If your library is having trouble getting new cardholders and you want to attract more people but don’t have any money, what do you do? In this episode of the Library Marketing Show, I’ve got four tips for you!
Plus, we’ll do kudos but with a twist. This shout-out goes to a podcast and all the librarians who have appeared on it.
Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Do you want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here. Thanks for watching!โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
Photo courtesy Cincinnati and Hamilton County Public Library
Two weeks ago, I led a library marketing workshop with a group of Tennessee library staff. Most of them are doing promotions all by themselves for their whole library systemโฆ including one staff member who also happens to be the libraryโs director! (When does she sleep?)
A section of the workshop was dedicated to metrics: What should we measure, and what are good numbers to shoot for? For most of the folks in that room, the goal was to measure quickly. They donโt have time to sit and mull over spreadsheets and contemplate numbers the way they might like to do.
On the way home, I thought about how you, dear readers, are likely in the same position. You want to measure your promotions so you know what is working and what isnโt working. But you may only have a few minutes once a month to dedicate to this task.
Thatโs how this post was born. I narrowed down all the metrics you could track, so the task will take you about 30 minutes or less once a month. Think of this check as your โmini performance reviewโ for your library marketing. Checking these numbers will guide your weekly or monthly promotional planning, so your marketing becomes more effective overall.
Metric #1: Check your most and least engaging posts on each social media platform.
Time spent: 10 minutes.
This is one of the quickest and most effective ways to assess your social media performance. By identifying the most and least engaging posts, based on likes, comments, shares, saves, and clicks, you get a fast snapshot of whatโs resonating with your audience and whatโs falling flat.
This metric helps you:
Spot trends fast: If all your top-performing posts are all Instagram Reels or have a certain topic focus (like humorous behind-the-scenes library content or book recommendations), youโve instantly got a direction for future posts.
Get platform-specific insights: What works on Instagram might flop on Facebook. This check helps you tailor your content for each social media audience.
Stay focused on effective posts: You may love producing certain types of posts. But if they consistently underperform, itโs a sign to let them go. Use your energy and time on the content your audience is most interested in.
Metric #2: Check the top clicks on your emails.
Time spent: 5-10 minutes, depending on your email volume.
This metric gives you direct insight into what your email subscribers find most compelling.
This metric helps you:
Determine what your community of readers cares about: A high open rate is a good start to email success. But clicks show true interest. If everyoneโs clicking on your booklists and skipping your storytime registration link, you know where to focus your energyโฆ on the books!
Inform content placement: If most of the clicks happen in the top half of your email, youโll want to make sure your most important content is placed there. Or, if something buried at the bottom gets lots of clicks, consider bumping it up in your next email.
Spark ideas for future email content: Your most-clicked items can inspire follow-up content, like expanding a popular booklist into a blog post or writing a promotional piece for your local newspaper about an upcoming event.
Refine your messaging: The wording or format of your most-clicked items might be more effective than the rest of your email. Did you use a strong call to action? A particularly eye-catching image? These clues can improve your future emails.
Metric #3: Check your website traffic.
Time spent: 10 minutes.
A quick glance at your website analytics can uncover a goldmine of insights. Focus on four key things:
Top traffic sources (from email, Facebook, organic search, etc.)
Top-performing pages
Lowest-performing pages
Search queries (from Google Search Console or internal site search)
This metric helps you:
See whatโs driving people to your website: If your library is getting most of its web traffic from email or from a specific social media platform, then you know to concentrate your efforts there.
Highlight content worth your time: Pages that get strong traffic and engagement could be promoted again on social media or email, or repurposed into new formats (like a short video or carousel post). For example, if your passport services page gets a lot of hits, youโll know this service is in demand in your community. You can promote it via email and social media to reach even more people.
Weed your website: Low-performing pages might need to be archived. This will improve the search ranking of your website.
Decide on content placement: Search queries can spark blog posts, social media content, FAQs, or updated landing pages. If users keep typing โsummer reading start dateโ into their search engine of choice in May, make sure that info is front and center.
Metric #4: Check QR code scans or trackable URLs on print pieces.
