Missouri statelibrarymobile
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Transcript of Missouri statelibrarymobile
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Auraria Library Goes Mobile Nina McHale
Missouri State Library Technology Institute
August 10 2011
+Our Agenda
Introduction About the Auraria Library and its Web Presence Mobile Project Timeline Mobile Content Philosophy & Strategy
Gathering Data Quantitative Data: Mobile Web Statistics Qualitative Data: “One Question” Survey Results
Development Prototyping Choosing a Development Platform: jQuery Mobile Framework Selecting and Massaging Existing Web Content
What’s Next? Assessment Future Developments
+About the Auraria Library
Academic library near downtown Denver serving three schools: Community College of Denver Metropolitan State College of Denver University of Colorado Denver
Total community size: ~50,000 (all students, faculty & staff) Fall 2010 FTE: 20,638 Commuter campus has many part-time and returning students ~6,000 visits per day, brick and click
Web staff (Library IT Division) Web Librarian Web Programmer Dozens of content developers in Research & Information Services
+Web Site Information
Full library web site: library.auraria.edu
Mobile development site: m.dev.auraria.edu
Mobile production site (future URL, launching August 15th): m.auraria.edu
+Mobile Timeline
Fall 2010: Mobile Investigate Mobile Technology/Web Services Task Group
Spring 2011: Data Gathering Mobile Analytics “One Question” Survey
Summer 2011: Development Choose a platform Identify/modify/create (when necessary) content
Fall 2011: Beta Launch Rollout to library staff and users for fall semester (August 15th) Usability testing (planned for November)
+Auraria LibraryMobile Site Philosophy
We aim to adapt existing site design architecture of the library's main site, prioritizing content and adapting and removing that content which does not lend itself to use on a mobile device. A "full site" redirect will be available on every screen so that users can opt to view the full, non-optimized site at any time.
+Auraria LibraryMobile Content Strategy
Create a mobile site, but not apps (for now?)
Purchase AirPAC (Innovative Interfaces, Inc.)
Optimize content for mobile by: Prioritizing resources (i.e., databases, LibGuides) Reformatting data in existing web site for mobile display
(i.e., staff directory) Using RSS to pull data from existing web site to populate
mobile site (i.e., Library FYI)
+Quantitative Data:Mobile Web Statistics
We have access to web statistics about use of our web site on mobile devices from October 2009-present (Google Analytics).
Web statistics are particularly helpful in telling us what content our users visit on their mobile devices; we know where they’ve been.
Top content is frequently: Library hours Databases A-Z Library directions/maps Links to/information about the library
+Two Tools for Gathering Mobile Statistics
Google Analytics Free! (requires Gmail account) Began offering mobile-specific data in October 2009 Custom reports (“dimensions”) provide mobile-specific
reports www.google.com/analytics/
Percent Mobile Full version free for non-profits (sign up, then indicate that
you are non-profit for access to the full version) Provides and displays data more specific to mobile use of
sites Kewl feature: shows pictures of the devices that patrons are
using percentmobile.com
+Sample Google Analytics Report(shows top mobile content)
+Sample Percent Mobile Report(shows pictures of devices used)
+Quantitative Data:Mobile “One Question” Survey Results
"What would you like to be able to do on your phone or mobile device at the Library's web site?”
Survey posted from April 21st-May 31st 2011
30 “real” results (graph summary and some responses follow)
Survey limitations: Not posted very long More results would have been better
+One Question Survey Results
+Some Individual Responses
Research and database access: “I would like to be able to look at different databases on my
phone to research papers.” “Search journal articles for research.”
Access to ILS functions: “RENEW BOOKS” “find location and status of library items” “Check out, download, read books, view all media, access
to database without a decrease in user friendliness. Faster and more streamlined access.”
“Ace my finals! ”
+Development
Low-tech Prototyping Pen and paper sketch
Choosing a Framework Drupal vs. jQuery Mobile Framework
+Drupal?
Existing site (and all library-hosted sites) migrated to Drupal in August 2010 Push to get them all in Drupal 7, which was released
January 2011
There are contributed themes and modules for Drupal that are aimed at making mobile development easier: Themes: Nokia, Fusion, Mobile, iUI Modules: Mobile Tools
But, ultimately, our programmer felt that mobile theming was “just not there yet,” specifically regarding site administration functions
+jQuery Mobile Framework!
