A virtual water cooler for church library folks to chat about new and existing technologies that can help manage and grow our libraries.
Internet access in library
Curious: How many of you have internet access for users in your church library and does it gt used much?
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Happy Easter!
Sandy
Thank you for that valuable info. I do believe our church has a twitter, I'll have to double check and talk to our youth pastor, who is also our technology person also. Thanks again for such a quick response and great info.
Debbie: Like with Facebook Pages, I wouldn't really advocate that a church library have their own Twitter account. Instead, your church should allow your church library to contribute to the church's main Twitter account. The last thing you want is to force followers/patrons to follow multiple church-related Twitter accounts. Plus, I just don't think church libraries have enough unique content to justify a separate Twitter account.
When I teach Twitter (any social media) workshops to nonprofits and across my own university, I encourage *fewer* channels that allow a team of people to regularly contribute content. That does much more service to your patrons, and keeps fragmented Twitter accounts from becoming stagnant.
Your church might want to consider a product like HootSuite that allows them to assign multiple people to the Twitter account without having to share the main Twitter login or password. And it allows them to schedule future posts, and even moderate who gets to post what.
Another option is to have your church hook your church blog to auto-post to the church's main Twitter account. That way, anything you post on the library blog goes out to all of their followers.
I don't think most church libraries (most libraries, period -- special collections and public libraries being the exception) need their own Pinterest brand page either. Again, just not enough regular content to contribute or staying power. If your church has a Pinterest account, and you have a personal Pinterest account, create some Boards specifically for stuff involving the church library...then have your church follow those Boards and repin those Boards.
Using these tools really isn't a "techie" thing.... it's a mix of understanding the tech end of the tools, but it's really a "communications" thing -- the mechanics are the easy part. The harder part is content strategy.
I have a personal Pinterest account and have a "board" with books worth reading, which I've posted books to and I also have a "mission" board, and a "Compassion International" board. I haven't thought about having a Pinterest account expressly for our Media Center. That might be an idea. We have a blog and our youth pastor says I need a Twitter account now...I'm still thinking about that. I have a Twitter account and I just can't figure it out. Any techie out there that could write an article on how to use Twitter for a church Media Center would be good!
If you have patrons who own a Kindle and subscribe to Amazon Prime, there's a huge selection of "free" (free to Kindle/Prime members) Christian ebooks that can be borrowed from the Kindle Lending Library.
See my blog post showing how to find the "free" Christian Kindle books.
I realize that some of the Texas folks on here are involved in one of the two new OverDrive consortia, but for those who aren't and have not tried OverDrive at their local public library (I've been using it 9 years), you might want to check out the set of OverDrive tutorialsthat I am building out for my local church library association chapter on our new website.
Please feel free to ask questions you might have about OverDrive.
Blessings,
Colleen Greene, MLIS
President, Southern California Chapter ECLA
Library Assistant, Rose Drive Friends Church
Systems Librarian, Pollak Library - California State University Fullerton
www.colleengreene.com | @colleengreene