<div dir="ltr">Please join the Collection Management and E-Resources Interest Group on Sunday June 26 from 3-4 pm in the Orange County Convention Center Room W106 for two presentations on e-resource troubleshooting:<br><br><b>Helping E-Resources Staff Build Reactive and Proactive Troubleshooting Skills<br>Sunshine Carter (Electronic Resources Librarian & E-Resource Management Unit Manager) & Stacie Traill (Metadata Analyst, Data Management & Access), University of Minnesota Libraries</b><br>This presentation will discuss how librarians at the University of Minnesota designed an e-resources access troubleshooting curriculum for E-Resource Management unit staff, and the outcomes of training delivered according to that curriculum. The presentation will also discuss the next phase of the ongoing troubleshooting project, currently in development: proactive troubleshooting. In this phase, we hope to answer two questions: what are our needs for proactive troubleshooting, and can we reinforce staff skills acquired through previous training sessions?<br><br><b>E-Team Workflow: A Case Study in Improving Electronic Access Troubleshooting<br>Debra Skinner (Interim Department Head, Collection & Resource Services, Georgia Southern University)</b><br>This presentation will discuss a case study of revised workflows to improve Electronic Access Troubleshooting using a team approach in the Collection & Resources Department at Georgia Southern University. The e-Team was established first using an internal eTeam e-mail for communications among library staff and the eTeam, and evolved into a sophisticated system using a LibAnswers queue and FAQs for handling ERA issues. The revised workflow offers an organized and efficient process for electronic access issue reporting as well as rapid feedback to library staff and library users. The eTeam workflow has provided insight into the nature of electronic access problems through the capture of statistics and includes a process for the rollout of new resources to the library and the university from trial to announcement of availability. The benefits of the new and improved eTeam are many, including a quicker response for problems and resolution; development of a tracking method for problems that take extended time for resolution or involve outside parties; and the improvement of morale in the department and <div>communications within the library between technical and information services.<br><br><br><br>--<br>Jennifer Bazeley<br>Interim Head, Technical Services<br>Miami University<br>King Library 312<br>Oxford, OH<br>p. 513.529.4216<br>e. <a href="mailto:bazelejw@miamioh.edu">bazelejw@miamioh.edu</a>
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