Everything is a Service: New Perspectives on Assessing the Library Using Service Design

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Everything is a Service: New Perspectives on Assessing the Library Using Service

Design

Michigan Library Association Academic Libraries 2016

Joe J. Marquez, Reed College Library

Three Inspirations

• The Need

• The Article

• The Quote

The Need

To understand how space and resources are being used.

Credit: http://romancestudies.unc.edu/files/2016/02/fondoquijote.jpg

Credit: https://armedrobbery.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/thejerk.jpg

The Article

Bell, G., & Kaye, J. (2002). Designing Technology for Domestic Spaces: A Kitchen Manifesto. Gastronomica: The

Journal of Food and Culture, 2(2), 46–62. http://doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2002.2.2.46

Credit: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/06/F._Taylor_1856-1915.jpg

Credit: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/30/Cyclogram_Gastev_TSIT.jpg

Credit: Christine Frederick’s diagram of efficient and inefficient kitchens. From The New Housekeeping: Efficiency Studies in the Home Management (New York: Doubleday, 1913).

The Article

Bell, G., & Kaye, J. (2002). Designing Technology for Domestic Spaces: A Kitchen Manifesto. Gastronomica: The

Journal of Food and Culture, 2(2), 46–62. http://doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2002.2.2.46

The Quote

“It must constantly be borne in mind that the object being worked on is going to be ridden in, sat upon, looked at, talked into, activated, operated, or in some way used by people individually or en masse. If the point of contact between the product and people becomes a point of friction, then the designer has failed. If, on the other hand, people are made safer, more comfortable, more desirous of purchase, more efficient — or just plain happier — by contact with the product, then the designer has succeeded.”

- Henry Dreyfuss, Industrial DesignerCredit: Dreyfuss, H. (1950). The Industrial Designer and the Businessman. Harvard Business Review, 28(6), 77–85.

Credit: Dreyfuss, H. (2003). Designing for people. New York: Allworth Press.

Service Design, a definition

“Service design is a holistic, co-creative, and user-centered approach to understanding customer behavior for the creation or refining of

services” (Marquez & Downey, 2015, para. 5)

The Case for Service Design

Inherited Ecology

Libraries are Tightly Coupled Systems

From the User’s Perspective, Everyone is a Librarian

Understanding User Needs and Expectations

The Inherited Ecology

Libraries are Tightly Coupled Systems

“A system is a set of things interconnected in such a way that they produce their own pattern of behavior over time.” (p.2)

“Once we see the relationship between structure and behavior, we can begin to understand how systems work, what makes them produce poor results, and how to shift them into better behavior patterns.” (p.1)

Donella Meadows, Thinking in Systems

Meadows, D. H. (2008). Thinking in systems : a primer. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Credit: http://uprightkreteworks.com/sites/default/files/pictures_before_after/4silos-before-demolition.jpg

Credit: Marquez, J. J., & Downey, A. (2016). Library Service Design: A LITA Guide to Holistic Assessment, Insight, and Improvement. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Patron Journey, Visualized

Patron Journey, Synthesized

From the User’s Perspective

Needs and Expectations

Needs and Expectations

Needs and Expectations

Needs are things we think will help us accomplish a task

Expectations are assumptions of how something should (re)act in certain situations

What is a Service?

Services are these intangible, co-created exchanges that cannot be

possessed.

They can only be “experienced, created, or participated in.”

Services are experiences. UX is more than just the UI.

Everything is a service.

Shostack, G. L. (1982). How to design a service. European Journal of Marketing, 16(1), 49–63. p.49

Anatomy of Services

Context

Purpose and Function

Interaction

Inability to be Possessed

Time

Everything is a Service

“Every step is a potential place.”

Credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/iamdavidlowry/4479175632/

Moore, C. W., & Keim, K. P. (2004). You have to pay for the public

life: selected essays of Charles W. Moore. Cambridge, Mass.;

London: MIT.

