Tips Article
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Plain text | PDF | Contents
"A Primer: The Wonderful World of Internet Advertising"
By David Sarokin
Samuel Johnson famously said, 'When a man knows he is to be either
hanged or fired from his online research job in a fortnight, it
concentrates his mind wonderfully.' Or something to that effect.
When Google Answers announced that it was closing up shop at the end
of 2006, leaving its quasi-staff of researchers to fend for
themselves, my mind did, in fact, concentrate on a single thought: 'Oh
my gawd ...What do I do now?' (Those not familiar with the wonderful,
sad tale of Google Answers might want to see an earlier article I
wrote <http://www.freepint.com/issues/040107.htm#feature>.)
Samuel J. was, perhaps, also the author of another pearl of wisdom
(though I rather doubt it): 'When one door closes, another opens.' So
it was with the demise of Google Answers, for it opened my eyes to the
quite incredible world of online advertising. In looking for ways to
continue as a professional researcher, I began to realise that
Internet advertising - which up until then I had aggressively ignored
- could help me build a business and rebuild my income.
You should understand a few things about me right up front: 1) I'm
very much a novice at the world of Internet advertising; 2) I don't,
as a rule, care for advertising, Internet or otherwise; and 3) I like
even less seeing English made ugly with phrases like 'increase
eyeballs and monetise your website'.
However, I'm more than happy to offer here my findings on how
independent information workers like me can increase eyeballs and
monetise their websites by making good use of Internet advertising
tools. As bleak as the frenzy of online advertising appears to be,
with pop-ups, intrusions, misdirects and all the other flotspam* on
the Internet, there is, still, a silver lining to the whole thing.
Internet Advertising 101
When you see (or hear) an advert - any advert, anywhere - it's a
pretty basic economic truth that someone paid to have the advert
displayed, and someone else is getting paid for displaying it. It's a
simple enough concept, one that Google applied to the Web with
astounding results, making billions of dollars seemingly overnight.
The genius of Google's advertising business is that they made it
simple for just about anyone to be an advertiser, or a displayer, or
both. To put a lofty spin on things, this was a revolution; the
democratisation of the world of advertising.
Not convinced? Think of your own role - prior to the Internet age - as
a would-be advertiser or as someone earning an income from displaying
ads. For most people, their role as advertisers was limited to an
occasional classified advert in the local paper, selling a car, or
renting a room. As a displayer - someone getting paid to run ads - the
average person simply didn't have a role, and never even imagined it
as a possibility. 'Real' ads, on TV or in magazines, involved
transactions of thousands of dollars, big production budgets and fancy
Madison Avenue digs, and simply weren't the purview of the average
citizen.
Along comes Google, and Bingo! Everything changes. Suddenly, any Jane
or John Doe can put an advert on the Internet, to be viewed by
thousands or millions of people. Even the tiny-budgeted among us can
still run a visible advertising campaign. And if John or Jane have a
website, they can also become electronic billboards of sorts,
displaying other folks' ads and earning some cash in the process. It's
mid-morning as I'm writing, and I've earned $4.34 thus far on my own
displays. Not bad, for doing nothing.
Becoming an Advertiser
Let's say you run a small business that you'd like to advertise on the
Web. Nothing elaborate, just a small text advert with a link to your
website. Google Adwords made it possible to do exactly that, even with
a surprisingly small budget. Yahoo and Microsoft have since followed
suit. The Big Three are Google Adwords <http://adwords.google.com>,
Yahoo! Search Marketing <http://digbig.com/4tmbj> and Microsoft
dCenter .
Microsoft (of course) strikes me as the clunkiest of the three, but
they all work the same way, do pretty much the same thing and at
pretty much the same cost.
The process is simple: 1) Design your advert; 2) decide how much you
want to spend; 3) select your keywords; 4) go through endless rounds
of tinkering.
