Gower handbook of library and information management
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Gower handbook of library and information management
Gower Pub. Co. , Gower, c1998
Available at / 7 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This Gower Handbook is an authoritative guide to both the traditional and newer aspects of library and information management. Edited by Ray Prytherch, it brings together the insight of a range of respected contributors, who offer advice on the management, storage, retrieval, analysis, marketing and delivery of information. The book begins with Part I analyzing the context and trends of the information world. In Part II, Strategy and Planning, the information environment is explored in more detail, with Chapters 3 and 4 presenting the main issues and principles of financial planning and strategic planning. Part III, The Service Infrastructure, looks at customer care, the role of performance measurement and research in service improvement, and the influence of copyright law in the delivery of information products to customers. Part IV, Managing Resources, includes five chapters on strategic management, information auditing, human resource management, preservation and disaster management. The last part of the Handbook, Part V, Access and Delivery, focuses on the potential of electronic systems with chapters on subject gateways and Z39.50, electronic publishing, intranets and new models of access and delivery. Each part of the Handbook begins with an introduction by the editor and the book concludes with a directory of organizations, including useful URLs, and a glossary. Flexibility and adaptability are crucial for information professionals if they are to maintain their skills at the right level to provide the services needed by both information-rich and information-poor. In this one book librarians from all backgrounds, information managers and officers, document and records managers, and network and Web specialists will find answers to a wide range of questions that confront them in their working day. The Handbook will become a standard reference on best practice for professionals and students. It will be of interest to information analysts, knowledge managers, and others, including publishers, involved in information maintenance and provision.
Table of Contents
- Contents: The Context: An Introduction: Definition and trends, Ray Prytherch
- The technological future: an overview, Terry Beck. Strategy and Planning: Introduction
- Scanning the environment: trends and pressures, Ray Prytherch
- Financial planning, Jo Bryson
- Strategic planning: the key to managing change, Ray Prytherch. The Service Infrastructure: Introduction
- Customer care for libraries: accident or design?, Peter Stubley
- Performance measurement and evaluation, Lawraine Wood
- Research: the infrastructure for improvement and change, Ray Prytherch
- Copyright and related issues, Graham Cornish. Managing resources: introduction
- Strategic management, Ray Prytherch
- Information auditing, Feona Hamilton
- Human resource management, John Pluse
- Preservation, access and integrity, Priscilla Schlicke
- Disasters: prevention, rescue and recovery, Priscilla Schlicke. Access and Delivery: Introduction
- Closing the information net: gateways, brokers and Z39.50, Peter Stubley
- Electronic publishing, Priscilla Schlicke
- The intranet as an information management tool, Feona Hamilton
- New paradigms in access and delivery, Colin Steele
- Directory of organizations
- Glossary
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"