Gostei muito de ver o cartaz digital da semana da leitura da EB1 de Nisa. Acho que é este o caminho. O uso das tecnologias para promover a Biblioteca.
Creio mesmo que este cartaz tem muito mais impacto que o tradicional cartaz em papel colocado à porta da Biblioteca
Precisamos de inventar as Bibliotecas deste século. Estas deverão ser algo muito pouco estático, continuamente reinventadas, tecnologicamente avançadas e, sobretudo, ao serviço do utilizador.
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta marketing. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta marketing. Mostrar todas as mensagens
quarta-feira, 7 de março de 2012
sábado, 25 de fevereiro de 2012
246 - Promoção de atividades ou serviços da BE
Nos dias que correm, tal o avanço e simplicidade das tecnologias já não faz muito sentido que se promovam atividades da Biblioteca Escolar apenas com um cartaz ou usando outros meios mais ou menos convencionais.
Temos à nossa disposição o Twitter, Facebook ou Youtube.
Fazer um filme, por exemplo, tem custo zero e é extremamente simples: basta usarmos uma máquina fotográfica digital que tenha a funcionalidade vídeo incorporada, editar no movie maker e acrescentar alguns efeitos. Depois, basta colocar no Youtube.
Simples e eficaz não é?
Temos à nossa disposição o Twitter, Facebook ou Youtube.
Fazer um filme, por exemplo, tem custo zero e é extremamente simples: basta usarmos uma máquina fotográfica digital que tenha a funcionalidade vídeo incorporada, editar no movie maker e acrescentar alguns efeitos. Depois, basta colocar no Youtube.
Simples e eficaz não é?
sábado, 11 de fevereiro de 2012
244 - Campanha a favor das bibliotecas
Confesso que gostei da campanha. Quem toma a iniciativa de fazer este tipo de marketing para a sua Biblioteca Escolar? Valeria a pena!
quinta-feira, 5 de janeiro de 2012
233 - É preciso aprender com as livrarias sim!
Libraries borrowing marketing ideas from bookstores
Today’s public libraries have a lot in common with retail bookstores, featuring special displays, coffee kiosks and gift shops.
It’s a way to keep libraries relevant, boost circulation and compete for the public’s dollar at a time when public funding is being cut, experts say.
Soft chairs flank a display of travel books at the Downtown branch of Columbus Metropolitan Library, where it’s OK to browse, dream, relax or even loiter.
Another display touts poetry and includes a message board allowing patrons to share their thoughts.
Throughout the library, books are displayed with the covers facing out. “Staff picks” are lined up on a table; another holds books billed “As heard on NPR.”
The Dublin branch had an overflow of true-crime and “edgy fiction thrillers,” said manager Michael Blackwell, so they were pulled out, embellished with crime-scene tape and now are a featured category.
“It’s standard operating procedure,” said Pat Losinski, director of the library system. “Our mission and our drive is to make materials relevant to our customers. We’re going out of our way to show customers that we’re aware of their investment.”
Library spokesman Kim Snell noted the library’s removal of large circulation desks a few years ago, which opened up the lobby for more displays.
“We don’t just want our staff just hovering behind a desk,” Snell said. “Having the books facing out can expose patrons to a title, author or subject that they might not have seen.”
Staff members, meanwhile must replenish the displays with new books and themes.
It’s a balancing act, said Steve Herminghausen, lead librarian at Northwest Library, between having “things that are popular, but also promoting titles that people might not know about.”
The “power walls” at Northwest include award winners, graphic novels and collections on parenting, science, current events and crafts. A separate table holds international books, with an Eastern-language emphasis.
Even the children’s area has attention-grabbing collections, focusing on superheroes and monsters.
“We know that, as bookstore experts have known for years, the face-out displays matter,” Losinski said. “It casts at least a preliminary vision in the reader’s mind” of what the book is about and why it’s important.
Of course, a library’s incentive to move products has more to do with education than making money.
“I think the greatest measure of success is that displays need to be” restocked with books, Losinski said. “It’s simply making the discovery process more intuitive for the customers.”
In the Hilliard branch, patrons are greeted by a wall of new and featured books when they enter and leave. That often poses a challenge.
Said manager Chip Patzer, “Some people tell me they can’t look anymore because of the temptation.”
But, he added: “That’s just one of the pleasures to going into a library, to get something you didn’t expect.”
dnarciso@dispatch.com
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