Time spent: 5 minutes
If you’re adding QR codes or trackable URLs (like Bit.ly links or UTM-tagged links) to posters, bookmarks, newsletters, or flyers, check the data on scans. Most QR code generators and short link tools like Bit.ly include basic scan and click tracking data. This is the best way to figure out if your print marketing is working.
This metric helps you:
Prove the value of print: Libraries often wonder if anyone scans those QR codes or types in those custom URLs. This data gives you the answer!
Decide what to repeat: If your โstorytime sign-upโ flyer gets tons of scans but the โdownload the library appโ one doesnโt, you know to double down on the storytime flyers and go back to the drawing board to drive awareness of your app.
Track placement: You can use different QR codes or URLs for separate locations (e.g., one for the front desk, one in the teen room, one in community centers) to see where your print pieces are most effective.
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address and click on the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
How exactly do you market to a niche audience? I have a viewer who wrote that they work for a particular kind of library and want some help with marketing advice. And I think this advice actually applies to everyone working in library marketing.
So, we’re going to get into niche audiences in this episode of The Library Marketing Show!
Plus, kudos go to a library that introduced a new staff member to the media.
Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Do you want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here. Thanks for watching!โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
Photo courtesy Cincinnati and Hamilton County Public Library
Laura Solomon grew up in upstate New York with a mother who was an avid reader. She took Laura and her brother to the local library about once per week.
โMy favorite memory about a library wasnโt directly in a library,โ recalls Laura. โWhen I got the chicken pox and was out of school for days, my mother asked the childrenโs librarian for books I would like. The librarian sent her home with a huge stack. I loved every book!”
Now, Laura helps libraries with digital marketing and website design for the Ohio Public Library Information Network. I reached out to Laura after the company I work for, NoveList, began work on digital accessibility. And, of course, that made me think of my library friends and their commitment to accessibility.
So, I asked Laura to share her expertise and tips. But first, Laura wants to clear up one misconception. I thought that the push for full compliance was the result of a new law. I was wrong.
Laura says there are no new legal risks, but there is likely to be much more scrutiny and even fewer accepted excuses for not meeting legal obligations after the deadlines.
โThere are no changes to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regarding web accessibility,โ declares Laura. โWebsites have had the legal requirement of being accessible to people with disabilities for many years. The Department of Justice has long stated this clearly.โ
Laura says that, in April 2024, ย the Department of Justice added two new rulings that impact your library.
There is now an official deadline for compliance for state and local government entities. The specific deadline depends on the population of your libraryโs community, which is not the same thing as your libraryโs service area.
โThe Department of Justice has drawn a line in the sand because too many government entities (including libraries) have been ignoring the legal requirement.”
Laura Solomon
In addition, there is now an official standard for compliance. WCAG 2.1 AA is a set of internationally recognized guidelines developed by theย World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)ย to ensure web content accessibility, particularly for people with disabilities. This is the standard your library must meet in order to be compliant.
So, itโs time for your library to get serious about compliance. Where should you start?
ย โI would recommend starting with automated testing, using a tool like Webaimโs WAVE tool,โ advises Laura. โHowever, I always recommend testing with more than one tool. They will usually catch slightly different errors.”
“Most tools (including WAVE) only check one page at a time, not an entire site at once. It takes manual testing to really dig into things correctly. However, itโs a good starting point for most laypersons.โ
โItโs important to understand that the WCAG standard is a technical standard. Itโs used to evaluate the code that creates the website, not what you see on the screen.ย That means it often requires someone with both web development and web accessibility expertise to completely remediate issues.โ
โWebAIM also has a great introduction to web accessibility. The best thing a library can do right now is to add accessibility checks into content workflows.โ
That means, for every piece of content your library creates, a library will need to check for accessibility, including color contrast, alt text, keyboard navigation, and structured content.
Laura says the most common accessibility mistake she encounters on library websites is a lack of alt text or poorly written alt text.
