Archive for March 2009


focusing and getting things done

March 31st, 2009 — 7:15pm

I keep meaning to blog about my experience at the AIIP conference, but I also keep getting distracted thinking about getting my business off the ground and getting small things done in that direction. In a coaching session a couple days prior to the conference, Josh had warned me that it had potential to be very defocusing, because I would be interested in all the different things people are doing, which could derail me from my goals. Interestingly, the exact opposite happened — I became more focused than ever on the idea of organizing small and personal libraries. This is the direction that Josh encouraged me to try first when we had our coaching chat, instead of pursuing research or taxonomy work first, so that may have helped me keep my focus.

It should be pointed out, though, that the nature of AIIP allows people to really carve out a niche for their talents, and some of the things people in the organization are so esoteric, they’re not likely to distract someone else from their goals.  Instead, they encourage members to hire each other to do the work they can’t do themselves, and on Friday, that is exactly what happened to me — a colleague came to me with a potential client for library collection organization services.  I haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since and it’s definitely had a focusing effect as well.  I have a followup email drafted, but it needs revision before I send it.  I’m also wondering if I should wait until my business paperwork is in order.

The conference experience reminded me a great deal of my “bootcamp” experience for UIUC-GSLIS’s LEEP program in 2006, and in reflecting on that, I realized that library school actually had a very defocusing effect on me, possibly because it was hard to see the path I wanted to follow while I was there, and because so many interesting options presented themselves to me.  (For about half a semester, I even considered YA librarianship, which is so not me.)  I left school far less certain about what kind of work I wanted to do than when I started, whereas this weekend feels like it set me back on the track I first identified for myself six years ago.

Anyway, instead of writing blog posts, I have been thinking about networking opportunities, figuring out the details of setting up a small business, considering what breadth of services I am capable of offering, and figuring out how to advertise my services.  For example, I just posted my first craigslist ad for my services as an independent professional librarian.  I spent most of yesterday evening drafting it; I have a bunch of variations to keep it fresh.  I posted it under my real name because I haven’t filed any paperwork with the city yet.  At the very least, I need to file a fictitious business name before I can start doing business under my chosen business name.  I am planning to get that done before the end of the week.  There is a free class at the local Small Business Administration Small Business Development Center tomorrow; I might attend that and try to take care of some of my start-up paperwork afterwards.

While I was reviewing other craigslist ads to help me write my own, I found a professional organizer here in the Bay Area whose services seem like they could be a real complement to mine. I need to find a non-craigslist way to contact her about her business and the possibility of a referral and/or mentoring relationship. I found her on LinkedIn — I might try to connect there — and she has a series of videos on Expert Village — one of which includes a discussion of salary, and which reminded me of the value of the services I am planning to provide.  I’m hoping she’ll be willing to share tips on how to safely and responsibly provide services to people in their homes.

I also started thinking about what sorts of other businesses would complement my own, so that I can network further, and where else I can do advertising.  In addition to professional organizers, I can think of book appraisers,  booksellers, and possibly even furniture stores.  There are also some local business organizations I should consider joining, like the Mission Merchants Association and the San Francisco Locally Owned Merchants Alliance (SFLOMA), that may help build a network for marketing my services (lots of booksellers belong to that one, for example).  As for advertising, I need to figure out how one gets an ad into the Cole Hardware newsletter, and I am considering the feasibility of writing a letter and dropping it into mailslots around the neighborhood, like a TV location manager recently did in the neighborhood to scout for filming locations.

This is all so nutty.  I would never have been able to even consider doing this kind of networking before the AIIP conference, much less be excited about getting started on it.  It’s like a networking switch got flipped in my brain, and the idea of contacting strangers for networking and referral opportunities feels like no big deal now.  Hopefully my next post will start to explain exactly how that happened.

My mind has been flooded with new ways to refer to myself, too, some that I like a lot better than “freelance librarian”.  I used “Independent Professional Librarian” in my craigslist ad, and I’m also mulling over “Personal Library Designer”, but I guess that one could limit my eventual work with nonprofits and small businesses.  My favorite, however, is “Old-school Information Architect”.  I think I am going to save the “fighter of entropy and finder of things” (currently on my business card) for whenever I branch out into research and taxonomy (which, incidentally, I decided this afternoon will probably happen under a different business name).

I really feel like this is all coming together.  Last night, I realized that I could potentially have clients that need help acquiring bookcase systems and that by offering services to help with that, I could possibly get paid to assemble flat-pack furniture, which is one of my favorite things to do, ever.  For years, my friend Mike and I have discussed posting our funiture assembly services on craigslist to channel our enthusiasm for it into some extra cash, but I think neither one of us knew how much to charge for it, or whether we really had the time to take it on. I don’t know why I didn’t realize I could offer it as part of my personal suite of library design services sooner.  It was like discovering my life’s purpose all over again — I was like, not only do I get to do a bunch of library science stuff that I love, I get to do that, too? –  and I feel vindicated that I’m back on the right path.

