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Libraryโ€™s Spectacular Success: A Day-Long Cardholder Event Draws Crowds in Record Numbers โ€“ Unveiling the Secrets Behind the Triumph!

Photo courtesy Cincinnati and Hamilton County Public Library

Mike Paulus had a career path like many library marketers I know.

The Eau Claire, Wisconsin native earned a degree in creative and technical writing. He planned and wrote educational video games for the speech-language pathology field. Then he worked at an arts and culture magazine.

But just before the pandemic, Mike saw an opening for a new position at the L.E. Phillips Memorial Public Library in marketing and digital systems.

โ€œMy wife had already worked here for a few years in Youth Services,โ€ explains Mike. โ€œSo, I jumped at the chance. Iโ€™m still downtown, working a block away from that magazine, trying to have a direct impact on this community. Pretty lucky!โ€

Mike and his four co-workers in the Programming and Communications Services department oversee all digital and print promotions. They also do a good chunk of the libraryโ€™s event programming, managing all adult events that use outside presenters. (Sound familiar to anyone?!) ย 

Last year, Mike was given the task of coordinating cross-departmental, library-wide events. The most successful of those events was a Card Crawl.

โ€œOur building recently underwent an $18.5M renovation,โ€ remembers Mike. โ€œWeโ€™d just moved back in and reopened the doors in October of 2022. So, the library had a lot of new rooms and amenities, including all these cool outdoor spaces.โ€

โ€œIn spring 2023, we held our โ€˜Outdoor Open Houseโ€™ to showcase the new patios, the terrace, the plaza, and whatnot. Just a few hours one afternoon, with free ice cream, free fresh-cut flowers (my wifeโ€™s idea), and light activities. We had 750 people show up. This became the model for the Card Crawl.โ€

As Mike explains it, the Card Crawl is a more robust version of past cardholder appreciation days, held in September during Library Card Sign-Up Month. The library previously had a prize drawing and offered patrons free candy if they showed their library card.

But last year, they expanded with a full-day event on a Saturday in late September. ย 

โ€œWe decided to upgrade the cardholder appreciation day using the Outdoor Open Houseโ€™s basic concept of having activities and giveaways stationed all over the library, near all the cool, new stuff,โ€ says Mike. โ€œThe idea of showing your library card to get free stuff (and have fun) was a no-brainer, leading to the โ€˜Card Crawlโ€™ name.โ€

โ€œWe just wanted the public to get in here and wander around. But showing appreciation for current cardholders and making new ones was the most important part. We wanted to help people feel proud of having a library card, foster those vibes.โ€

Besides building a lasting relationship with cardholders, the Card Crawl had another big benefit.

โ€œWe used the Card Crawl as a way to get different departments working together and excited for a common goal, something tangible of which we all had ownership,โ€ explains Mike.โ€ This included our Friends of the Library group. We also used the event to strengthen some community partnerships, working with Eau Claire Transit on free bus rides, and a local chain restaurant for free ice cream.โ€

Mike and the rest of the L. E. Phillips Memorial Public Library marketing team used the landing page as a hub and promoted the event on all their available channels, including:

  • Press Release(s)
  • Facebook posts and Facebook event
  • Instagram posts and Reels
  • Email newsletter features
  • A dedicated email newsletter
  • In-house posters
  • Partner promotions
  • Day-of directional signage and flyers

โ€œFor about six weeks before the event, we just feed the new copy and graphics into those channels whenever possible,โ€ remembers Mike. โ€œWe also made three HUGE library cards. Before the event, we used them for some fun Instagram stuff. During the event, we set up two selfie stations so people could pose with them, post, and tag us. And now we have these fun, massive library cards to use for whatever.โ€

Mike says the biggest challenge the marketing team faced was โ€œreigning in all the ideas.โ€

โ€œOur libraryโ€™s slogan is โ€˜So Much More,โ€™โ€ says Mike. โ€œBut staff jokes that it should be โ€˜Too Much More.โ€™ Everyone has such great ideas, and they all want to dive into them. So, my job was to try and keep things doable and sustainable without too much stress. Our committeeโ€™s motto was โ€˜big impact for little effort.โ€™โ€

โ€œThat said, we still had A LOT of moving parts to promote, and you canโ€™t promote everything all at once in every little Facebook post, etc. or it becomes white noise. I had already dealt with this at the magazine Iโ€™d worked for, with some large, festival-style events weโ€™d staged.”

“You need to choose a small handful of things (or just one thing) at a time, and then decide the best channel and tone. But when you promote, youโ€™re always pointing back to the landing page for full details.”

The marketing teamโ€™s careful balance worked out. The Card Crawl brought in about 1,800 people, three times the libraryโ€™s normal Saturday attendance.

