This document discusses the growing importance of user experience (UX) design in libraries. It begins by defining UX and ethnography, noting that UX goes beyond web design to include physical space design and other contexts. The document then discusses how ethnographic research methods like observation and interviews can provide deeper insights into user needs and behaviors compared to traditional surveys. It provides examples of libraries that have successfully adopted ethnographic research, including projects studying student study habits and mapping user engagement. The document argues that libraries should incorporate more qualitative and ethnographic approaches in addition to traditional quantitative metrics in order to better understand user needs and improve services.
1. Why UX in libraries
is a thing now
Andy Priestner
Cambridge Judge Business School
2. Why UX in libraries
is a thing now
Andy Priestner
Cambridge Judge Business School
• What is UX?
• Ethnography
• The Old Ways
• Adidas case study
• Library ethnography
• UX in Libraries conference
3. ‘In some quarters UX is still viewed narrowly as analysing web metrics
and web usability testing. Those are great things and necessary to
practicing UX, but UX has extended far beyond the web and so
should our conversation. We should be talking about applying UX in
physical spaces and in any other context where it might be useful.’
www.weaveux.org / Journal of Library User Experience
What is UX?
4. What is ethnography?
‘The scientific description of peoples and cultures with
their customs, habits, and mutual differences’
(OED)
‘...a practice in which researchers spend long periods
living within a culture in order to study it. The term has
been adopted within qualitative market research to
describe occasions where researchers spend time -
hours, days or weeks - observing and/or interacting with
participants in areas of their everyday lives.’
(Association for Qualitative Research)
5. • Usability
• Space design
• Service design
• User profiling/personas
• Ethnographic research
What does this broader definition
of UX include?
6. Origins of ethnography - Müller
Gerhard Friedrich Müller. Mid-1700s expedition to Kamchatka. He
differentiated Völker-Beschreibung as a distinct area of study.
7. Origins of ethnography – Bronislaw Malinowksi
Studied indigenous culture of the Trobriand Islands for several
years by living with them. Founder of ethnography as we know it.
8. Some of Malinowksi’s works
One of these books is borrowed from libraries more than others...
9. ‘The final goal is to grasp the
native’s point of view, his
relation to life, to realise his
vision of the world’
(Malinowksi, 1925)
10. But what’s this go to do with libraries?
‘The final goal is to grasp the users point of view, their relation
to research life, to realise their vision of the service’
11. Ethnographic Research
- more personal and empathic
- delves deeper
- interested in more variables
(incl. things usually ignored)
- wider context, holistic
- observation not just Q&A
- less structured
- no wrong answers
- immersive
- more interpretative
- takes time
12. So why don’t we librarians use
ethnography?
- techniques are relatively unknown
- we are wedded to The Old Ways...
13. The Old Ways
- Quantitative data
- Surveys/Questionnaires
- Hard and fast ‘true’ facts
are easier to record and
describe
- We tend to ignore (or at
least downgrade) the value
of things such as culture,
customs and habits
14. The Old Ways
- Also... we love pie charts
- And to a lesser extent bar
charts
15. Problems with surveys
- only get data from those who
take them / not representative
- closed & leading questions /
poor construction
- respondents giving answers that
survey creator wants to hear
- hidden explanations for spikes
and dips / blind interpretation
- remote and impersonal
- principally seek quantitative
rather than qualitative data
16. RIP quantitative data
and surveys?
- no, just need a more balanced approach
- ramp up qualitative approaches
- offer more than just those gaping white
empty free-text boxes
17. Rise of Corporate Ethnography (from 1990s)
Adidas and... IBM, Apple, Intel, Xerox, Microsoft, Herman Miller all
engaged in ethnographic research and/or hired ethnographers
22. Nancy Fried-Foster
2007 Undergraduate Research
Project: ‘wanted to learn about
the interplay of environments
and physical facilities in the
research and writing processes
of students. Specifically, we saw
an opportunity to learn more
about where students like to
study and why, with whom, and
when.’
Key finding: Undergraduates
do lots of academic work late at
night - led to the Night Owl
Librarians pilot, an extended
hours outreach service.