The end result is a small text advert that will appear in various
places on the Web. The ads are 'content relevant', which is something
of a mixed blessing. Your ads will appear on pages where the content -
that is, the main topic of the page - is related to your advert . So,
if you're selling headache remedies, your advert will likely appear on
pages that discuss headaches. If you're selling your expertise in
competitive intelligence, you will show up on pages related to
competitive intelligence.
As sensible as this seems, it's not the way advertising usually works.
When you're watching a football game, there are rarely any ads about
football. Instead, you're bombarded with ads about beer. There's no
'relevancy' to the content, other than the fact that football and beer
are practically synonyms.
Adwords and the Yahoo!/Microsoft equivalents, on the other hand,
strive to match the content of your advert with the content of the
pages on which it appears. The pages are usually individual websites
<http://firstmention.com/> or search results pages
<http://digbig.com/4tmbk>, depending on what options you select,
although ads can also appear in blogs, group forums, maps and even in
e-mail messages.
Another important feature of Adwords is that they are pay-per-click
ads, so that you pay not for the number of times the advert is seen,
but for the number of times it's actually clicked on (there are some
other options as well, but pay-per-click is the most common, by far).
Where your advert appears, and how often it shows up, depends on how
much money you're willing to spend, the keywords you've selected and
the content of the website you're linking to.
Earlier I said the process is simple. I lied. Oh, it's simple enough
to get started, but like choosing a cell phone plan, there are so many
options available, and they're so obliquely explained, that online
advertising can quickly get weird. This is especially so in trying to
pick keywords that will get noticed without expending your budget all
in one click (the more popular a keyword, the more expensive it is to
have your advert show up in response to that keyword). Hence step 4
above ... the endless tinkering.
Complexities aside, you can set up an advertising campaign quickly,
even on a dollar-a-day budget, and get yourself widely noticed. The
jump in traffic to your website can be substantial, though at a cost,
of course, since every click on your advert is a (usually) smallish
expense that you have to pay out.
Becoming a Billboard
The flip side of online advertising is Google's Adsense
, where your website becomes an
Internet billboard for ads (the very ones that people create in
Adwords), and you can earn a (usually modest) income from people
visiting your site, viewing the ads, and saints be praised, clicking
on them. Most clicks seem to earn about a nickel or a dime, though it
can be as little as a penny, or well over a dollar for a single click!
Adsense strives to be content relevant, of course, which sometimes
works well, and sometimes doesn't. My Dun and Bradstreet page
<http://xooxleanswers.com/dnb.aspx> generally produces very relevant
ads, but a page on the history of the Why Did the Chicken Cross the
Road Joke <http://xooxleanswers.com/chickencrosstheroad.aspx> is not
always as successful ... advertising fried chicken franchises isn't
really the point, now, is it? (The posted ads are constantly changing,
and are geographically targeted, so that you'll see a different
collection every time you visit the site, and depending where you're
located when you visit.)
There are variations on the Adsense theme. You can host image ads,
text ads, large banners, smallish boxes, line item ads. You can also
add search boxes to your page, which can also generate income as they
get used. And more sophisticated (possibly, more annoying) options are
rapidly becoming available, involving video, flash, sound and other
media choices.
Yahoo! and Microsoft haven't picked up on this flip side of
advertising (yet!) but Adsense certainly isn't your only option. There
are a host of other advertising and income-generating opportunities,
which I'm just beginning to explore myself. Displaying advertisements
for books from Amazon.com is one of the most popular
<http://affiliate-program.amazon.com/gp/associates/join> - you can
earn up to 10% of any sales that are generated. A new service called
Tumri is getting some buzz
<http://www.tumri.com/publishers/index.htm>, which lets users build
'AdPod' widgets that offer more e-commerce functionality than a simple
advert.
Online advertising isn't going to make me rich. But then again, having
a few hundred dollars in extra spending money every month certainly
doesn't hurt.
And if nothing else, online advertising can help you learn a few dozen
languages: <http://www.google.com/errors/asfe/system_down.html>.
* flotspam - If it's not a real word, it should be.
