Wednesday, 17 June 2020

Strategy or set dressing?

A conversation I had in another place reminded me of all the effort that used to go into writing strategy documents and annual plans that sat on shelves collecting dust until someone important asked if there was a strategy or annual plan.

A strategy isn't a document, it's a direction of travel.
  • Do people know what the strategy is, and why?
  • Do plans align with the strategy, or at least acknowledge and explain any deviation from the strategy?
  • Does the operation align with the strategy, or at least acknowledge and explain any deviation from the strategy?
  • Is the strategy regularly reviewed to make sure it's fit for purpose, delivers what is required and doesn't incur undue costs and risks?
  • Is the strategy regularly revised to reflect changes in stakeholder requirements, technical developments, new opportunities,and  changes in the operating environment?

If the answer to these isn't "Yes" then you don't have a strategy, you have a theatrical prop. Like painting books on a wall and calling it a library.



Monday, 18 May 2020

Libraries and COVID-19


IFLA provides a pretty comprehensive overview of the impact of COVID-19 on libraries and the known factors involved in returning to something like business as usual.

https://www.ifla.org/covid-19-and-libraries


Wednesday, 13 May 2020

Managing libraries in a crisis

This is an interesting conversation, not least because of the multiple external disasters the library has had to deal with.

For me this highlights the point that while operational processes can be best delivered just in time the management and governance of a line of business or a public service has to be just in case. Those risk assessments, contingency plans, fallback positions and reviews of  organisational strategies are all essential components of day-to-day business as usual.

In my experience crisis management seems to have been the norm in English public libraries for the past thirty years, even without earthquakes, shootings and pandemics. It would be good if the preparations for reopening libraries could be used not just to put together the essential tools needed for a safe and orderly resumption but also the opportunity to review how these services are structured and supported so that they don't have to be managed on adrenalin.

I'm pessimistic about this because the pressures on the limited resources available will be understandably focussed on the return to business as usual but the problem all along is that we've never established what business as usual really is or how its resilience is to be resourced.

Sunday, 10 May 2020

Baby steps out of lockdown.

Resuming business after closing a service — particularly after an unexpected closure — is always more work than the closing was. There are all the consequences of the closure to be tidied up, all the preparations for reopening, all the things that need catching up with before it's business as usual.

And then there's the additional complication where nobody knows if it's necessarily safe to go back to business as usual. And whether or not it will stay safe. It's like working in a building where you can't be sure there's not an unexploded bomb in the cellar or that somebody won't accidentally bring one in with them.

I suspect all returning workforces will have a tricky tension between the popular idea that they've had a rest so should have plenty of energy and the exhausting reality that lockdown will have released a lot of adrenaline over an extended period without the options of fight or flight. The challenge for managers is:
  • Not to fall into the trap of making the assumption people have had a rest; 
  • Making sure staff don't fall into that trap and start beating on themselves and/or colleagues; 
  • And also watching out for their own wellbeing.
The return to business as usual needs to be treated as a managed change process.
  • Each step must be specified, planned, and have a rollback plan in case of failure. 
  • The physical and mental safety of staff and customers need to be success factors as much as much more than the delivery of intended outcomes. 
  • An essential component is transparency: being upfront right from the start that business as usual will be a while coming and that each step taken towards it is dependent on the safety of staff and customers. It's imperative that all stakeholders are told this loud and clear.
There will be a lot of pressure for a sudden abracadabra transformation back to business as usual. It is the responsibility of senior managers and politicians to resist that. (Some will resist the responsibility or even be the loudest voices demanding a swift return to the old status quo. They will be godparents to the local 2nd and 3rd pandemic spikes.)

And then, of course, there's the question of how to manage staff who've worked throughout the lockdown. They'll need a lot of help processing the experience and returning back to normal. That in itself is a significant task and may need support from external agencies. Added to that is the need to manage the relationship between those who worked through the lockdown and those who didn't, the risk of resentments ("We had to work and you didn't," "Why are they getting special treatment?" etc.) needs to be managed out.

All of this is a big management load and I'm not convinced every library service is going to have enough management resource to do this by themselves, especially as many of these issues will apply to the managers as much as the people they are managing. There will need to be a national matrix of support coming in from both library and corporate local government perspectives. I'm hoping that the various national associations, professional organisations, unions and government departments are working on resources to help local managers address both the operational issues involved in the safe resumption of services and, just as importantly, the personnel issues involved in returning back to normal business in times that are very far from normal.

Wednesday, 22 April 2020

Libraries at Home

This is a very promising piece of ongoing work by Libraries Hacked.

"Watch" pulls together podcasts and videos, "Read" is a blog feed and they're working on "Listen."

This is the sort of thing I'd hoped would have been the basis of a national digital library platform but those projects always seemed to begin and end in discussion of expensive sexy portals.

I wonder how many English library authorities still do Unity submissions. The obvious add-on to the Libraries at Home site would be a union catalogue search which could easily be done with WorldCat if the data's there to be found.

https://www.librariesathome.co.uk/

Sunday, 2 February 2020

Sustaining change

Encouraging and managing bottom-up change doesn't have the razzmatazz of a big transformation programme and looks (but not necessarily is) inefficient at the input end but the output is more efficient and sustainable. A culture of continuous small, incremental change and review is healthier and more effective than the traditional years of stasis punctuated by short periods of stress and upheaval.

Here are a couple of useful takes on this: