Instant messaging, email, and chat reference are already here, but have you adapted your traditional reference interview and information provision skills to these new formats? Diane K. Kovacs has assembled this handbook to help reference librarians develop the communication skills and resources they need to work effectively in the digital reference environment. The handbook demonstrates how to adapt traditional face-to-face reference interview skills to the virtual interview, and how to interpret and use new communication techniques - chat slang, instant messaging shorthand, emoticons, etc - to better serve your users. For both chat and email transactions, the author outlines strategies for analysing the question, conducting the interview, developing a search strategy, and delivering sources in the best information formats for users. Packed with guidance throughout on how to deliver content that is truly timely and value-added, this practical guide offers everything reference librarians need to move from the face-to-face to the virtual transaction with ease.
I give this book 1.5 stars. It was difficult to read because there was no coherence to it. One minute, I was reading the author's text and then the next minute, I had to read pages and pages of chat transcripts of different librarians' responses to a question that seemingly had nothing to do with what the author was discussing previously. Additionally, the way the chapters were broken up was awful! I won't even go into the typos. There were some useful tips on how to run a virtual reference desk but I think the author should have just written an article instead of creating this book.
This was a text for my basic reference course, and so I had high hopes for it. I was quite disappointed. The structure was so obtuse that I had a difficult time studying it. In particular, the anecdotal asides from librarians could have been organized and presented in a much clearer fashion.
Poorly structured, low on information, and feeling dated despite only being published in 2007. Assigned as an optional text for my class, I felt all I achieved from this book was an hour gone from my evening.