I’ve mentioned before that the Santa Clara Library
District (SCCLD) revamped its online system, and I initially wasn’t
massively impressed with the new interface.
Well, there’s more. And I’m gonna give you a
for-instance:
My objections?
Point No. 1: The screen capture was taken after I’d clicked
the Submit button to place Re: Jane
on hold. The “in progress” loop just goes and goes every time I request a book,
so they don’t appear to have optimized for Firefox. (I haven’t tested it with
IE or Chrome, but if they can’t make it work properly with Firefox they just
aren’t trying.) Meaning, it just hangs there until I close out the pop-up
window.
I only know that the request has gone through by trying
to submit a second time, whereupon I get a snippy error message telling me that
I’ve already requested it.
This is bad design and apparently non-existant testing.
And I’ve encountered this every time I’ve requested a hold since they brought
the new system up.
So, I guess at least it’s consistent. Bad, but
consistent.
Point No. 2: Yeah, okay—technically, Re: Jane is indeed a “previous” result, although it’s actually the
result I’m in the process of requesting, so I’m not sure what this bit of information
does.
(Point No. 2.5: I’m guessing that at some point in the
past I’ve looked up Major Crimes in
the SCCLD, but that wouldn’t have been in the last several months, so it’s kind
of creepy that it’s showing up here. Like Target spitting out coupons for
things I’ve purchased in the past that they only know about because they’re
tracking my credit card. Ever since librarians told the Feds to get stuffed
when they came snooping for patrons’ reading habits, I’d thought that records
of what I borrow from the library get expunged the instant I check something
back into the system. Well, if so, that obviously doesn’t apply to my online
activities and I find this troubling.)
Point No. 3: Why is their algorithm set to suggest that I
might want to borrow…the exact same book I’m in the process of looking
at/requesting? Not once, but twice? Is this a feature catering for patrons with
multiple personalities?
I know it’s very “customer-centric” and all Amazony to
suggest other purchase ideas, but to make this feature actually a useful
benefit, you’d have to program your system with other choices that are somehow
related to the current option. Without being, you know, the same thing I
already have in my basket.
For books, this would require entering some sort of
synopsis, with keywords, and I’d have thought that out of scope for libraries
on tight budgets. So this is kind of an empty flourish.
And my initial response to the new system is confirmed. I’m
thinking you should have had a product manager or two involved.
No comments:
Post a Comment