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Personas: The Person Behind the Glass

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Title: Personas: The Person Behind the Glass


1
Personas The Person Behind the Glass
  • SLA Annual Conference, June 8, 2004
  • Stephen Abram, VP Innovation, Sirsi Corporation

2
Can personas help deliver great information
experiences?Designing for desktops vs.
understanding the person behind the glass
3
(No Transcript)
4
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5
Light at the End of the Tunnel
6
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7
Information Engagement Levels
Stimulate/Live
Present/Teach
Argue/Defend
Act on/ Discuss
Content Source Situation
Read/View
Dr. Thomas Davenport
8
Intelligence and Learning Styles
  • Visual/Spatial (Picture Smart)
  • Verbal/Linguistic (Word Smart)
  • Musical/Rhythmic (Music Smart)
  • Logical/Mathematical (Number Smart)
  • Bodily/Kinesthetic (Body Smart)
  • Interpersonal (People Smart)
  • Intrapersonal (Self Smart)
  • Piaget, Bloom, Gardner, etc.

9
Information Literacy
  • Standard Curriculum Components
  • Mathematics / Arithmetic
  • Science, Biology, Physics Chemistry
  • English, Languages
  • History, Geography, Politics, Sociology
  • Music, Art, Phys ed.
  • Guidance, Religion

10
Information Literacy
  • Information literacy is integrally tied every
    aspect of the curriculum
  • Mathematical logical thinking skills - Math and
    Arithmetic
  • Scientific method - Sciences
  • Criticism, interpretation and comprehension -
    English and languages
  • Analytical thinking - History, Geography
  • Interpretive and imaginative- music, art phys
    ed.
  • Inter and Intrapersonal skills - Religion,
    Guidance, etc.
  • There is an imperative for people to have a
    lifelong curriculum - a personal learning strategy

11
Taking The Knowledge Positioning
12
Personality and Searching
  • Five personality dimensions and their influence
    on information behaviour
  • Jannica Heinstrom, Abo Akademi University,
    Finland (Oct. 2003)
  • http//informationr.net/ir/9-1/paper165.html
  • Central Question How does personality influence
    searching behaviour?

13
Personality and Searching
  • Dimension
  • Neuroticism
  • Extraversion
  • Openness
  • Agreeableness
  • Conscientious
  • High Level
  • Sensitive, Nervous
  • Outgoing, energetic
  • Inventive, curious
  • Friendly, compassionate
  • Efficient, organized
  • Low Level
  • Secure, confident
  • Shy, withdrawn
  • Cautious, conservative
  • Competitive, outspoken
  • Easy-going, careless

VS
VS
VS
VS
VS
14
Sample Conclusions
  • Extraversion was related to informal information
    retrieval as well as preference for thought
    provoking documents over documents which
    confirmed previous ideas.

15
Sample Conclusions
  • Openness to experience was related to broad
    information seeking, incidental information
    acquisition, critical information judgement,
    preference of thought provoking documents instead
    of documents which confirmed previous results.
    Conservativeness was related to problems with
    relevance judgement and preference for confirming
    documents.

16
Sample Conclusions
  • Competitiveness was related to lack of time being
    a barrier to information retrieval, problems with
    relevance judgement and competence in critical
    analysis of information. Low levels of
    agreeableness forms a base for skeptical and
    critical thinking.

17
Sample Conclusions
  • Conscientiousness was related to preference for
    thought provoking documents instead of documents
    that confirmed previous ideas and use of effort
    in information seeking. Carelessness, on the
    other hand was related to problems with relevance
    judgement, feeling that lack of time was a
    barrier to information retrieval and preference
    for documents that confirm previous ideas.

18
Assumption
  • All organizations who are market leaders excel in
    one of three primary dimensions and perform well
    in the other two
  • Customer intimacy
  • Product leadership
  • Operational excellence
  • AND they fully exploit knowledge, expertise and
    ideas.

The Discipline of Market Leaders Choose Your
Customers, Narrow Your Focus, Dominate Your
Market by Michael Treacy, Fred Wiersema 1995
ISBN 0-201-40648-9 Addison-Wesley.
19
Knowledge Conscious Management Core Knowledge
Actions
Expertise Directing cross silo collaborative
working Encouraging learning and
insights Building external networks Turning
good practice into common practice Ensuring
that expertise can be located
Information Providing an appropriate
architecture Preventing information
duplication and filling gaps Mobilizing
customer, market and competitor
intelligence Developing processes to capture
intellectual capital
Ideas Encouraging creative communities Supporti
ng idea sharing and application Facilitating the
identification of relationships Providing the
time and permission for reflection Valuing
diversity and fresh eyes on problems and
processes
Connecting people to people and people to content
From the Knowledge Proposition, TFPL, 2004.
20
Organizational Success
  • What a portal can do

And what it cant
21
Portal Credibility and Longevity
  • Critical success factors
  • Support organizational objectives in a measurable
    way.
  • Be owned and managed by a credible, authoritative
    source.
  • Include opportunities (as appropriate) for
  • Learning
  • Knowledge transfer (peer-to-peer, experts,
    coaches, teachers)
  • Transaction or task-based activities
  • Offer structured access to internal and external
    content that is relevant to one or more target
    audiences.