24. Photo Survey (and follow-up interviews)
1. The computer you use in the library, showing its
surroundings
2. All the stuff you take to class
3. Something that you would call “high tech”
4. Something really weird
5. One picture of the libraries to show to a new
freshman
6. Your favorite place to study
7. The place you keep your books
8. A person, any person
9. Your favorite person or people to study with
10. Something you’ve noticed that you think
others don’t notice
Lessons: different needs and personalities, willing
to share, always on-the-go
(p41, Foster & Gibbons, Studying Students, 2007)
25. Donna Lanclos
Library Ethnographer at the
J. Murrey Atkins Library at
UNC Charlotte.(The
Anthropologist in the
Stacks)
‘Visitors & Residents’
project – a new way of
mapping user engagement
with the web
Collaborative wayfinding
project (photos/interviews)
Cognitive mapping of
learning landscapes
Sleeping maps
26. Sleeping maps (from Donna Lanclos’s blog)
Sleeping happening in high traffic and quiet areas and at unexpected times.
‘Making assumptions about where students will sleep in the library based on
a) where we think they should be sleeping, or b) where we would prefer to sleep, or
even c) conventional wisdom about where students sleep, will not get you very far.’
28. Innovation & Design Team (at the UL)
• Personas (diary study, guerilla surveys, in-depth interviews)
• Research & Publishing Experience Map
29. Georgina Cronin (UX Librarian)
• Website usability testing
• Cognitive mapping of research landscapes
with faculty & researchers, and final year
undergraduates
• Observation of Information Centre space use
Ange Fitzpatrick (Deputy Librarian)
• ‘Show-me-round’ – recorded tour of
Information Centre (student giving tour to
librarian)
Ethnographic research @ Cambridge Judge
30.
31.
32. Why UX in libraries
is a thing now
Andy Priestner
Cambridge Judge Business School
Resources/Links
UX in Libraries conference: www.uxlib.org
UX in Libraries twitter: https://twitter.com/UXLibs
UK Anthrolib blog: http://ukanthrolib.wordpress.com/
The Anthropologist in the Stacks: http://atkinsanthro.blogspot.co.uk
Studying Students PDF (Fried-Foster): http://bit.ly/1ouo6io
BBC Four documentary on Malinowski: http://bit.ly/1qVP7w3
Weave UX/Journal of Library User Experience: http://weaveux.org/
33. Photo credits
Man with binoculars: http://www.flickr.com/photos/practicalowl/314989744 (CC)
Kamchatka women: http://blogs.princeton.edu/pia/personal/xinjiang/history/
Malinowski: London School of Economics and Political Science
Library user in hat: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jstar/345712329/ (CC)
Pencil questionnaire: https://www.flickr.com/photos/albertogp123/5843577306 (CC)
Pie charts: http://www.flickr.com/photos/laurenmanning/5658985469/ (CC)
Person struggling with survey: https://www.flickr.com/photos/clemsonunivlibrary/7845287468 (CC)
Cemetery: https://www.flickr.com/photos/mugley/2592160631/ (CC)
Women in conversation: http://www.flickr.com/photos/collin_key/6080864794/ (CC)
Adidas trainers: http://www.flickr.com/photos/cornyjoke/444473490/ (CC)
Woman running: https://www.flickr.com/photos/infomatique/1799996163 (CC)
Yoga class: https://www.flickr.com/photos/63045810@N00/5018250456/ (CC)
Student with bike in library: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jonastana/5568637762 (CC)
Nancy Fried-Foster: http://www.rochester.edu/currents/V40/N03/Foster.html
Disposable camera: https://www.flickr.com/photos/37227626@N00/2894263073/ (CC)
Donna Lanclos, Sleep Map, Cognitive Map: Donna Lanclos, The Anthropologist in the Stacks
Cambridge University Library: https://www.flickr.com/photos/34255186@N05/565866377 (CC)
Cambridge Judge Business School: https://www.flickr.com/photos/geoffjones/2437638720 (CC)
Georgina, Ange: Andy Priestner
UKAnthrolib screenshot: Slide 27: bit.ly/1gAYCKi (Wikimedia Commons)
UX in Libraries website: Matt Borg, Paul Jervis-Heath