From the President is a regularly-appearing column written by the current PLA President.
What makes a good community collaboration? At the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Public Library (GRPL), we’ve had partnerships where the library does all the work and the community partner slaps its name on it, as well as incredibly fruitful, long-lasting partnerships that make you want to believe in marriage again. Some will argue, rightfully so, that I am referring to a range of possibilities here that include cooperation and coordination rather than strict collaboration. But I am encouraging working together, not just giving a paper at a conference.
GRPL collaborations typically sort themselves into five categories:
GRPL has partnered on movies, speakers, political panels, informational town halls, parties, programs, and anything else you can think of that would further the cause of literacy, books, information, or the library as a community institution. We have cosponsored events with bars, churches, cemeteries, hospitals, cheese makers, the ballet, and—just to cover the A to Z angle—ambulance services and the zoo.
One of the most important ways collaborations help the public library is in achieving the goals of its strategic plan. These visionary documents often include collaborations as a goal in and of themselves. If yours doesn’t specifically, breaking down community barriers or silos will help you meet other goals and expectations that are a part of your plan. To be truly strategic, a plan and its goals need to place the library within the larger context of the community.
Collaborations also recognize and capitalize on the changed or preferred work styles of our younger library workers. Every staff member at every level has a responsibility to reach out and communicate the library message to their family and social networks, whether virtual or physical. Many of our most creative partnerships come from staff members being on boards or members of other organizations.
There are some key ingredients for building lasting relationships with quality partners. These include healthy doses of trust, professionalism, flexibility, mutual benefit, creativity, and common goals. It also requires a paradigm shift from an organization sufficient unto itself, to crowd sourcing, systems thinking, and an appreciation for synchronicity.
One of the beauties of the concept of partnering or collaborating is its scalability. The very smallest library with a part-time manager can do it as well as the very largest library system and vice versa.
Where to start, or where do we go from here?
Last point, this article is an example in miniature of the impact good collaboration can make. While searching for a topic last week I asked the executive staff to join in and help. We decided on a topic and put an outline on Google Docs. I give many thanks to my colleagues, Kristen Kruger-Corrado and Marla Ehlers, who were collaborators on this article.
Reference
March 22nd, 2012
Implementing “Choose Civility,” a Community-wide Campaign
March 20th, 2012
Pre Conference: Winning Grants
March 19th, 2012
Friday Sessions: Teens, Jail Libraries and Budgetary Woes
March 19th, 2012
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