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Please join us for the meeting of the ALCTS Technical Services Workflow 
Efficiency Interest Group meeting at ALA Midwinter 2015.


Date: Monday, February 2

Time: 1:00-2:30 p.m.

Location: McCormick Place West, Room W176a

The Technical Services Workflow Efficiency Interest Group will be discussing 
best practices for streamlining workflows for technical services functions and 
staffing. In addition to the topics below, discussion points include adjusting 
workflows as staff increase their credentials and exploring efficiencies for 
tracking workflows with online tools.

“Taking the First Step towards Change; A Workflow Analysis of the Cataloging 
Functions at the University of Houston Libraries,” presented by Heylicken 
"Hayley" Moreno.
Institutional practices are sometimes put in place for historical reasons. 
Sometimes libraries do not even know why certain procedures are performed in a 
specific manner. With this in mind, it is important that librarians review 
current practices at their institutions. One of the first steps a librarian 
should take when analyzing their department’s functions is to perform a 
workflow analysis. A workflow analysis reviews procedures, identifies 
inefficiencies, and recommends the adoption of new practices. Performing such 
analysis can help streamline processes by making them more efficient and 
cohesive. In this presentation, participants will learn the various steps in 
workflow analysis and how these steps were applied to the Resource Description 
Unit’s workflow at the University of Houston Libraries.

“Who Catalogs What?: A Virtual Workflow for Cataloging Electronic Theses & 
Dissertations,” presented by Joshua Barton & Lucas Mak.
Managing in-house cataloging of electronic resources requires procedures 
different from existing print-based workflows. A particular challenge is the 
absence of any physical queue to drive the work. Michigan State University 
Libraries has devised a workflow for the institution’s electronic theses and 
dissertations (ETDs) that is independent of any workflows for the ETDs’ print 
counterparts, leveraging automation and cataloger expertise. We will review 
challenges and efficiencies in the steps, which include repurposing ETD 
metadata supplied by ETD authors and ProQuest, programmatically creating brief 
records via XML/XSLT in a local Fedora repository and the local ILS, enhancing 
brief records in the ILS by original catalogers using Google Sheets as a 
real-time, virtual workflow management tool, and the uptake of 
cataloger-enhanced metadata into the Fedora repository.

“Linking E-Resources Management and Metadata Works,” presented by Sherab Chen.
In a recent librarians conference focusing on e-resources management, I heard 
the buzz words of “ERM replacing cataloging.” This raised the question of what 
exactly an E-Resources Metadata Librarian’s role is in providing access and 
enhancing discovery of e-resources provided in today’s academic libraries. In 
my presentation, I would like to share some of our experiments in designing a 
more effective workflow that chains up with Acquisition and Collection 
Management, and strategies on transfer staff expertise from senior to new 
members. I will talk about how to motivate staff for stewardship in day-to-day 
works and projects. And I would be most interested in exchanging ideas with 
colleagues from other institutions in their undertakings and thinking.

“Expanding Technicians’ Work Within and Beyond the ILS: ‘Whoever Has the 
Item/Information Completes the Work’,” presented by Betty Landesman.
Silos are not limited to big departments.  When I started at University of 
Baltimore in July 2012, the two technical services technicians did either 
acquisitions or copy cataloging/physical processing of new materials, but not 
both.  Their work was limited by system – if it wasn’t done in the ILS [for 
example, electronic resources management in Serials Solutions], someone else 
did it.  Following the principle of “whoever has the item/information completes 
the work”, technicians now add items to WorldCat Lists and create invoices for 
gifts as part of cataloging; do physical processing of materials as part of 
acquisitions; and maintain journal holdings in Serials Solutions and ebooks in 
SFX.  In addition, when the acquisitions technician left in July, the check-in 
and maintenance of our print journals and the entering and receiving of orders 
in the ILS passed to the other technician.  We are now advertising for a 
library technician, without functional distinction.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Annie and Michael
Co-chairs, Technical Services Workflow Efficiency Interest Group

Annie Glerum
Head of Complex Cataloging
Florida State University
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Michael Winecoff
Associate University Librarian for Technical Services
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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