โ€œWe did a weekโ€™s worth of card signups, renewals, and replacements in a single day,โ€ recalls Mike. โ€œCheckouts and circulation were through the roof. Culvers scooped 630 scoops of free, frozen custard. Our Friends group had one of their most profitable book sales. We gathered a few hundred emails in a prize drawing. And Eau Claire Transit gave a ton of free rides all over the city to cardholders.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re lucky enough to have a great Library Board and some big supporters on our City Council. So, we invited those people to come volunteer at the Card Crawl giving away prizes, and to just be a part of the day. It gave the โ€˜powers that beโ€™ a nice, close-up look at what we do. They got to see our customers all being happy. They got a little ownership of what we do for the community.โ€

โ€œThe day had a great energy with both kids and adults excited to roam the library and bust out their cards for prizes. My wife and I were โ€˜Card Crawlersโ€™ who snuck around the library with special prize wagons, waiting to be found. Since I donโ€™t work a desk, this gave me an amazing chance to interact directly with customers, which really doesnโ€™t happen that often.โ€

The prize giveaway the team ran during the Card Crawl not only collected emails for the library’s subscriber list, it provided a little post-event promotion when the library announced the winner in a video.

Mike will do a few things differently for the 2024 Card Crawl. For example, he wished the team had taken more photos of the event.

โ€œOur Youth Services desk pulled double duty as a prize station, in addition to setting up a few different activities,โ€ explains Mike. โ€œThat was just too much for the staff we had on hand. Next year, weโ€™re planning on adequate staffing and extra hours.โ€

“The other big thing was the eventโ€™s end time. Things really tapered off in the last two hours of the day. We only had passive activities happening during that time. So, we either need to end it earlier or plan more scheduled events.”

But until September, Mike and the team at L. E. Phillips Memorial Public Library have plenty to do.

โ€œSustaining our annual events, programs, and promotional cycles is enough to fill our days,โ€ exclaims Mike. โ€œThe challenge (as always) will be figuring out how to do new stuff while maintaining the old. Maybe letting some stuff go.โ€

โ€œRight now, our video work goes in phases. We do a lot more videos during promotional downtimes. So, weโ€™ll go from weekly videos for a few months to no videos at all. Finding a better balance is big on my list.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re also hoping to make time to develop general library marketing campaigns. So more of the โ€˜Hey! Weโ€™re cool! And youโ€™re cool when you use the library! Tell your friends!โ€™ type stuff.โ€

โ€œIf weโ€™re not careful, all we do is fill the promo channels with upcoming events after upcoming events, which gets boring for people pretty fast. We need room for more fun, brand loyalty stuff.โ€

โ€œOh, and we also need to top last yearโ€™s April Foolโ€™s Day video.โ€

When he needs inspiration, Mike looks to the work of other libraries.

โ€œThe Southern Adirondack Library Systemโ€™s Facebook account is an absolute meme machine. Slam dunk upon slam dunk. I have no guilt in this: I steal their stuff all the time.โ€

โ€œI have to mention the Milwaukee Public Library, right? Weโ€™re all Sconnie-proud of them. If they could stop being so cool, thatโ€™d be a big help.โ€

โ€œThe Joliet Public Library is another favorite on TikTok.”

“I like following libraries with cool or interesting events and services and thinking about how Iโ€™d market their events if we were the ones doing them. This usually gives me ideas on how to handle our own stuff. It helps to jump-start your creativity, like a thought exercise.”


PS You might also find this helpful

The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How One Library Marketing Team Executed a Grand Opening of Epic Proportions for Their New Library Building

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2 Secret Tips To Build FOMO and Excitement for Your Next Big Library Event๐ŸŽˆ

Watch this episode now

#LibraryMarketing Show, episode 218

One of my viewers has big plans for next summer!

No, it’s not summer reading. They are planning a giant event at their branch. And they want to know how to get the community excited enough to attend this event in droves. We’re talking a filling-the-parking-lot and running-out-of-chairs-level excitement!

๐ŸฅณIt’s a mashup of marketing and party planning in this episode of the Library Marketing Show. Plus we’ll give away kudos to a deserving library doing great marketing work.

Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here.

Thanks for watching!


Miss the last episode? No worries!

Will I see you soon?

Subscribe to this blog to receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address and click on the โ€œFollowโ€ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:

Libraries are Winning the Relevancy War! Why Now is the Perfect Time to Banish Your Fear and Promote Your Books

I have a confession to make.

For more than a year now, I’ve been amid an internal struggle that caused me some anguish. It started when I realized that I was hearing the same phrase from many administrators and staff in public libraries, both here in the U.S. and abroad.

Here’s what I kept hearing, over and over: In order to stay relevant, libraries must change completely.

