Library Marketing and Communications: Strategies to Increase Relevance and Results
Description
Effectively marketing libraries by persuasively communicating their relevance is key to ensuring their future. Speaking directly to those in senior leadership positions, Anderson lays out the structural and organizational changes needed to help libraries answer the relevance question and maximize their marketing and communications efforts. Focusing on big-picture strategies, she shares lessons learned from her 20+ year career in library marketing and communications. No matter what type or size of library you help to lead, by reading this book you will
- gain insight into why libraries need to tell their stories more effectively than they are today;
- be able to craft a strategic roadmap for marketing your library and communicating its value in a variety of ways that resonate with key audiences;
- see why improvements to the structure of your marketing and communications team can lead to better results;
- learn practical methods for incorporating audience research into your planning;
- know how to remove customer barriers and discontinue practices that are thwarting your marketing efforts;
- receive guidance on preparing for potential crises;
- understand how to be more community-focused by forming and sustaining partnerships; and
- feel confident in engaging with stakeholders so that they become your library’s best ambassadors.
Praise for Library Marketing and Communications: Strategies to Increase Relevance and Results
" The discussion of marketing and communications partnerships and advocacy planning were my two favorite chapters. Finding organizations that one can partner with and carry the library's message to new and unreached audiences is a smart use of resources as in this way the library can champion their message: a win-win relationship ... The academic and public library sector will benefit greatly from its content."
— Journal of Hospital Librarianship
" An outstanding book about how to successfully and strategically launch marketing and communication plans from within libraries ... I want to re-read this book already. The real life stories shared by Anderson throughout the book as she illustrated the successful and sometimes not so successful ways that libraries market themselves are engaging and inspiring. I have long felt that libraries, generally, struggle with being able to tell their stories (their events, their struggles, their wins) consistently and effectively. This book will inspire you to look at the marketing and communications strategies within your own library, or, if you don’t have one, create one!"
— Against the Grain