David Sarokin is a well-known expert on Internet research skills, and
(alas) a former researcher with Google Answers. He now runs his own
research service at XooxleAnswers.com <http://xooxleanswers.com/>, and
also participates in the group research service at Uclue.com
<http://uclue.com/> (both of which are well worth checking out, if he
may say so himself). He also has a quirky word-history site at
FirstMention.com <http://firstmention.com/>, guaranteed to appeal to
at least two or three FreePint readers. You can reach him with any
feedback at <sarokin at gmail.com>.
Related FreePint links:
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"Thanks for all that I have learnt from FreePint over the years. It is
the one completely indispensable email newsletter I get." -- UK
Tell your story: Provide your FreePint testimonial here:
<http://www.freepint.com/testimonial.htm>
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Join the Job Seekers
Information-related jobs at Jinfo can put you in a new position by
summer. 30,000 job views last month -- search the database at:
<http://web.jinfo.com/jobs/search/>
Subscribe to the free Weekly update of the latest jobs,
plus the monthly newsletter with career tips:
<http://www.jinfo.com/subs/>
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Review
|
Plain text | PDF | Contents
"The Virtual Reference Handbook: Interview and Information Delivery
Techniques for the Chat and E-mail Environments"
Written by Diane Kovacs
Reviewed by Laura Suttell
Looks can be deceiving. This thin paperback volume opened my eyes to
the challenges of providing reference service by what I formerly
thought of as 'non-traditional means'. I have seen the present, and,
thanks to Diane Kovacs, I'm not afraid.
"The Virtual Reference Handbook" is organised into four main sections;
the first, entitled 'Technical, Communications, and Reference Skills
and Knowledge for Virtual Reference Librarians', stresses the
importance of the reference interview and compares the processes used
for face-to-face, chat and e-mail interviews. I was glad to see that
the reference interview is still the starting point for helping
patrons in the virtual world.
While I receive about a third of my daily reference queries by e-mail,
I now realise I'm actually not participating in virtual reference. I
have the flexibility to pick up the phone, or, in some cases, meet
face-to-face with a patron. Kovacs discusses ways to communicate with
patrons by chat or e-mail, letting them know the librarian is paying
attention to their questions during the virtual reference interview,
since non-verbal forms of communication, such as eye contact and
gestures, are missing in virtual reference.
What I like most about this book is its organisation and emphasis on
practising until you're comfortable with the many skills that
contribute to providing virtual reference. I mentioned the book is
broken into four main sections above, but each one has a section on
competencies, questions and answers with eight librarians currently
providing virtual reference, self-assessment activities, and a list of
reference and recommended reading.
Technical competencies are as important as reference skills, and
Kovacs provides links for Web-based learning activities. How do you
make it on the West End? Practise. The same is true for virtual
reference. Librarians need to be adept at attaching and sending files
by e-mail, using toolbars and plugs-ins, and scanning documents to
send to patrons.
Chapter 3, 'Practice and Expand Communication Skills and Knowledge for
the Virtual Reference Interview', certainly builds on the material in
previous chapters. Again, Kovacs interviews seasoned virtual reference
providers, asking them to share their 'bad' chat interview stories and
lessons learned. She lists Web-based tutorials to improve
communication skills and provides information on professional
discussion lists and blogs for librarians using virtual reference. She
and her fellow librarians consider the uses of emoticons and chat
styles, and the author gives a list of common chat and e-mail
abbreviations.
The final part of this true handbook focuses on maintaining and
building reference skills and knowledge. Librarians need to have a
full toolbox of core reference resources and be able to guide and
instruct patrons in the use of these materials, whether they are
electronic or print. There are many thought-provoking quotes, which I
won't re-type here, that made me smile and nod to myself. I like the
fact that Kovacs includes references to journal articles, papers and
books throughout this title. If I come away from reading this book
with only one thought, it would be 'remember why you became a
reference librarian, way back when' and, with some practice and
informal training, the pieces will fall into place.