22
Defining Portal Requirements
23
Organizational Requirements
  • Define the organizational requirements in terms
    of the...
  • Right people
  • Right knowledge
  • Right information
  • Right time
  • Right place
  • .to improve business performance in terms of
    learning, producing, marketing, selling, meeting
    customer and partner expectations

24
Organizational Requirements
  • Deliverables
  • Documentation of the organizational requirements.
  • Documentation of what the people in the work
    process need to know.
  • Selection of the information sources.
  • Metrics that serve as targets for performance
    improvement.
  • Buy-in from key stakeholders.

25
Defining Improvement Opportunity
Business process workflow
Required process workflow
What decisions?
Required decisions
Analysis and Proposal
What pain?
Required knowledge
What knowledge?
Required information
What information?
Required use
How used?
26
Right Knowledge
Align the knowledge sought in the context of
decision-making. What decisions are being made
and what knowledge is being sought?
  • First within the context of the organizations
    purpose and the type of work (procedural-heuristic
    -executive)
  • Then within the work process and their function
    etc.
  • By knowledge needed
  • By source or reputation
  • By decision style

27
Best Information Sources
  • Relevance
  • Credibility
  • Reliability
  • Accuracy
  • Maintainability
  • Usability/reuse/format

How do you know?
28
Summary Know the Portal Audience
  • Work purpose (customers, products, organizational
    efficiency)
  • Type of work (procedural, heuristic, executive)
  • Work processes formal and informal
  • Role
  • Function
  • Demographics (geography, language, time in
    organization etc.)
  • Decisions and decision style
  • Knowledge needed to make decisions
  • Information needed to support the knowledge
    needed
  • Motivation factors/value
  • Comfort with technology (ies)

29
People and Portals
Heath
Henry
Patty
Dianne
Brendan
Brian
30
People and their Persona
Henry
31
Look at your Ecology . . .
32
View the Relationships
33
How is learning happening?
34
Innovation and Creativity occur when?
35
Where are ideas turned into action?
36
Pre-Boomer1934-1945
Workplace Character
  • Traditional work ethic
  • Work first
  • Born to lead
  • Loyal to employer
  • Independent by conventional
  • Value working well with others
  • Technically competent
  • Believe in mission
  • Strong chain of command
  • Want to win

37
Boomer1946-1959
Workplace Character
  • Money / work ethic
  • Work first
  • Expect to lead
  • Loyal to employer
  • Care deeply what others think
  • Want others to work for them
  • Technically challenged
  • Lip service to mission
  • Chain of command
  • I win, you lose

38
Cusper1960-1968
Workplace Character
  • Money / principle
  • Work and lifestyle
  • Lead and follow
  • Loyal to employer and skills
  • Ambivalent about what others think
  • Want others to work for them
  • Technically challenged
  • Care about mission
  • Mixed about command and individual
  • Want to win

39
Buster1969-1978
Workplace Character
  • Principal / Satisfaction
  • Lifestyle first
  • No need to lead
  • Loyal to skills
  • Dont care what others think
  • Prefer to work alone
  • Technically savvy
  • Must have mission
  • Individual first
  • I win, you win

40
Nester1979-1984
Workplace Character
  • Principal / Satisfaction
  • Lifestyle first
  • Lead of necessary
  • Loyal to skills
  • Care little what others think
  • Like small groups
  • State of the art technically
  • Must have mission
  • Individual first
  • I win, you win

41
Pre-Boomer1934-1945
Motivation
  • Money
  • Responsibility
  • Public Recognition
  • Accomplishment
  • Desire to lead
  • Control
  • Organizational Loyalty

42
Boomer1946-1959
Motivation
  • More Money
  • Promotion
  • Public Recognition
  • Peer recognition
  • Desire for subordinates
  • Control
  • Loyalty to self

43
Cusper1960-1968
Motivation
  • Do well by doing good
  • Meeting organizational goals
  • Recognition from boss
  • Bonuses
  • Stock options

44
Buster1969-1978
Motivation
  • Time off
  • Meeting own goals
  • Recognition from boss
  • Skills training
  • Stock options
  • Mentioning

45
Nester1979-1984
Motivation
  • Time off
  • Portable skills training
  • Meeting own goals
  • Stock options
  • Mentioning
  • Prepare for self-employment
  • Sales training

46
Younger Worker Summary1960-1980
  • I work best alone
  • I need . . .
  • Blunt style Just do it.
  • Abrupt speech patterns
  • Care little what others think
  • Just tell me what you want done and Ill do it
  • Dont participate, attend meetings or need to
    hear others opinions
  • Recognition doesnt work and isnt needed.
  • Want results quickly and success in stages.

