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User experience in the library: a case study
Tamar Sadeh
2008
7 - 24
0307-4803
10.1108/03074800810845976
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Purpose – The purpose of this article is to describe the need for and realization of a new kind of interface for searching and obtaining library materials, an interface designed around user needs and decoupled from, though interoperating with, current library systems.
Design/methodology/approach – The paper describes a product that was released in May 2007 – the Primo
Findings – The paper demonstrates how users' expectations, which emanate from the everyday experience on the internet, can be addressed by library software in a way that corresponds to librarians' requirements and suits and libraries' technological infrastructure.
Originality/value – Using a concrete example, this paper demonstrates how the design of a discovery and delivery interface for library materials can satisfy the expectations of users who are accustomed to services on the web and can help libraries attract such users back to the library environment, where they can obtain credible, trustworthy scholarly content.
Customer satisfaction, Information retrieval, Internet, Libraries, User interfaces
Case study