Laura Suttell has been a reference librarian at Phillips Lytle, in
Buffalo, NY, since 2001. She received her MLS degree from the State
University of New York at Buffalo in 1994 and serves as a board member
and grants committee coordinator for her local chapter of the American
Association of Law Libraries. Suttell is also the Buffalo coordinator
for the Special Libraries Association's Upstate New York Chapter. She
has assisted in planning the 2007 Northeast Regional Law Libraries
Meeting - Libraries Without Borders II, and is looking forward to this
event, happening this October in Toronto.
Related FreePint links:
Related links:
Propose an information-related book or resource for review today. Send
details to Monique Cuvelier, editor of FreePint <editor@freepint.com>.
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Feature Article
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Plain text | PDF | Contents
"Search Trails: Back to the Future"
By Nigel Hamilton
Humans are great at discovering new things, but not always so good at
remembering how we found them. Since the first caveman discovered
fire, the knowledge has been passed down through the ages. In a way
we've all been touched by that first flame and the idea of it is still
burning.
Fire was a fantastic discovery, but human language is our best
discovery yet as a way of infecting others with new ideas. With
language we can pass more than DNA on to the next generation: we can
pass on discoveries too.
But spoken language is ephemeral ('Sorry, how do I make it spark
again? I can't hear properly; The Neanderthals are shouting.') So
humankind came up with ways of fossilizing our ideas into written
symbols on various media: cave walls, stone tablets, papyrus scrolls,
books and more recently 1GB memory sticks.
Bringing order to chaos
The Internet is a massive archaeological pile of fossilized ideas. But
armed with an average query of 2.5 keywords and Google, we can still
dive into the pile and come out relatively unscathed. But for how
long? The pile of information is growing and growing. According to the
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), there are 1,173 million Internet
users as of June 2007, compared with 938 million two years ago.
Currently Google only crawls part of the pile. Vast tracts of valuable
information reside in topic-specific search engines out of the Google
crawler's reach.
The Google PageRank algorithm <http://www.google.com/technology/>
tries to bring order to some of the pile by ranking Web pages:
'Google provides its views on pages' relative importance,' according
to the Google website. But the polarity of PageRank is still skewed
in favour of the publishers. PageRank is conferred by Web publishers
to other Web publishers in the form of referral links - not by users.
Consequently Web publishers, ably assisted by an army of search engine
optimisers (SEOs), are playing Google's PageRank for profit. The
raison d'etre of SEOs is to create optimally relevant pages tuned to
the Google algorithm so their clients' pages appear high in Google's
results. Although these pages appear relevant they lack a crucial
ingredient: authority.
It was 'authority' conferred by referral links that propelled Google's
PageRank to be the premier retrieval algorithm for the Web, and it is
authority that is ebbing away as the SEOs and Web publishers take
control of their position in Google's results by manipulating
PageRank.
Power to the people
We need a system of Darwinian information selection where the users,
not publishers, decide the best answer for a given query. Shouldn't
users be given more authority in deciding what is, or isn't relevant?
Social search provides this by determining the relevance of search
results in accordance with actual usage.
Every day millions of people search the Web and apply human intellect
to making search discoveries, yet this effort is mostly wasted. The
pile grows and grows but remains untouched by the humans sifting
through it. The promise of social search is to harness this communal
effort for the good of all. But how can we bring human order to the
pile?
I've been wrestling with this question for the past six years and I
believe the answer lies in the prescient vision of Dr Vannevar Bush in
his 1945 seminal paper "As We May Think"
<http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/194507/bush>. Bush describes a machine
called a Memex that augments your memory and searching powers by
helping you to create and share 'trails of association' between things
in the 'common record' (analogous to the Internet).
Back in 1945 this concept must have seemed wild but Bush successfully
predicted the future by directly influencing it. Bush inspired Ted
Nelson (hypertext), Sir Tim Berners-Lee (WWW) and many others to
realise his vision of an 'interlinked common record'. However, there
are still major parts of his functional specification missing.
