Now, more than ever, a
window to the world’s libraries
By Chris Galvin
For more than 30 years, WorldCat—created by OCLC member
libraries in a true spirit of cooperation—has functioned as the most comprehensive
database of library-owned materials. Now, WorldCat is being transformed into a
full-fledged “service platform”: a Web-based structure that libraries can use to
manage their entire collections across a broadening range of functions.
What will WorldCat do next? Add new value in a world where requirements are
expanding, but funding is not. Provide a single point of entry for libraries seeking wider
exposure for their entire collections. Attract business partners who want the holdings
of thousands of libraries as part of their search mechanism or other resource. Expand
the promise of the library to include 24/7, customer-driven, personalized service on
the open Web.
As WorldCat evolves, it continues to be the ultimate showcase of what libraries can
do when they combine their resources and work toward a common goal. As a result of the
contributions of libraries to WorldCat for the last 30 years, WorldCat now provides the
means by which libraries are able to connect directly to information consumers on the open
Web, where learners don’t just passively consume information, but help create it.
Search, find...get!
Until recently, searching WorldCat meant using FirstSearch on-site or as a
validated user. Now a broad Internet audience can use Open WorldCat to “Find in a Library” through Web partners like Google, Yahoo! and many
bookselling and bibliographic sites. Search results deep-link directly to
libraries’ online catalogs.
Digitized materials, such as eBooks and eAudiobooks, linked through
WorldCat and the “Buy it Now” pilot are ways that connect users directly to the
materials they’re searching for. WorldCat in this framework becomes more than a
map: it’s the transportation.
Build, create…connect!
The ability for online users to create identities, do their own work and even contribute to the
library experience makes them stakeholders in their institutions. WorldCat enhancements are
encouraging this behavior, with user accounts in FirstSearch allowing saved searches and do-it-yourself
resource sharing requests. User-contributed ratings and reviews can also be added to WorldCat. In the future,
WorldCat might absorb data from Web users via other “social networking” tools, such as RSS feeds or blogs.
Contact with a helpful research expert over the Web—through e-mail, IM, chat or even voice—will be a persuasive
way to build library usage. A WorldCat pilot is presently testing links to “Ask a Librarian” services, including OCLC’s QuestionPoint.
Link, view…expand!
Library usage improves when linking into WorldCat increases. OCLC is working to add name-brand
business partners to WorldCat; has helped create browser toolbars that make library searching an “always-on”
option; and has released an easy-to-use syntax that lets anyone—researchers, bloggers, literary fans—link to a “Find in a Library” lookup for a particular title.
Library groups that have already cataloged their materials in WorldCat can now leverage that investment
with a group catalog that lets users start a search locally and expand outward
to the group, region and beyond. A future enhancement could allow the creation
of unique “views” of WorldCat data: mini-WorldCats organized around a
subject, time period or virtually any limiter, so libraries can cater to specific
audiences or needs.
And OCLC is expanding WorldCat as a global resource, so that it
represents more languages, more content and more formats—especially
electronic ones.
Scan, share…study!
OCLC has recast existing library services and created new ones with
WorldCat at the core. WorldCat now lets catalogers quickly synchronize new holdings with bibliographic records. Broad
exposure to digitized items improves visibility to funding bodies
and communities. Resource sharing tools support and foster
an international resource sharing network to get
materials into users’ hands quickly. And WorldCat
Collection Analysis truly leverages the power of
WorldCat—allowing libraries to better understand how
their materials measure up to similar institutions and best
plan how they will make strategic growth decisions.
Point, lead…simplify!
WorldCat is always striving to take in as much
metadata as possible—in the future, not just captured
from our member libraries’ collections, but also from
external sources. OCLC is aggressively pursuing
partnerships and technologies that will set the standards for
rich, clean metadata importation.
While absorbing massive amounts of metadata, WorldCat will also
become more intuitive. Multiple records representing different manifestations
of the same work (translations, audiobooks, different editions, etc.) will
automatically be collapsed into a single entity using the principles of FRBR
(Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records). As search results become
easier to use and reveal evaluative information earlier, WorldCat will become an even
more valuable tool for research.
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A pewter lapel pin of the WorldCat logo was part of the celebration of the 1 billionth holding entering WorldCat. OCLC sent pins to member libraries as a reminder of their individual contributions to WorldCat, and for all those yet to come. Libraries can order additional pins from the OCLC online store. |
Putting the E in collEction management | Getting visual with the DeweyBrowser
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