47
Older Worker Summary1935-1959
  • Were invincible as a team
  • I want, would think, would like . . .
  • Soft style Id love it if you . . .
  • Long preambles.
  • Care deeply what others think.
  • Like process and talking about ideas and issues.
  • Highly value participation and consensus
  • Want people to want to be involved.
  • Recognition means a great deal.

48
Another View Veterans
  • Defined by WW2, Korea, Silver Screen, unions and
    born between 1922-43
  • Core values of sacrifice, dedication, hard work,
    conformity, law and order, patience, respect for
    authority, duty before pleasure, adherence to
    rules and honour.
  • Personalities are conformist, conservative,
    spenders, past-oriented, believe in logic not
    magic

Ron Zemke, Training Magazine, July 2001
49
Another View Boomers
  • Defined by their bulk, civil rights, cold war,
    feminism, space race and born between 1943 and
    1960
  • Core values include optimism, teamwork, personal
    gratification, heath and wellness, personal
    growth, youth, work and involvement.
  • Personalities are driven, soul-searching, willing
    to go the extra mile, love-hate relationship with
    authority.

Ron Zemke, Training Magazine, July 2001
50
Another View Xers
  • Defined by Watergate, OJ, stagflation, single
    parents and born between 1960-1980
  • Core values include diversity, thinking globally,
    balance, techno-literacy, informality,
    self-reliance, pragmatism.
  • Personalities are risk-taking, skeptical,
    family-oriented, focused on job - not work hours.

Ron Zemke, Training Magazine, July 2001
51
Another View Nexters
  • Defined by Internet, school violence, terrorism,
    multiculturalism, media and born after 1980
  • Core values include confidence, civic duty,
    achievement, sociability, morality, diversity and
    street smarts
  • Personalities are optimistic, prefer collective
    action and tenacious

Ron Zemke, Training Magazine, July 2001
52
Ontario Public Library Market Study
  • Ontario Public Library Strategic Directions
    Council
  • Nov. 2000
  • Consulting Report by Market Probe Canada
  • http//www.strategicplan2000.com

53
Supporters (22)
  • This segment believes the public library plays an
    essential social role, and one that will expand
    dramatically in the future, as it fulfils an
    increasing variety of public needs. Although
    relatively light Internet users, they are the
    most likely to agree the public library could
    help them use the Internet. This segment is also
    the most likely to believe libraries will become
    more important in the future. Those who don't use
    the library tend to say they are too busy. This
    is the oldest segment.

54
Seekers (27)
  • This segment sees the public library as
    fulfilling a valuable role within a society where
    information is available from a variety of
    sources. They are the heaviest users of the
    public library, the Internet (with Negators) and
    bookstores, and the most educated segment.

55
Negators (28)
  • This segment sees the relevance
  • of the public library diminishing
  • as information becomes available through other
    sources. Along with Seekers, they are the
    heaviest Internet users, but they are much more
    likely to say the Internet has caused them to use
    the library less often, and to disagree the
    library could help them use the Internet more
    effectively. A majority say that libraries will
    become less important in the future. This is the
    youngest segment.

56
Tweens ( n/a)
  • This segment was added to the group since school
    age children are such key targets for libraries
    (school and public). They may not have their
    opinions of the Internet and libraries fully
    formed yet and there is hope.

57
Portal Functionality
  • In terms of the exchange of ideas, expertise and
    information through
  • Collaboration
  • Communication
  • Publishing
  • Sharing
  • Finding
  • Learning
  • Meeting
  • Etc.

58
Sample Portal Functionality
  • Expertise
  • People directories
  • Communities of Practice
  • Online training
  • Knowledge bases
  • Online help
  • Information
  • Online transactions
  • Access to office maps
  • Glossary tool
  • Access to policies, procedures
  • News delivery
  • Market research tools
  • Customer profiles
  • Product specification management
  • Self-service tools
  • Ideas
  • Discussions
  • Web meetings
  • Editorial features
  • Blogging

One could also view this in terms of the required
verb find, collaborate, communicate
59
Click2Learn
Saba
SkillSoft Books24X7
Newmindsets
60
E-Learning
61
MS Live Meeting (PlaceWare)
Webex
Centra
62
Virtual Reference, IM, Chat
63
Video Games, PC Gamers
  • Goals, scaffolds and learning
  • Decision trees and Problem solving

64
Its an Information Ocean, not a Highway.
65
  • Its an Exploration Space not a collection
    space.

66
Context is King, not Content.
67
What is context?
  • Its not about the Library!
  • It is about . . .
  • Learning
  • Research
  • Community
  • Workplace

68
Zacs Media and Zine
  • 8.5 hours digital media
  • Downloads MP3s
  • Downloads mainstream media
  • Assembles and publishes 1 hour TV show with ads
  • But, also
  • Publishes a zine in dead tree format too.
  • Small Feedback loop in IM and eMail

69
Sydneys Publishing
  • 3,000 IM Buddies
  • Small website
  • Original MP3 files
  • Rock Band and concerts

70
Stephen Abram, MLS Sirsi Corporation 416-669-4855
stephen.abram_at_sirsi.com http//www.sirsi.com
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