Trailblazing, for example, is a crucial, yet largely overlooked part
of Bush's invention:
'There is a new profession of trail blazers, those who find delight in
the task of establishing useful trails through the enormous mass of
the common record. The inheritance from the master becomes, not only
his additions to the world's record, but for his disciples the entire
scaffolding by which they are erected.'
Trailblazing
Every day millions of people blaze search trails into the pile but
most of that search effort just goes up in smoke.
How can all this search effort be harnessed simply and unobtrusively?
Fortunately something as simple as saving and displaying a search
trail can capture the association between human search desire and its
satisfaction.
Let me give you a personal example. I spent my first five years at the
University of Queensland in Australia trudging from the car park
(known then as the Dust Bowl) up a winding path to lectures. The
winding path, colloquially called the Goat Trail, was etched into the
grass thanks to the collective unconscious of all the students rushing
to lectures - a planner could not have designed a more optimal route.
Around November each year the Goat Trail would inexplicably change
route - it suddenly diverted around a large pair of jacaranda trees.
The jacaranda trees at the university flower beautifully and smell
even better, but local legend has it that they are deadly to students
- especially around exam time. The legend warns that if a jacaranda
flower lands on your head you're certain to fail your exams. New
students who had never heard of the brain-busting jacaranda flower
were spared failure thanks to following the Goat Trail. I remember
marvelling at the high technology of a simple path on the ground. It
was, in essence, a meme-filtering machine.
The Goat Trail actively encoded the association between search desire
and the destination (lecture hall) and was malleable enough to move
with the times (watch out for those flowers). A similar system is
required for Web search. Who needs all that fancy AJAX-ian widgetry on
the Web? Search engines just need to provide a simple system of way-
finding - we can trust humans to do the rest.
A trail is a simple method of showing the way. On the Web a search
trail begins with a search engine, typically 2.5 keywords, a sequence
of clicks and ends hopefully, but not always, at a relevant result.
Over time the association between a search keyword (desire) and its
most traversed destination becomes stronger. This is analogous to
human memory. Each time a memory trail is traversed the synaptic gaps
fire between neurons and the engram, or unconscious memory, is
reinforced. The more times this trail of neurons fires the stronger
the memory becomes. If it fires less frequently, the memory fades.
Saving memory lane
The real achievement of human memory is not what we remember but what
we forget. Everyday life is full of forgettable factoids and our
memory does a great job of filtering them out. Shouldn't search
engines do the same?
Despite what the publishers say a lot of the pile is worth forgetting,
and we need a system that behaves just like human memory on a communal
scale.
I believe large-scale trailblazing can act like a global search
memory: reinforcing but also fading the associations between search
desires (keywords) and destinations (URLs).
Vannevar Bush lamented the 'artificiality of indexing' and hoped that
'selection by association, rather than indexing, may yet be
mechanised'. I hope so too. The time has come for a pure interaction
layer that sits above the Web and acts as an associative lens that can
burn trails through the pile.
It's time to let the users leave their mark on the pile - not just
publishers. There is a simple democratic truth to a physical trail in
the grass - it's transparent, open and honest. Millions of micro-
discoveries are made every day and we have the means to pass them on
to each other - search trails offer a simple way for us to do it.
Nigel Hamilton is the CEO and mastermind behind Trexy.com. Trexy
enables users to remember and share their search discoveries on the
Web by creating search trails. Nigel initially developed Turbo10.com's
'Deep Net' metasearch technology for connecting to search engines in
the 'invisible Web' or Deep Net. Based on this Deep Net technology
Nigel invented a way of sharing search trails. Prior to establishing
Trexy.com and its sister search engine Turbo10.com, Nigel worked as an
intellectual property barrister and information systems lecturer.
Nigel holds a Bachelor and Masters in Information Technology
(BinfTech, MInfSys) and a Masters of Law (LLM) in intellectual
property. He is an active member of the British Computer Society
(MBCS).
Related FreePint links:
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A look back at what FreePint covered at this time in previous years:
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Forthcoming
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FREEPINT FORTHCOMING ARTICLES [Provisional]
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