Matt,

Our library's website is visually and navigationally part of the larger 
university website, but housed on its own server. We are under the "Academics" 
tab in the "Centers of learning" block along with the writing center, community 
service office, etc. Being part of the larger university framework makes it 
easy to navigate folks to our website. Being visually part of the university 
website has its advantages and disadvantages. It ties us in visually and makes 
us clearly part of the university website, but it also dictates a lot of our 
design features. We have a push-pull relationship with the "sales-oriented" 
approach of the university website -- a while back we were told that the 
library website was too oriented toward doing work and not enough toward 
advertising the awesomeness of the university. We have tried to include a bit 
more selling-the-awesomeness without sacrificing the utility (heavens forfend!) 
of the website.

Having our own server is usually a great advantage to us. It does mean that we 
have to do some extra legwork to keep ourselves integrated with the rest of the 
website, but it also gives us a lot of latitude to develop new services and 
create a pretty broad infrastructure. It is in part a legacy of the late 90s 
when the library had one of the first web developers on campus. We've sometimes 
had to fight to keep our independence, the complexity of a library website 
really requires some dedicated attention in a way that could not be expected of 
an external department with different mission priorities. 

We do have a minimal presence in the student portal -- basically a link to the 
"ask a question" form and a login link for the OPAC/Circulation Record/"what do 
I have checked out now" page. If I had another person to work on it, I would 
love to develop more integration with the portal -- but not at the expense of 
the larger website.

Good luck! 
Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Matthew 
Sherman
Sent: Tuesday, December 17, 2013 9:41 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Academic Library Website Question

Hi Code4Libbers,

Slightly odd question for you academic library folks.  Why does your library 
have its website where it is on the university site?  For context, the library 
I currently work at has our library site hidden within the campus 
intranet/portal, so that students have to log into a web portal to even see the 
search page.  This was a decision by the previous director who was here before 
my time and an assortment of us librarians think this is a terrible setup.  So 
I wanted to kick out to the greater community to give us good reasons for free 
to the website to more general access, or help us to understand why you would 
bury it behind a login like they did.  All thoughts, insights, and opinions are 
welcome, they all help us develop our thinking on this and our arguments for 
any changes we want to make.  Thanks everyone and have a good week.

Matt Sherman

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