51
MARKETING THE LIBRARY Presented by Philip Blake Australian School Library Association Inc.

Marketing the library

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Marketing the library

MARKETING THE LIBRARY

Presented byPhi l ip Blake

Australian School Library Association Inc.

Page 2: Marketing the library

Australian School Library Association Inc.

Housekeeping

Sue JohnstonASLA Board DirectorChair ASLA

ProfessionalLearning Project Team

Facilitator for this webinar

Housekeeping:Participation optionsAttendee control

panelQuestion facilityPost-webinar

informationFuture PL events

2

Page 3: Marketing the library

Australian School Library Association Inc.

3

Questions

Orange link to see Question Box

Questions and Comments here

Page 4: Marketing the library

‘I trust a good deal to common fame, as we all must. If a man has good corn or wood, or boards, or pigs, to sell, or can make better chairs or knives, crucibles or church organs, than anybody else, you will find a broad hard-beaten road to his house, though it be in the woods.’—Ralph Waldo Emerson

Page 5: Marketing the library

A better mousetrap

‘Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door.’

Page 6: Marketing the library

‘The world will beat a path to your door…’

Page 7: Marketing the library

No it won’t.

The only way the world will beat a path to your door is if you tell them about the better mousetrap behind the door.

This applies to libraries too. It doesn’t matter how good you are, or how

innovative the library is; if you don’t tell people about it, nobody except the regular users will know or care.

Page 8: Marketing the library

How to tell the world

Your library needs to be in the public eye. There are plenty of ways to get it in the public eye:

Send out a regular newsletterFind out what themes the teachers are

working on, and talk to them about how the library can help.

Set up displays and advertise them.Organise competitionsGet guests or speakers into the library

Page 9: Marketing the library

How to tell the world (2)

Keep up with current affairs, make the library topical – and advertise it.

Have a ‘library opinion’ about everything in the school – and publicise it.

Offer the library as a venue for school eventsTake the library on the road – go with kids on

excursions, or put together an outdoor library event.

If nothing is happening –Make something happen.

Page 10: Marketing the library

You need to be creative

You need to be creative

Page 11: Marketing the library

How to tell the world (3)

If you’re not creative, get the help of people who are. (Lots of kids are creative.)

When you want to do something different, don’t listen to people who say either:

‘That won’t work – it’s never been done before’ (and they do say things like that) OR

‘We tried that and it didn’t work’.

Page 12: Marketing the library

Key facts

FEATURES AND BENEFITS, PROBLEMS AND OPPORTUNITIES, COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES

Page 13: Marketing the library

Ask yourself these questions

What are the library’s main resources?What can the library do for its users?

(WIIFM)What is the library’s main problem?Can you turn that problem into an

opportunity?Where is the library ahead of the

competition, and where is it behind them?Who or what is the library’s competition?

Page 14: Marketing the library

Positioning

VERSUS AT LEAST TWO MAJOR COMPETITORS

Page 15: Marketing the library

Positioning: ‘The one that…’

Positioning simply means placing yourself in relation to major competitors.

So first you need to find out who or what your competition is.

If people aren’t using the library, what are they doing? That activity is your competition.

It’s not your library versus another library.

Page 16: Marketing the library

Who or what is the competition?

If people are not coming to the library, what are they doing?

Page 17: Marketing the library

The competition

Are they doing nothing?

And can you provide them with a more comfortable environment to do nothing?

Click icon to add picture

Page 18: Marketing the library

The competition

Are they texting or playing games?

And can you text to them?

Click icon to add picture

Page 19: Marketing the library

The competition

Are they being too busy?

Note the difference between ‘Are they too busy?’ and ‘Are they being too busy?’

Click icon to add picture

Page 20: Marketing the library

Positioning

Whatever they are doing instead of using the library, you need to tell them that ‘The library is the place where…’(for example)

You get the answers It’s warm You will be safe It’s fun We can do some of the work for you

That’s positioning. Decide on your own positioning statement.

Page 21: Marketing the library

Key communication

IF YOU COULD ONLY SAY ONE THING, WHAT WOULD IT BE?

Page 22: Marketing the library

One thing

If you only had ten seconds in which to tell someone why they should use the library, what would you say?

(N.B. This is one of the most important questions you need to ask yourself. From this comes a consistent message that you can hammer home with every communication.)

Page 23: Marketing the library

Target audience

Who are your targets? Students? Teachers? Heads of department? Parents? The Principal? Visiting specialists? Others? All of the above?

Page 24: Marketing the library

Preach to the converted

Never use the library

Always use the library

Hardly ever use the library

Sometimes use the library

Page 25: Marketing the library

Target Audience

Your audience is different people at different times. But don’t forget that you are really only speaking to one person at a time. Others will see your message, but they only read it one at a time. So be personal, be direct, as if they were in the room with you (which is what you want to achieve anyway.)

And the principal is a primary target. Because the principal has the power of life and death over the library. So whatever you’re doing, make sure the principal knows about it. Unless something goes wrong, in which case create a diversion.

