08.06.08

Change is difficult, but not impossible

Posted in Mangement tagged , , , , , at 11:10 pm by andreak64

My technical services department has faced more changesin the last ten months than we’ve had in most of the fifteen years I’ve worked there. Since last September, we’ve tried to retool our work flow, cross-train staff, move materials through the department faster, outsource some work, and evaluate the work of our outsourcing vendors. Then this summer we lost a staff person to retirement, we’ve started RFID tagging all new materials, we’re evaluating digital project management software and later this month, we’re going to be changing hundreds of the internal codes we use to identify our shelf locations.

Amidst all of these changes, I’ve tried to simplify our cataloging and processing procedures, but with limited success. A consultant and three outsourcing vendors have told us our cataloging and processing procedures are complex– and they were right! But changing old ways of doing things is tough, if not downright impossible at times. My challenge is to define the problem areas, research possible solutions, and determine costs for continuing doing things as we’ve done them. Before stopping or changing any of our procedures, I need to ask our public services staff for their input on making specific changes. There’s nothing worse than making a decision without good information to back it up, then reversing that same decision because it wasn’t well-thought-out to begin with. It can be embarrassing– and definitely not good management practice.

The final step is selling my staff on the proposed changes. This is the ultimate challenge, especially when they probably feel like nothing is sacred any more. I know my own first thoughts when hearing of impending change are: ”What’s wrong with the way I’m (we’re) doing it? It works fine the way it is. Why change?” I know these thoughts run through their heads too, so I’m trying to be sympathetic to their discomfort and fears surrounding change. But I believe they may be more willing to implement changes if they understand the reasons behind them.

One thing’s for sure– the only library science management class I took never mentioned I would have to develop research, sales, and persuasion skills if I was going to be an effective manager. Nor did it mention I would need a dash of psychology sprinkled over everything in order to manage people and processes. Change is difficult, but not impossible.

02.05.08

Change and new routines

Posted in Uncategorized tagged , , , at 9:04 pm by andreak64

I was delivering a truck of books to the processing side of the department today when I began thinking about the impact of change and how it forces us to create new routines. I was looking at the empty shelves and reflecting on how their contents have now been shifted to book trucks of various sizes. Nearly everyone in the department has had to deal with changes in their job duties, priorities, or workflow since the consultant’s visit last September. Some have given up duties or procedures while others have added new ones.

I think one of the toughest things about adapting to change is creating new routines and making them a part of your workday. Take, for example, the changes that resulted from outsourcing our authority control. Mary used to spend hours every day and week manually checking new headings as they were reported in Millennium. Now I’m the one handling daily authority control of new headings.

I’ve had to create a new routine where I send Marcive a file of bibliographic records with new headings. In return, I receive a file of changed records, which I have to load back into our system. In the early stages of this new routine, I either forgot to send the file every day or I sent it in a panic just minutes before the 2 pm cutoff time (thank goodness Marcive is located in San Antonio, TX, where they’re on Central time with us). Then I was forgetting to retrieve files from Marcive’s FTP server, and I lost one because it expired. It wasn’t worth the price (both in time and money) to try to recreate it and send it out again. I had to get over it.

Mary is relieved her daily grind of manual authority work is greatly reduced (she now works on reports generated when I load monthly files of new and updated authority records). The authority workload has shifted in part to me, yet is not done in the same way as it was before, so the workload isn’t the same. Mary and I are adjusting to changes in our daily routines and I will soon be creating new authority workflows for her. Too bad we didn’t make these changes years ago.