The information professions - librarianship, archives, publishing and, to some extent, journalism - have been rocked by the digital transition that has led to disintermediation, easy access and massive information choice. Professional skills are increasingly being performed without the necessary context, rationale and understanding. Information now forms a consumer commodity with many diverse information producers engaged in the market. It is generally the lack of recognition of this fact amongst the information professions that explains the difficulties they find themselves in.
There is a need for a new belief system that will help information professionals survive and engage in a ubiquitous information environment, where they are no longer the dominant players, nor, indeed, the suppliers of first choice. The purpose of this thought-provoking book is to provide that overarching vision, built on hard evidence rather than PowerPoint 'puff'.
The authors of the acclaimed CIBER Google Generation study, and an international, cross-sectoral team of contributors has assembled together for this purpose. Key strategic areas covered include:
the digital consumer: an introduction and philosophy
the digital information marketplace and its economics: the end of exclusivity
the e-shopper: the growth of the informed purchaser
the library in the digital age
the psychology of the digital information consumer
the information-seeking behaviour of the digital consumer: case study - the virtual scholar
the Google generation: myths and realities about young people's digital information behaviour
trends in digital information consumption and the future
where do we go from here?
Readership
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