Go team!
Worthwhile user research goes beyond simple audience segmentation. It’s valuable to know, for instance, that 57 percent of your cardholders are female. But it is even more valuable to know about the behaviors, motivations, and needs of these people. Learning about our users is an act of respect. Chances are, however, your library doesn’t have a dedicated User Experience department in charge of research. That’s okay. Your library is filled with people who like to do research and are trained to do it well. Do keep in mind, though, that it is pointless to have them deliver research recommendations that will end up on a shelf unread. You don’t have to cede complete control of the library to your researchers, but you shouldn’t bother assembling a crack team of library user researchers if you’re going to ignore their hard work. Conversely, your library user research team shouldn’t act like know-it-alls as they proceed. Ideally, you’ll identify people all across your organization to be on the user research team because this helps create broad buy-in. If your library’s organizational environment resembles a landscape of silos, this can be a way of getting different departments talking and understanding and learning from one another.Observing patrons
Once you’ve got a good cross-section of library interests represented, give your team a first assignment. I suggest having them organize a modified version of what’s known as a contextual inquiry exercise. Contextual inquiry is a method used to gather data about users and how they interact with a product; it’s “contextual” because it takes place not in a testing lab but in a location where the product will actually be used. In this case, we want to watch people use the library. Work with managers to give staff 30 minutes to sit somewhere in the library and observe patrons. Anything is fair game: watch people enter the building, use the self-check machine, approach the reference desk, set up to study, or use the photocopier, etc. Have staff record patrons’ behaviors and any apparent body language, but hold off on analysis at this point. The first few lines of a report from someone observing photocopier use might look like this:We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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