Over the last few months, I have received quite a few inquiries as to why I love LibGuides so much, so I thought it might be helpful to share a brief post highlighting my ten favorite features.
In no particular order, here is why I invest in LibGuides for The Unquiet Library:
1. The ease and flexibility of creating guides: LibGuides makes it super easy to add RSS feeds, embed videos, embed an endless range of HTML or script codes (great for widgets and embedding and content), lists of links, feature books from the catalog (which could be print books, Google Books I like, or eBooks from our virtual collection), document widgets, a timeline widget, assorted Google Searches, and various polls. While I have utilized the user link submission feature on a limited basis, I plan to incorporate it more after being inspired by friend and fellow librarian Elisabeth Abarbanel’s recent blog post, “LibGuides: Collaborative Aspects”. Because it is so easy to add content and widgets for traditional and emerging sources of authoritative information ( social scholarship) , LibGuides is an essential tool for supporting my information literacy instruction and supporting technology integration into my library program; I can also seamlessly push my students to other library streams of information, including our blog, our databases, and other essential library resources.
In addition, if I need to create multiple guides on a similar topic for different teachers with slight variations, I can easily copy the original guide and then add/take away guide elements or I can create a new guide and add existing elements from other subject guides I’ve created using the “copy from another guide” feature. As if that isn’t enough, I can also use and modify templates for guides (67,000 plus and growing!) created by other library professionals in the LibGuides community. These features of LibGuides make it easy for me to generate research pathfinders efficiently, quickly, and dynamically.
2. Social Media Integration: my students can capture RSS feeds for guides or use the built-in “Add This” sharing feature that allows my students to easily bookmark or post a guide to a diverse range of cloud computing/social media tools. Students and teachers can also sign up for email notification when a new guide is posted, and this email registration can be customized by tags or keywords.
3. Subject Guide Organization and Tagging: I can create and organize my subject guide categories however I choose, and I can also tag my guides with essential keywords. These are features that allow me to “catalog” my guides!
4. Usage and Statistical Reports: you can choose to create a general summary report, homepage hits, or overall guide hits; you can even view a guide hit report for a specific subject guide. I will soon be incorporating this data into my monthly and annual reports. The reports can be generated in standard (best for viewing your browser), plain (best for copying and pasting into another application, or Excel (spreadsheet) format, too!
5. Widgets: I love that I can create and customize my widgets to focus on one particular subject guide OR I can create a more generic widget to direct my students to our general LibGuides home page while featuring new or popular guides. The code is incredibly easy to generate and can be placed on virtually any web platform.
6. Superb Stability: in the fourteen months I have been a subscriber, I have experienced only one minor service outage. I can count on the platform to be up and running without worrying about frequent outages.
7. Customer Service and Tech Support: I have only had to call upon tech support once in the 14 months I have been a user, but when I did, they were most helpful. The individuals in customer service are also wonderfully responsive and gracious as well! You can also join (at no charge) The Springshare Lounge, a free network for discussions about Springshare products, including LibGuides. The support blog , Springshare Twitter feed, and LibGuides FAQ Twitter feed also help me keep up with the latest new features and product news. As if that is not enough, you can also participate in product webinars!
8. Multiple Editors: if you work in a library setting in which you have a team (library professionals, students, or teachers) who may need some access to creating and editing guides, you can add multiple users and establish their editing/access rights to invite participation while protecting the integrity of your overall platform.
9. Multiple Uses for the Platform: While I primarily use LibGuides for generating subject guides/research pathfinders, I am now using LibGuides to create organic, dynamic, and multimedia monthly reports that help me better tell the story of my library program in a transparent and effective manner. I also love how this high school is using LibGuides as a medium for paperless monthly library newsletters!
10. More Than Reasonable Pricing and a Product Worth Its Weight in Gold: if you are someone like me who generates a large number of subject guides and integrates your virtual resources heavily into library instruction, then LibGuides is truly your best friend. The price point, in my opinion, is more than reasonable for a K12 institution, and I get more than my money’s worth in terms of the value the product has in terms of helping me be an effective librarian and the way it impacts the library experience for my students (and teachers, too!). While there may be other similar products out there for less or free, I have yet to see anything with the “horsepower” and reliability of LibGuides. After only six months of use, I renewed my subscription for two more years—given my generally conservative bent in purchasing any online product too far in advance, this should indicate to you how much I love and how heavily I reply on this service/product!
The Bottom Line
Ultimately, my investment in LibGuides is an investment in my library program. I feel that the integration of LibGuides into my library program since February 2009 has played a major role in improving the quality of my library instruction and service. I am empowered to integrate a diverse range of information sources and instructional support materials in an organized manner that works for my students and makes it easy for them to navigate the broad range of resources I can provide for a collaboratively designed research project.
If you are a LibGuides user, what are some of your favorite features?
We are still in the midst of preparing a migration to LibGuides and LibAnswers, so I can’t really comment yet on the other aspects, though it does seem indeed very flexible and can save quite a bit of time with careful planning.
But I can say customer service is indeed top notch. Like you I seldom ask tech support typically, but the LibGuide support is so helpful and friendly, I fear I have now caught the habit of asking them questions to answers I really should have figured myself by reading the documentation 🙂
Even more impressively since Mar 2010 they have quickly implemented I believe 4 changes in features I requested for LibGuides/LibAnswers many within 10-30 days.
Granted most of the requests were minor, basically the “increase limit from 10 to 15” variety type of request but still very impressive..
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The best reason to use LibGuides? Because they are helpful to users. This is from an email I got today from a student: “I wanted to thank you for the site you put together for my class to use as we wrote our papers. It was invaluable to me and, I assume, the rest of the students.
I was also hoping I could convince you to leave the site up over the summer. With [my professor]’s guidance, I’m hoping to expand the paper I wrote and submit it for publication, and having your list of resources would be extremely helpful to me.”
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Nice! LibGuides are an awesome tool for knowledge sharing, love it!
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This is a wonderful post. I use LibGuides not only to build subject guides but as a platform for our entire library website. Thanks for the idea about using LibGuides to publish a library newsletter. I’ll try it.
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Buffy, I just saw this post and want to share with my FB friends. Thanks! I love LibGuides, too!
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Just an FYI, the link to the highschool is entered wrong. http://bvwlmc.libguides.com/jagstacks# is what should be in your entry.
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The post was written 2.5 years ago, so I’m guessing the school changed their LibGuides URL at some point between then and now. I will update the link later today.
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Reblogged this on Madeleine Brodsky and commented:
Learning all about LibGuides this semester in LIS 620, and this post breaks down all the features quite nicely!
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