โAs the web has become increasingly visual, much of that content has become completely unavailable to people using assistive technology,โ explains Laura. โAlternative text is mission-critical and not just a nicety.โ
โAnother thing that many libraries do is to pack images with tons of text. This isnโt just problematic for web accessibility, but itโs also poor design.โ
Laura says another problem that’s become increasingly pervasive is the use of accessibility overlays, which are third-party products that usually have some kind of button that provides additional accessibility features when activated.ย
“Accessibility advocates have long begged site owners to stop purchasing these,” says Laura. “They can often interfere with the technology that people with disabilities already use to make their online experiences accessible. Also, they donโt protect libraries from lawsuits. If your library has purchased one of these, I strongly recommend removing it and focusing on making your website accessible from the ground up.โ
Your library may feel overwhelmed by both the scope of this work and the cost.
โTo be honest, retrofitting a website for accessibility can be more time-consuming and expensive than starting with a framework that already provides accessibility as part of its core functioning,โ says Laura. โSadly, a lot of popular content management systems donโt do this or only provide some accessibility features.โ
Your libraryโs website isnโt the only thing you need to review to be compliant. PDFs, e-newsletters, and social media graphics should also be considered. Laura says itโs difficult to make PDFs compliant. The best advice is to not use PDFs. As for e-newsletters, they have the same requirements as any regular web page. Social media graphics require alt text.
โItโs important to understand that web accessibility includes everything,โ shares Laura. โIt includes databases, apps, and anything else that connects to the internet. It also includes a lot more than just the blind or visually impaired.”
“People with disabilities are not a small part of our communities; statistically, they represent at least 1 in 4 people. Libraries are about serving their communities, and this is an especially important way in which they can do that, regardless of legal requirements.โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address and click on the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
Are you marketing and promoting your library by yourself or with a very small team? Do you feel overwhelmed and stressed, like there’s never enough time in the day to do everything that needs to be done?
I have five tips to help you make the most of your time and be efficient with your library marketing without getting stressed. We’re going to talk about it in this episode of The Library Marketing Show.
Plus, kudos goes to a library that managed to work a talking point about the value of libraries into a story about a book returned decades after its due date.
Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Do you want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here. Thanks for watching!โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
I’m not sure this is healthy for me. Still, I’ve been thinking about Facebook organic reach a lot lately. I’ve been wondering: Does it make any sense for libraries to post organically to Facebook anymore?
I think there are some hard truths about Facebook that we need to work through. We’re going to do it in this episode of the Library Marketing Show.
Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Do you want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here. Thanks for watching!โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
Photo courtesy Cincinnati and Hamilton County Public Library
I will confess to you that I am worried about the future of libraries.
The news that the current United States Presidential administration intends to eliminate the Institute of Museum and Library services is devastating. For some libraries, the funding from IMLS accounts for a huge percentage of their annual budget. In my day job with NoveList, Iโve heard that some U.S. libraries are worried they won’t have enough money to buy books, let alone pay staff and keep buildings open.
Libraries in other parts of the world are facing threats, too. Canadian libraries are beating back book censorship challenges. In the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand, funding cuts continue to threaten libraries. Itโs a scary and infuriating time to be a library marketer.
Iโve been compiling a list of things that library marketers can do to protect their jobs and prove the value of their promotions and their libraries. Putting a plan in place and acting on that plan makes me feel less helpless and hopeless. So, hereโs what I want you to do.
Stay focused: Set goals and center your energy there
Focus is critical during turbulent times. You may be tempted to think that you must promote everything the library offers to fight back against budget cuts. But I can say from experience that this method is ineffective and exhausting for you and your audience.
This is where goal setting can be critical. Pick the three biggest goals for your library for the next six months. For example, you might say Summer Reading, opening a new branch, and increasing the circulation of print items.
Next, you set goalsfor each of those three items. Use numbers, active verbs, and decide on a timeline for when that goal will be completed. Do not set a goal of โWe hope to get more people to participate in Summer Reading.โ Instead, say, โBy August 15, we will increase participation in Summer Reading across all age groups by 10 percent.โ ย
Next, use the divide and conquer method to focus your promotions on those goals. Youโll want to spend about 75 percent of your promotional time on these three key areas. What will you do with the other 25 percent?
