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Content provided by Beth Patin, Dave Lankes, & Mike Eisenberg, Beth Patin, Dave Lankes, and Mike Eisenberg. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Beth Patin, Dave Lankes, & Mike Eisenberg, Beth Patin, Dave Lankes, and Mike Eisenberg or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Library & information science for decades has focused on the “user” perspective in systems and services. This includes HCI (human-computer interaction), interfaces, features in search and catalog systems, and ways of improving services (e.g., online/chat reference, maker spaces, events). We provide systems, resources, and services and users use them. Furthermore, "users (or customers) know best," so we should develop and improve systems primarily through user feedback.
But maybe it’s time to move on from piecemeal innovations or improvements for customers, and consider people as whole persons and their places in "community." A customer orientation implies short-term interactions while people in communities are there for the long haul. In this episode, the Libraries Lead team considers this alternative approach and discusses what this might look like for all types of libraries as well as the major information and social media systems used extensively today.

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49 episodes