Comment » | Information Enterpreneurship

a post for ada lovelace day

March 24th, 2009 — 6:37pm

I’ve read some lovely posts for Ada Lovelace Day on my friends’ blogs today and I  have been inspired me to write my own.  Unable to settle on one subject, I’ve decided to write about three women in technology who have affected me personally.

Anne Thompson

Anne, or Mrs. Thompson as I referred to her, taught my 10th Grade Accelerated Geometry and 12th Grade Calculus classes at Washington High School in Sioux Falls, SD.  She has an infectious enthusiasm for math and she was a very strong proponent of integrating graphing calculators into the math curriculum, something that had a huge impact on my own math education.

My family moved from Indiana to South Dakota in December of my eighth grade year, right in the middle of Algebra II.  The school districts used different textbooks, which addressed topics in a different order, so I wasn’t quite prepared for where the class at my new school was at in their textbook, and I fell behind, which messed me up in math classes for years.  A graphing calculator exercise in the first chapter of my graphing-calculator-based Calculus textbook allowed me to break through many of the barriers I’d had with Algebra in a single stroke of insight.  It was also the first platform that I enthusiastically programmed on.  The instant visual feedback of being able to graph a function immediately is an extremely powerful teaching tool and I thank Anne Thompson for working so hard to bring this technology into her classroom and into the classrooms of her fellow teachers.  I believe the school owned well over 100 TI-81 calculators by the time I graduated in 1994.  I still have my TI-85 around here somewhere.

It appears Anne is teaching classes at South Dakota State University these days.

Toni Logar

Dr. Logar is a Professor in the Math and Computer Science department at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.  I’ve always admired her for the fact that she has a mess of degrees, and for being one of the clearest programming teachers I’ve ever had.  She was always willing to help when needed and was always looking out for students’ best interests.  I was delighted when she agreed to write me a recommendation for my application to library school.

Janie

I haven’t spoken to Janie in years, but I suspect she values her online privacy, so I won’t be referring to her last name here.

Janie was the systems integration lead on the team at Rockwell-Collins where I did a co-op for eight months in 1997.  She was also one of my officemates.  Janie is one of the smartest people I have ever met, and I don’t feel that she ever got enough credit for it.  I remember her as both an excellent natural engineer and an excellent natural tester.

My favorite example of her raw engineering prowess is that she had designed a cruise control for her car that worked on mechanical principles — it would simply hold the accelerator pedal in the spot needed to maintain speed on the freeway, and she could easily engage and disengage it with her foot.  Once, she got a speeding ticket driving through Nebraska, which puzzled her until she realized that she’d last filled her gas tank with a 10% ethanol mix.  She concluded that it made her car go faster at the position the pedal was being held in by her cruise control mechanism.

Janie also gave me my first exposure to good edge test cases.  Our team worked on Flight Management Systems (FMS), which are the avionics systems that fly planes when they are up in the air, keeping track of the flight plan and instruments and such.  The project I worked on was a software simulation of the computer hardware the FMS ran on, and Janie would use the simulator to program the FMS to follow crazy flight plans, like a series of waypoints along a spiral, or going endlessly back and forth between two waypoints.  She’d find good bugs, too.  I thought of her often during my career as a software tester.  She would have been a great Microsoft hire.

I often think about getting in touch with her again.  I hope she is well.  I know she still lives in the same house in Cedar Rapids, which I believe managed to avoid the bad flooding there last summer.

The Ada Programming Language

Not exaclty a “woman in technology”, I know, but I had to learn how to program in Ada when I worked at Rockwell-Collins on a co-op, and I have to say that it is one of my favorite programming languages.  I came to love it for it’s refusal to compile until the code is mostly correct (as opposed to C/C++ compilers, which will try to compile whatever you throw at it) and the fact that it flows in such a way as to need very little commenting to document it. I would like to program in it again someday.

Other Ada Lovelace Day posts I enjoyed:

Comment » | Uncategorized

i’m going to alberquerque next week!

March 18th, 2009 — 12:59pm

I just finished making arrangements to attend the 23rd annual conference of the AIIP next week. I am really excited about this.

Comment » | Information Enterpreneurship

oh wow, should have joined AIIP earlier

March 17th, 2009 — 4:00pm

I joined AIIP last week. If I had known that doing so would get me a letter from Mary Ellen Bates, I would have joined a long time ago. I first discovered her in 2003 — before I had even heard of library school — and her work has been an inspiration to me ever since. Now, granted, it is really a letter marketing her business coaching services, but it is written in such a warm and unassuming manner, I don’t feel marketed to at all. Instead, I feel like I just got a response to a fan letter. This woman has serious skills.

Comment » | Information Enterpreneurship

Back to top