Why Social Networking? Why Books?
People love to talk about books – recommendations are important
- Proof once again – that people love books and still read
- Geography is not a barrier
- Connecting with people who have the same or similar titles
- Long tail of certain titles
- Tagging – user generated, diverse viewpoints
- Member reviews – honest, straight-forward
- Connecting with authors – positive for authors as well as for readers
- Support and discussion – author mentoring (GoodReads), topical discussion (LibraryThing)
- Publishers can connect directly with readers
LibraryThing Basics
- Public library thing for all users (http://www.librarything.com/)
- LT for Libraries (a product) - http://www.librarything.com/forlibraries
- 459,380 users, 29,405,040 books cataloged, 3,460,217 unique works (7.21.08)
For everyone: - Free for 1st 200 books, $10 for 1 year, $25 for a lifetime
- Started in 2005
- Catalog books (using Amazon, Library of Congress or 690 world wide sources)
- Tag titles, star rating, reviews
- Profile page – basic info, blogs, interests
- Comments – private and public
- Tag interesting libraries, make LT friends, connect with authors in your library
- Early Review Opportunities
- Discussion groups
- Suggestions and unsuggestions
- Blog and Facebook widgets
- International (French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Italian) sites
What LibraryThing for Libraries Brings to the Catalog
- User generated tags
- Suggestions
- Reviews from patrons
- Patrons stay within the library’s own site – seamless
- First library – Danbury CN Public Library: http://danburylibrary.org/books/index.htm
- Universities – UT Austin: http://catalog.lib.utexas.edu/
- Special Libraries – An Organizational Membership is available (http://www.librarything.com/organizations.php)
GoodReads
- Free – no fees but there is advertising on pages
- Started in 2006
- Daily digest email from friends (can disable)
- Create bookshelves – currently reading, read – and user created
- Star rating and review screen
- Group activity – author lead
- More geared toward social networking – connecting with people around books
- Graphics are refined
- Blog and Facebook widgets
From Otis Chandler, the founder and CEO of GoodReads:
"Thank you so much for the opportunity [to share with librarians]! ...you may want to mention that Libraries can submit their catalogue as a 'find at' link for Goodreads members to easily look up books via ISBN/title.
To submit a link, go to any book detail page, then click "more..." to the right of the 'find at' links, then click 'create a new link'.
http://www.goodreads.com/book_link/edit_list?book_id=1154887
Shelfari
- Dubs itself – the premiere social networking site for books and readers.
- Amazon has bought a stake in the company in Feb. 07 (also based in Seattle)
- Focused on the social aspect
- Group discussions, author pages
- Graphics are even more refined
- Launched in October 2006
- Blog, Facebook and MySpace widgets
Things to consider
- Pick one and stick with it (basically)
- Import data using CSV from one to the other (not perfect)
- Barcode readers can make adding to the collection even easier
- Occasional spam
- Makes the TBR pile even taller
- Something else to manage
- If using with patrons – dedicated user
Coming down the pike
- Visual bookshelf – Facebook application
- Amazon – discussions, tags, recommendations
- Ning – User created groups
- WhatsOnMyBookShelf.com or PaperBackSwap – book trading sites with some tagging, reviews, and rating
- Bookswellread.com – A personal lifetime list of books read
- Revish – Encourages lengthy reviews
- WorldCat – My WorldCat
- GoogleBooks -- create profile, add books, integration with WorldCat
1 comment:
from what u said .. i'll go with library thing
thnx for the review
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