Make room for the Millennials
Changes to systems and services will appeal to this generation
By Lynn Silipigni Connaway, OCLC Programs and Research
By 2010, the Millennial
generation—those now 14
to 28—will outnumber their
Boomer parents. Also known as “Generation Y,” the “Net Generation”
or “Echo Boomers,” this group
of approximately 76 million people
have been described as “ … thinking
and processing information
fundamentally differently from their
predecessors” (Prensky 2001, np).
Information services that match
the information-seeking habits of
Millennials, who cannot remember
life without computers or mobile
phones, will be more relevant to this
group. In fact, the term ‘Screenagers’
has been used (Rushkoff 1996) to
refer to the youngest segment of this
group (14–19 year olds) because
of their affinity for communications
technology.
What do they want?
Several common themes arise
when discussing the information-seeking
habits of Millennials. They
prefer:
-
Immediacy. Millennials tend
to be impatient, pay less
attention to spelling and
grammar and have a low
tolerance for complex searching.
Convenience is key.
-
More choices and selectivity.
Millennials prefer multiple
formats and media.
-
Collaboration and teamwork.
Millennials prefer to collaborate
virtually and in person as is
demonstrated in their participation
in social networking sites.
-
Experiential learning. Millennials
tend to be nonlinear
thinkers, which may be attributed
to surfing the Web.
Millennials tend to prefer visual
orientation of information and are
multitaskers. They use their mobile
phones for information seeking
by calling and texting parents, family
members and friends. Their familiarity
with text messaging may account
for their tolerance of nonstandard
grammar and punctuation. This
group tends to be results-oriented;
less concerned with format than
with immediate delivery. Students
in this group have been described
as “not wanting to learn how to use
a library—they want to get their work
done!”
What have we learned?
During the past five years, while
studying the information-seeking behaviors
of college and university faculty
and students (Dervin, Connaway
and Prabha, begun in 2003) and
evaluating virtual reference services
(VRS) from the perspectives of users,
nonusers and librarians (Radford
and Connaway, begun in 2005), the
behaviors reported by the Millennials
were often unique.
The Millennials in our studies preferred
independent Internet searching,
specifically Google. Why?
Speed and convenience: “Google
is my first place to find something
quickly.” “I wouldn’t really trust my librarian.
I trust Google.” “[Google] is
user friendly … [the] library catalog
is not.”
 |
| Millennials use their mobile
phones for information seeking
by calling and texting parents, family
members and friends. Their familiarity
with text messaging may account
for their tolerance of nonstandard
grammar and punctuation. |
Commenting directly on the library
catalog, a Millennial undergraduate
student explained how she went to
Amazon.com to find books and then
copy title information and paste it in
the library catalog search box.
The Millennials also go to their parents,
academic superiors or friends
when they need information. A Millennial
who participated in a
graduate student focus group
interview said, “… I just go ask
my Dad, and he’ll tell me how
to put in a fence, you know? So
why sort through all this material
when he’ll just tell me.”
Despite negative librarian stereotypes voiced by Screenagers
in a VRS nonuser focus
group interview, many Millennials
preferred the face-to-face
mode when interacting
with librarians. In a telephone interview, one explained, “Usually, [librarians
are] very helpful, because
they, I’ve only interacted with librarians
in person, they nearly always seem
to be able to answer my question
accurately.”
Both graduate student Millennials
and Screenagers expressed concerns
about privacy using the Web. A Screenager
expressed, “I’m not going to go get
tutored on the Internet by somebody
who I personally don’t know who might
be some psycho serial killer out there
when I could get personal help from my
home and people in my community.” A
graduate student articulated a different
type of privacy concern: “I always worry
that [chat sessions] are being saved …
if the department would get a report
about what questions [I asked]…”
Millennials do enjoy being able to
multitask in virtual reference and they
appreciate the value of the service for
last-minute information needs. Depending
on the situation, Millennials often will
settle for information that is convenient
and fast and that is “good enough.”1
By changing services and systems, libraries
can better attract Millennials. We can:
-
deliver resources efficiently
and quickly at the point of
need at the network level
-
make our catalogs easier to use
-
accommodate different discovery
and access preferences
-
allow users to personalize
the interface
-
offer multiple modes of service—virtual, face-to-face and telephone
-
provide opportunities for collaboration
online and in physical library spaces.
Librarians trained in Millennials’ communication
patterns will be able to provide
instruction at the time of need in a“show and tell” environment. Marketing services to Millennials in language
they understand may also help
dispel librarian stereotypes.
We are no longer the only game
in town and currently are not the
first to be chosen. With work, we
can make our resources, services
and spaces inviting to the next
generation of college and university
students, entrepreneurs,
inventors, scholars, teachers and
researchers.
Note:
1. For an in-depth discussion on this topic, see Prabha,
Chandra, Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Larry Olszewski & Lillie
Jenkins. 2007. “What Is Enough? Satisficing Information
Needs.” Journal of Documentation, 63(1), 74-89. URL:
http://www.oclc.org/research/publications/archive/2007/prabha-satisficing.pdf.
References:
Dervin, Brenda, Lynn Silipigni Connaway & Chandra Prabha. 2003.“Sense-making the Information Confluence: The Whys and Hows
of College and University User Satisficing of Information Needs.”
A research project funded by the National Leadership Grants for
Libraries program of the Institute of Museum and Library Services
(IMLS), Ohio State University and OCLC Online Computer Library
Center, Inc. URL: http://imlsosuoclcproject.jcomm.ohio-state.edu.
Prensky, Marc. 2001. “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants.” On the
Horizon 9(5). URL: http://www.marcprensky.com/writing.
Radford, Marie L. & Lynn Silipigni Connaway. 2005. “Seeking Synchronicity:
Evaluating Virtual Reference Services from User, Nonuser,
and Librarian Perspectives.” A research project funded by the
National Leadership Grants for Libraries program of the Institute of
Museum and Library Services (IMLS), Rutgers, The State University
of New Jersey, and OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.
URL: http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicity.
Rushkoff, David. 1996. Playing the Future: How Kids’ Culture Can
Teach Us to Thrive in An Age of Chaos. New York: HarperCollins.
New life for special collections | WorldCat statistics
|