Making WorldCat more inclusive
In the past year,
we have been working
hard to make
WorldCat more inclusive
at the local, group
and global levels.
In August 2006 we
introduced the WorldCat.org Web site. It offers
a search box that
people can download
and use to search the
more than 88 million
records and 1.1 billion
holdings in WorldCat. For the first time, collections
in OCLC member libraries became visible
on the Internet to people everywhere.
Since then, we have enhanced WorldCat.org
with more content (35 million article-level records
from ArticleFirst, ERIC, GPO and MEDLINE)
and a citation capability.
Our goal in releasing this new way to access
WorldCat was to drive search traffic to the library,
and it has done just that. In May 2007, the number
of people coming into WorldCat from the Web had
increased 193 percent over May of 2006, going
from 4.8 million to 13.9 million. During that same
period, the number of people clicking through to
library services on a library Web site increased
490 percent, from 144,000 to 851,000. These
are people who started out on the Web and
ended up at or in a library.
In May, we started the WorldCat Local pilot at
the University of Washington. WorldCat Local
provides libraries with a way to customize WorldCat.org as a solution for local discovery and
delivery services. WorldCat Local interoperates
with locally maintained services such as circulation,
resource sharing and resolution to full text to
create a seamless experience for library users.
WorldCat Local was recently launched as a pilot at the Peninsula Library System in California and will soon be piloted at nine libraries in
Illinois, and at The Ohio State University. We plan
to go into production with WorldCat Local later
this year.
This past June, a new social networking tool
was added to WorldCat.org—WorldCat Lists.
Users can create lists of their favorite items
located in the WorldCat database. Lists can then be
shared with family, friends or the entire WorldCat
community. More than 10,000 lists were created
in the first eight weeks. The creativity found
in these lists is fascinating: categories ranging
from “Organic Chemistry” and “Naval History”
to “Good Read-Alouds for Older Adults” and “Afrocentric Voices in Classical Music.”
It can be argued that WorldCat has been one of
the most successful examples of social networking
by professionals, who have been contributing
and sharing information at the institution level
since 1971.
Now, the social network built by the library community
is going to end-users. WorldCat Lists is
OCLC’s first venture into user-created, i.e., nonlibrarian, content. This issue of NextSpace explores
some of the opportunities that are emerging for
libraries in social networking.
Providing information to people when and where
they need it has been a long-standing goal of libraries
and the OCLC cooperative. Going forward,
we’re excited about the possibilities presented by
social networking technology for more dynamic
connections to the rich collections of libraries
around the world.

Jay Jordan
OCLC President and Chief Executive Officer
Contents | Libraries and social networking
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