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Where Do Services Happen?

Credit: http://www.shorpy.com/files/images/Untitled-11.jpg

Why Does This Matter?

Services do not operate in a vacuum, but rather in tandem with other established services.

Services are part of larger things called systems or ecologies.

Services matter.

Credit: http://www.rosa-lux.fr/wp-content/uploads/adam-smith.jpg

Services as Unproductive Labor“...labour of a menial servant, on the contrary, adds to the value of nothing”“In the same class must be ranked, some both of the gravest and most important, and some of the most frivolous professions: churchmen, lawyers, physicians, men of letters of all kinds; players, buffoons, musicians, opera-singers, opera-dancers, &c.”

- Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations, Book II, Chapter III

Service Design Mindset

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence• Focus on User Needs and Expectations

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence• Focus on User Needs and Expectations• Holistic

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence• Focus on User Needs and Expectations• Holistic• Empathetic

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence• Focus on User Needs and Expectations• Holistic• Empathetic• Open minded, No Devil’s Advocate

Service Design Mindset• Co-Creative• Making the Intangible Tangible• Confirming with Evidence• Focus on User Needs and Expectations• Holistic• Empathetic• Open minded, No Devil’s Advocate• A Willingness to Evolve

Phases of Service Design

Phases of Service Design

• Pre-Work Pre-Work

Phases of Service Design

• Pre-Work

• Observation

Pre-Work

Observa

tio

n

Phases of Service Design

• Pre-Work

• Observation

• Understanding/Thinking

Pre-Work

Observa

tio

n

Understanding

/ Thinking

Phases of Service Design

• Pre-Work

• Observation

• Understanding/Thinking

• Implementing

Imple

mentin

g

Pre-Work

Observa

tio

n

Understanding

/ Thinking

Phases of Service Design

• Pre-Work

• Observation

• Understanding/Thinking

• Implementing

• Maintenance and Continuing Feedback Loop

Imple

mentin

g

Pre-Work

Observa

tio

n

Understanding

/ Thinking

Service Design, in action

Goal• Understand how students use the physical library and library services/resources.

Scope• Defined by College Librarian• Changed and refined over time to focus more on space usage

Timeline• Two+ years• Plan in fall / implement in spring / data analysis and report writing in summer

Two groups• Library User Experience Group (LUX) = staff• Student advisory group = users

SD @ Reed, Year 1

Assess space usage (SUMA + Gate counts)• Once each semester• What questions do you have?• What will you do with the data?

Create student advisory group4 meetings with student advisory group

• Pre-survey• Service discussion• Scenarios• Journaling• Customer journeys• Reference desk prototype• Website review

Analyze data and write final report

ScenariosA student is looking to find a book. She has a call number on a slip of paper and is looking at the map by the Reference Desk. A librarian sits at the desk.

Journaling

Journaling, synthesized

Prototyping

Prototyping

Blueprinting

SD @ Reed, Year 2

Turning the tables….adding student advisers to Library User Experience Group

• Students create, plan, and run focus groups• 2-3 meetings as whole team to develop plan and questions• Students volunteered for roles• Marketing /recruiting participants• Facilitators• Note takers / helpers• Analysis (if time)

What did we learn from our students?

• students are creatures of habit• wayfinding• culture of the library• hierarchy• library spaces are consecrated spaces• naming conventions• additional services: refilling stations, printing, better website• chairs, uneven• small repairs needed throughout library

What did we learn about the process?

• Plan early• Test often• Get buy-in early• Communicate about the process – explain what you are doing and

what you are NOT doing• Don’t be afraid to ask questions• Leave all preconceived notions about your students (users) at the

door – approach the process with an open mind

Next Steps

• Owning Service Design

• Making Assessment Something We Do, and Not Something We Tried

• Understanding How to Influence Change (C = ABD > X)

Any Questions?

???

Thank you!

Joe Marqueze: jmarquez@reed.edu

t: @joughm

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