Page 26: Marketing the library

Promise

WHAT WILL THE LIBRARY DO FOR ITS CONSUMER BETTER/MORE THAN ITS

COMPETITORS?

Page 27: Marketing the library

Promise

‘Promise, large promise, is the soul of advertising.’ Samuel Johnson

Click icon to add picture

Page 28: Marketing the library

Promise

What can you promise? It isn’t just a library. It’s what the library can do. Make a list of what the library can do for its visitors – both the regulars and those who are not using it at the moment.

Remember also that it does different things for different people.

Page 29: Marketing the library

Promise

‘We are not here to sell a parcel of boilers and vats, but the potentiality of growing rich beyond the dreams of avarice.’

Samuel Johnson

Click icon to add picture

Page 30: Marketing the library

Examples of promisesIt can get you out of the rain; it’s warm, cosy, comfortable…

Click icon to add picture

Page 31: Marketing the library

Examples of promises

You should be able to find what you want

Click icon to add picture

Page 32: Marketing the library

Examples of promises

It’s fun

Click icon to add picture

Page 33: Marketing the library

Examples of promises

The school pets like it here.

(If you haven’t read Dewey the Library Cat I suggest you do. I’m not a cat lover but I found it an enchanting story.)

Page 34: Marketing the library

Supporting evidence

WHAT PROOF CAN YOU OFFER THAT YOU CAN DELIVER WHAT YOU ARE PROMISING?

Page 35: Marketing the library

Supporting evidence examples

Take surveys from people you have helped. Ask them what the library has done for them, and then use their responses as testimonials.

Page 36: Marketing the library

Supporting Evidence

‘He wasn’t interested in South America – but he had a one-track mind about

soccer. The library showed him the other sides of both soccer and South America!’

Page 37: Marketing the library

Supporting evidence

‘I didn't know how many different ways to search there were…’

Page 38: Marketing the library

Supporting evidence‘In the last month, the library has had 1000 visitors. There must be something here worth doing! ’

Click icon to add picture

Page 39: Marketing the library

Tone and style

HOW DO YOU WANT THE LIBRARY TO COME ACROSS? IS IT FRIENDLY AND

WELCOMING? IS THERE A LOT OF LAUGHTER? IS IT A PLACE FOR SERIOUS STUDY ONLY? WHATEVER IT IS, THAT’S

HOW YOU WRITE ABOUT IT.

Page 40: Marketing the library

Net take-out

HOW OR WHAT DO YOU WANT PEOPLE TO THINK ABOUT THE LIBRARY?

Page 41: Marketing the library

Net take-out

Examples: ‘I didn’t know you could do that in a library.’ ‘That’s cool.’ ‘Not just for nerds, then.’ Well, if they’re going, I’ll go.’ ‘That looks interesting.’ ‘What they do on Tuesdays at lunchtime looks like

fun.’

Page 42: Marketing the library

Desired consumer response

WHAT DO YOU WANT THEM TO DO AS A RESULT OF YOUR COMMUNICATION?

Page 43: Marketing the library

Desired consumer response

Examples:Make the library the first port of callAttend an eventTake a tourSee a displayHear a speakerEnjoy what you send themOr even: Stay out of the library while it’s

being repainted

Page 44: Marketing the library

AIDA

When writing advertisements, the simple formula is ‘AIDA.’

Attract AttentionArouse InterestCreate DesireAsk for ActionAnd everything you send out of the library by any

medium is an advertisement for the library. A side issue is that the most effective advertising of all is word of mouth. So make sure you are delivering what you promise.

Page 45: Marketing the library

Attract attention

REMEMBER THE MOUSETRAP, AND REMEMBER YOUR COMPETITION. BEFORE YOU CAN DO ANYTHING WITH PEOPLE’S ATTENTION, YOU HAVE TO ATTRACT IT.

Page 46: Marketing the library

Arouse interest

Now that you have their attention, give them a reason to read on.

Page 47: Marketing the library

Create desire

You’re trying to sell something. Make them want it.

Page 48: Marketing the library

Ask for action

It’s incredible how frequently advertising writers forget to tell people what they want them to do. People are very much more likely to do what you want if you ask them to do it.

(Salesmen call this ‘closing the sale’; it’s the moment when you ask them to commit.) We may not be able to ‘close the sale’, but we can open the way.

Page 49: Marketing the library

And if you get stuck…

If you are scratching around for ideas and coming up with nothing

If you’re getting fed up If you’re feeling lost If you think the library is becoming a poor

relation…

Page 50: Marketing the library

Read your way out of trouble!

The internet is full of advice about how to market your library.

Page 51: Marketing the library

Australian School Library Association Inc.

Post-webinar information

Certificate of attendancewill be emailed

Membership information is available athttp://www.asla.org.au/membership.aspx

Future Webinars http://www.asla.org.au/Professional-learning/webinars.aspx

Follow ASLA on Twitterhttps://twitter.com/aslanational

Like us on Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/ASLAOnline

51