“A unified user interface system across all popular mobile device platforms, built on the rock-solid jQuery and jQuery UI foundation.” jquerymobile.com Beta 2 released August 3
jQuery Mobile Framework integrates smoothly with existing Drupal site Content can be added and edited via the Drupal site, and
mobile version does reformatting Mobile site can therefore be read-only for security as well
Programmer wrote a code library for the RSS and database features, but most functionality was as-downloaded
+Device-Specific Functionality in jQuery Mobile Framework (Demo) The two following slides demonstrate device-specific
functionality: On phones, when users touch the “Phone” button in the
footer, the phone begins to place the call. (iPhone screen captures follow)
On tablets, when users touch the “Phone” button in the footer, the device offers to save the phone number as a contact. (iPad screen captures follow)
+Functionality for Phones (iPhone shown)
+Functionality for Tablets(iPad shown)
+Search Box, Full Sitelibrary.auraria.edu
+Search Box Changes for Mobile
Issue: The wide, horizontal orientation of the “Start My Research!”
box on the home page was not suited to the majority of mobile devices, which are small and tend to be vertical.
Solution: The programmer recreated the six horizontal tabs (“Books,”
“Articles,” etc.) and the search functionality of each tab in a vertical menu styled simply for mobile use.
Users can expand and collapse menus for each search type, which conserves valuable real estate on a mobile screen, much as the tab layout does on the full site.
+Search Box, Mobile Site(viewed on iPad)
+Staff Directory, Full Sitelibrary.auraria.edu/nina-mchale
+Library Staff Directory Changes for Mobile
Issues: The photo, while a nice touch on the full site, is perhaps not
as relevant or necessary in a mobile context. Extra information (blogs, social networks) beyond contact
information (phone number, email) seems equally extraneous for mobile.
Solution: The mobile site draws the basic content desired for mobile
display from the full library web site database, but only includes name, title, rank, service unit, email, phone number, and room.
Any changes to staff information made on the full site are automatically reflected in the mobile site.
+Staff Directory, Mobile Site(viewed on iPhone)
+Ask A Librarian: Full Sitelibrary.auraria.edu/services/researchhelp
+Ask A Librarian Changes for Mobile
Issue: Two-column display of all modes of reference (IM, phone, text,
email) is far to big to merely shrink successfully for a mobile screen.
As coded, this page would not make optimal use of mobile device functionality for the different means of communication with Research & Information Services staff.
Solution: Programmer created four buttons in a floating footer on the
mobile version that connect users to all reference channels. Buttons adapt to device functionality:
When users touch “Text” on a phone, SMS application opens. When users touch “Phone” on a phone, it places the call.
+Ask A Librarian: Mobile Site(viewed on iPhone)
+Library FYI: Full Sitelibrary.auraria.edu
+Library FYI Changes for Mobile
Issues: We needed a way to import content from our news and
events blog easily, without duplicating work for bloggers (i.e., having to post in two places).
Solution: Programmer wrote an RSS library to pull the content from
the database backend of our full Drupal-based site. Blog entries are pulled from the database and redisplayed,
optimized for mobile. On tablets, the Library FYI adds secondary content to fill
available space without crowding out the most important mobile elements.
On phones, the FYI content is still available, but “below the fold.”
+Library FYI: Mobile Site(viewed on iPad)
+What Content Was Omitted?
Research Tools (first full site navigation item) All content omitted; it seemed redundant with mobile
optimization of search box.
Library Services (third full site navigation item)
Only Research Help (i.e., “Ask A Librarian”) info included as the series of buttons in the footer.
Library Info (fourth full site navigation item) Directory, Comments, Maps and Hours included/highlighted Jobs, Mission, and Policies omitted
+What’s Next?
Assessment Web analytics (Google Analytics and Percent Mobile) Usability testing with patrons planned for November 2011
Further integration with other electronic resources Reserves (Docutek) InterLibrary Loan (ILLiad) Serials Solutions’ Summon (licensed, but not launched)
CSS/design Color/images to better match full site More features forthcoming in jQuery Mobile Framework
+Questions? Comments?
Facebook, Twitter, SlideShare:
@ninermac
This slide deck is available on SlideShare:
www.slideshare.net/ninermac/missouri-statelibrarymobile