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In an earlier post, Brian Light asked "Who is the person or group, that we really need to cater to in the future?"
One such group consists of users who are outside the library: in campus offices or labs, in off-campus locations, or just walking around with mobile devices. This includes a large proportion of our users, often the same people who are helping us realize the vision of the electronic library when they use our licensed full-text article databases, e-journals, sound/image databases, etc. In business terms, such folks are prime customers of our most expensive resources.
When we call these people "remote users," it puts them immediately in the wrong frame. As Anne Lipow remarked, "rather than thinking of ourselves as remote, we should instead recognize that we are remote from our users. We need to change how we do business to link us back together - this time on their turf."
We already offer a number of services to users outside the library, but these are not unified organizationally or philosophically, and are implemented in various, sometimes offhand ways. What would "new directions" in this area look like?
Follow up:
Here are some ways we could cater to users outside the library:
Are some of these items already well handled? Are some mis-stated? Are there others we should be thinking of? Would all this take some changes in the organization or staff allocations to accomplish in a really first-class way? Or should we actually not worry so much about the "remote" user? Comments welcome!