Incorporate value-driven messages into your calendar
With the remaining 25 percent of your energy, youโll focus on repeated messaging that conveys core library values. Use messaging that focuses on the library as a welcoming place where privacy is protected and where community members can pursue learning, creativity, and connection. Here are 4 ideas for how to do that.
1. Use positive storytelling
Share real-life stories of how the library is a refuge for students, job seekers, new residents, and others who need a safe, quiet, or supportive environment. Give your patrons opportunities to share why the library feels like a safe and welcoming place for them through video clips, quotes, or social media posts. Need inspiration? Hereโs how one library marketer does it.
2. Feature library services that center on safety and comfort
Promote meeting spaces, quiet study areas, free Wi-Fi, literacy programs, or social services partnerships that help patrons feel secure and supported.
3. Celebrate the joy of reading
A Scottish librarian once told me, โReading for pleasure is fairy dust.โ Itโs magic. It transports you, teaches you, and inspires you.
One way to connect with the readers in your community is to do more collection promotion, focused on the joy that the reading experience brings. Your readers are fierce library supporters, and theyโll be the first to defend you from attacks. Engage them with more reading recommendations!
4. Use visual cues in the library
Display signage that communicates safety and inclusivity, such as “All Are Welcome Here”, โYour Library, Your Spaceโ, and โCome as you are. Stay as long as you like.โ You can use AI to help you come up with short, non-political phrases that will convey the message of welcoming.
Build your email lists
Social media platforms are more divisive, and many people are leaving them. You need a way to directly communicate with your community without algorithms! Right now, start working on building your subscriber list for emails. Here is a step-by-step guide for doing that.
Track metrics to prove your value
I know itโs time-consuming. But tracking marketing metrics helps you prove the value of your work by providing data-driven evidence of your impact on the community.
Metrics like email open rates, social media engagement, and website traffic show how well your library is connected with patrons. Compare your metrics to the industry averages to show the value of email marketing.
You should also track event registrations, program attendance, and resource usage tied to promotions. These numbers will allow you to show how marketing drives participation. For example, if you track metrics, you can tell your supervisor and your board of trustees that the rise in participation in summer reading was the direct result of your promotional campaign. when requesting funding or staffing.
Hard data will help protect the funding and staff you may have to work on marketing. If you donโt believe it, this libraryโs experience with metrics may cause you to change your mind.
Remind yourself of your successes
Library marketing always comes with setbacks, but remembering your past successes reminds you that you’ve overcome challenges before and can do so again. I have two ways that I practice this concept.
Every two weeks, I write a post for our company Teams channel about the content and emails weโve released and their results (if I have them already!). I also give shout-outs to the coworkers who helped us with different pieces of marketing. I don’t ever want to take it for granted that everyone I work with knows what my team does and why our work is valuable.
At the end of every day, I take just a second to acknowledge everything I have done that day. Itโs a simple but effective way to remind yourself that you are working hard and making progressโฆ because progress in marketing sometimes seems very slow!
Network with others
This is the perfect time to join groups that relate to your work. You may need those connections if your job is threatened. And itโs always a positive boost to have people who understand library marketing in your circle.
The Library Marketing Book Club is a great option! We meet every two months to discuss a marketing book and to share ideas about marketing. In between meetings, we celebrate successes and ask for help with projects on our Facebook and LinkedIn pages. You can sign up for the club here.
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address and click on the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms:
One of the hardest parts about working in a library is the bureaucracy! It can slow everything down, including approval for your marketing materials.
I’ve been there. I might not be able to fix it completely, but I have five things you can do to help make that approval process a little less painful, and that’s in this episode of The Library Marketing Show.
We’ll also give kudos to a library that got an unusual and exciting patron testimonial during Library Lovers Month.
Do you have a suggestion for a topic for a future episode? Do you want to nominate someone for kudos? Let me know here. Thanks for watching!โ
Subscribe to this blog, and youโll receive an email whenever I post. To do that, enter your email address. Then, click the โFollowโ button in the lower left-hand corner of the page. You can also follow me on the following social media platforms: