I was pleasantly surprised by my secret shopper experience,
especially after seeing some of the poor experiences my peers have had. It did
start off a bit rocky, but eventually turned into a good experience. I first told
the librarian that I was looking for a new book to read and was wondering if
she had suggestions. I kept my initial question vague, because I wanted to see
if she would ask more questions to clarify and what types of questions would be
asked. Initially, she froze up and seemed very surprised/confused when I asked
her the question. However, she recovered from the shock and started asking me
questions such as what genre and authors I usually read. I indicated that I read
a mixture of genres, but I was looking to get into more historical fiction.
The librarian then had a few titles in her head and lead me
over to the general fiction section where she started with two different titles
set in the Victorian time period. I indicated that I didn’t care much for this era,
so we moved on to other suggestions. After showing me a few titles, she left me
to decide on my own what I wanted, but was ready at the desk with more
suggestions and resources, such as the Book Page catalog, when I was ready to
check out. This showed me that she took a lot of initiative and care in helping
me.
Overall, I felt like the interaction went well aside from
the initial reaction. Once the librarian understood what it was I was wanting, she
was able to find titles that I ended up checking out and am excited to read. I
do feel that had she asked more clarifying questions, we could have avoided the
first two titles that were a bust since I don’t enjoy that time period. She
also showed me that she really understood her collection because she was able
to come up with multiple titles from different authors and could show me right
where it was on the shelf. I appreciated that she was able to show me older
titles, as well as newer ones, because it shows patrons that she knows the
entire collection, not just those that have crossed the desk recently.
The librarian did indicate that historical fiction is her personally
preferred genre, so I question if patrons would have as good of an interaction
had they been searching for titles in a different genre. Unfortunately, since I
had already indicated that I was well versed in other genres, I didn’t feel
like I could do the secret shopper technique again to determine if this
experience was fluke due to what I was wanting or if this librarian really does
know her entire collection. However, it did show me that good librarians need
to be well-versed in most genres, if not all, so that they can better assist
patrons.
Glad to hear your experience was so positive and that she recovered from her initial suprise! I wonder if RA requests aren't made that often and so she was caught off guard.
ReplyDeleteI really like that your librarian took you over to the fiction section. That gave you a chance to learn something new about the physical layout of the library, and maybe in the future you would head right there and start browsing on your own. I think it showed initiative that she was looking up additional resources while you searched the physical. That was a good use of time, rather than have you stand there at the computer while she looked. Glad you had a good experience!
ReplyDeleteLast semester, I did an observation of the reference desk and asked the librarian if they received many requests for recommendations. She said they are pretty rare. Honestly, I expected the initial response that you received. I was also afraid that they would figure out what I was actually up to! I was pleasantly surprised that the librarian I spoke to took it all in stride. I actually find it kind of sad that these interactions don't happen too often because I love when people ask me for recommendations. I think with the technology and wide variety of book-centric websites available, it just isn't requested as much.
ReplyDeleteI'm so happy she gave you some resources to take home as well! I forgot to mention that in my response to your paper. Great job!
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