1. Twitter
Anyone who has read my blog for any length of time knows I’m a total Twitter fangirl. I use it, and love it, daily. I evangelize about it! But, when I tell people how wonderful it is to have the collective mind floating through my Firefox sidebar each day, do I really do the possible useful applications of Twitter for libraries justice? Probably not, so here goes!
First, there are a lot of great posts out there about how to use Twitter in libraries. The last one (linked to the word “libraries”) even has a great explanation of what Twitter is. This is a great starting point to learn how other people use Twitter.
One great use of Twitter by a library is at LPI Library. They use it both for announcements of new books and programs, but also to contribute to the conversations that go on among the librarians using Twitter. The library ( for The Lunar and Planetary Institute) provides a lot of great information on topics within it’s specialty - it’s a handy Twitterer to follow whether you are interested in library topics or astronomical topics.
The way we (as in MRRL) use Twitter is as an announcement broadcaster that has the ability to broadcast our news to people’s cell phones, IM clients, web browsers and email clients - whichever they prefer. The way I (as in Webgoddess) use Twitter is as a water-cooler. I spend more time responding to other people in a conversational way as I do announcing what it is I’m doing. I spend as much time asking questions of the “hive mind” as I do announcing what it is I’m doing. Yes, I use it to keep my co-workers and friends apprised of what it is I’m doing with my day, but I like the social, not-quite-gossipy, but definitely chatty aspect of Twitter just as much as I do the work-related announcements of what I’m up to.
One very recent use of twitter (I blogged about it the other day) is to provide reference services via the Twitter architecture. The original idea is as a decentralized, 24/7 reference service, but it could be personalized for use in a busy library with a heavy population of cell phone users as well. Perhaps not as 24/7 service, but definitely during busy reference hours. The ability to text in reference questions is something that some libraries (Yale, for example) is doing already. Twitter would let smaller libraries offer this service without investing in the underlying architecture to handle the text messages - Twitter does that for them.
These are some of the uses that I find Twitter ideally suited for. What does your library do with Twitter? Is anyone using RSS from the catalog to populate a Twitter feed? How do you use Twitter?
March 5th, 2008 at 9:40 am
I too *love* twitter! I use their IM features most, but my library is apparently anti-technology so I only use it for personal use.
March 5th, 2008 at 11:09 am
How about a twittervangilist girl group? I am in…username “twot”
March 5th, 2008 at 1:37 pm
I’ve been able to feed new items to the twitter stream, http://twitter.com/cglibrary and see my instructions here
http://gathernodust.blogspot.com/2007/04/twitter-update-or-how-i-was-able-to.html
However, the reaction is that most people don’t like it. There are too many books and it results in noise instead of signal.
March 5th, 2008 at 2:03 pm
Jeff - thanks for the link to your twitter account! I knew about you all, but couldn’t remember exactly what the name of your library was… As for the mass of information, that’s something I worry about with our Twitter stream - for people who JUST want Bookmobile notices, they don’t care when any of the other announcements come out. I’ve considered splitting the announcements up into separate Twitter accounts - one for Bookmobile stuff, one for press releases and other announcements of programs, etc., with all of them feeding into a single “mothership” twitter account as well. That way people could decide what they want.
We don’t twitter our books, however, so I may be completely uninformed about this - but splitting out the books into genres may ease the noise factor. This may not be possible with your workflow, but it’s one way to handle overloading folks if it is possible!
March 5th, 2008 at 2:25 pm
That is what I thought when I first started doing this. I could set up another account for the library and then make the streams specific. I found it was difficult to create a separate account since it is tied to the email address. Unless I wanted to establish several different email accounts for each twitter account, I would be out of luck. Furthermore, I can’t parse my RSS feed to genre, subject, or age. I would have to do it manually. I am investigating changing it so it reads that way, but it is very time consuming. Just sending the new books to rss requires almost no interaction. Just set it up and it goes by itself. As long as we don’t have an extremely busy day cataloging, it isn’t too bad. Over time, people don’t like it. Thanks for your response. There are a lot of ways to use twitter, but I believe small and targeted will work best. How to do that is the $64,000 question.