The fear that the public perceives libraries as old-fashioned and unnecessary is not new. But it seemed to reach a kind of fever pitch last year. Everyone was writing about it. Everyone was talking about. There were whole conference sessions and webinars dedicated to library relevancy.

I thought maybe I was imagining it at first. So, I did what any normal person does when they’re looking for validation. I did a Google search.

I clicked on the first result, “library relevance.” There are 314 million results.

I understand why libraries are worried about relevancy. It’s the media narrative. (For a great perspective on that, read this fabulous opinion piece from Public Libraries Online). It’s also the argument made by those who want to cut funding and services for libraries.

But here’s the thing. The public at large doesn’t think libraries are irrelevant. In fact, they think quite the opposite.

I’m sure you saw the new Gallup poll released this past Friday (Jan. 24, 2020) that shows “Visiting the library remains the most common cultural activity Americans engage in, by far. The average 10.5 trips to the library U.S. adults report taking in 2019 exceeds their participation in eight other common leisure activities.”ย ย 

Public libraries have bought into the notion that we have a brand perception problem. But we don’t. We’re doing a great job. And people see it.

What we have is a fear problem. Public libraries are afraid to market the fact that they have books.

Why? Because they’re terrified that talking about our collection will reinforce a notion that libraries are a dusty, old, unsophisticated repository of classics. They may even believe that marketing the collection will distract people from the other great services that the library offers.

I vehemently disagree.

Libraries should market their collection. In fact, they should do a lot of collection marketing. Instead of limiting the conversation to non-collection services, libraries should expand the conversation to show the connection between the books, literacy, and all the other amazing work they do.

Your collection makes it possible for you to offer social services. Your collection makes it possible for you to create programming around workforce development. Your collection makes it possible for your library to offer support to educational institutions in your community. Your collection makes it possible for your library to be a thriving, open, welcoming, and inclusive public space.ย ย 

Literacy is tied, undeniably and inextricably, with all the things libraries do outside the realm of books.

Data tells us that most people who sign up for a library card do so to get free and open access to the collection. The collection is the gateway to get community members in the door of your library, where they’ll experience the other services you provide.

If you were to look at the Google Analytics data for your website, or the usage data provided by your library’s app developer, I’ll bet my bottom dollar that the number one activity for online use of your library is collection-based. That’s why your library spends most of its non-facility related, non-staff related budget on collections.

Studies of library usage by the Pew Research Institute shows that 66 percent of library cardholders use their card to check out items including books, magazines, CDs, and more. Only 17 percent of library cardholders say they use their card to attend programs, classes, or lectures.

People are still reading books. People believe libraries have transformed themselves into tech hubs. People see that libraries offer digital services. People hear about the social service help offered by libraries.ย Libraries are winning the relevancy war (good job, you!). The community knows and understands that we are more than a place for books. It’s why your library gets regular requests from organizations looking for a partner in important outreach work and advocacy.

The message is out there that libraries are more than books. But make no mistake, most of the folks who walk through your doors or interact with your library online, are there for the collection.

Before I was a library marketer, I worked as a television news producer. That means I put together each night’s newscast, decided which stories were told, in what order, and how they were told.

Every year, our news director would bring in a consulting firm to help us improve our shows and increase our viewership. I was proud of my work as a journalist. But when I was presented with the feedback from focus groups, it was clear that most viewers were watching my show for the weather. I spent a lot of time writing insightful, informed, well-sourced investigative pieces. But my viewers only wanted to know was whether it would rain the next day.

In television news, weather is king. In libraries, the collection is king. That’s why your library spends the majority of it’s non-staff and non-facility money on the collection.

Now, please understand me. I’m not saying you stop promoting your non-collection related activities. Far from it. Library programs and outreach nourish the soul of our community and offer cultural and educational opportunities for those who might not otherwise have access to them. And they must be given attention through marketing.

But don’t stop talking about your collection. Don’t hide your collection below the fold on your website. Mention your collection when you talk with the media. Write about your collection on your blog. Send emails to your cardholders with reading suggestions.

If we want to compete with Amazon, Audible, Netflix, Hulu, and other paid content providers, we must promote our main asset. If you want to attract new cardholders and keep the ones we have happy and using their library, market the collection. If you want to have a part in making the world more informed, more educated, and more empathetic, market the collection. Share this infographic to help spread the word!

Check the Upcoming Events page for a list of webinars and conferences where I’ll be next. Let’s connect! Plus, subscribe to this blog and youโ€™ll receive an email every time I post. To do that, click on the โ€œFollowโ€ button in the bottom left-hand corner of the page. Connect with me on YouTube, Twitter,ย Instagram, and LinkedIn.ย 

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