June 09, 2009

San Andreas Team Building – Wine Tasting and Blending

On Saturday May 16th Chapter members with guests in tow convened in Livermore for our annual wine tasting activity.  This year we had a special twist to the event.  We were “trained” as wine blenders!

It was a beautiful spring day and almost a little too hot in Livermore.  But that made our foray into the thick stucco winery of Tenuta Vineyards even more welcoming. 

The coolness of the tasting room was refreshing.  The warmth of the pourers was engaging.  We hung out awhile sipping and chatting while we waited for everyone to show. 

Tenuta is a very friendly winery, with art on the walls, tables to sit at--in and outside--even a sofa “U” for more intimate gatherings.

When we left the tasting room, we ambled through the production area of the winery.  It’s a very compact operation for the third largest producer in the Livermore Valley.  On the day of our tasting the wine making operation was quiet.  The crush is months away in the fall, of course.  Just weeks ago, when I was at Tenuta making arrangements for the event, the operations floor was heavily occupied by a bottling project.  It looked to me like three or four families were collaborating on the process of fill, cork and label. There were even small kids involved.  They were having a blast.

Our tour guide and host, Rich, showed us around the operations floor, sprinkling wine facts and Livermore history throughout the tour;   and eventually we made our way into the cellar.  Now we were really in a cool spot.  And it was chilly too.

The first thing we did to prepare for our blending routine was to blind taste three wines.  Most of us were chagrinned to find we did not recognize these varietals by taste alone.  But we did have fun trying.

Next we divided up into three teams of six each, and we named ourselves respectively, SLA Primo Vino, Vino Ragazze, and the Wine Devils.  All teams were given a bottle each of Syrah, Cabernet and .Merlot.  We had our pipettes, blending flasks and spit buckets at a separate table for each of the teams.  And we were off!

It wasn’t really a race, of course.  It took us a good while of trial and error blending to come to consensus on a top selection.  Each member of each team was given an opportunity to try a blend.  Each member of each team tasted and voted on each blend via the “all in favor” method. 

I know that sounds like a lot of wine tasting.  But we were regaled with many delicious noshes throughout the blending project--savory and sweet, fruits, nuts, sausage, cheese and spreads. 

At least an hour and a half later Rich told each team to bottle its chosen blend and had us re-convene in the sofa “U”.  We handed off our bottled blend as we proceeded out of the cellar.  While our group spent the next 20 minutes or so gabbing and laughing, Rich set up a blind tasting of all three winning blends.  We were in for a final competition.

We had our final taste-off in the “U” and each participant jotted down their favorite blend onto a piece of paper.  The ballot check was dramatic.  The count was almost a tie for two of the blends.  But the Wine Devils prevailed in the end!  Participants were offered the chance to buy a bottle of the winning blend to take home.  Ten bottles of Wine Devil delight went home with happy blenders that day. 

While Rich was blending and bottling the home-bound blends, dessert arrived.  Most of us hung around for awhile for the last sweet nosh and to drink plenty of water.  Slowly participants started drifting back to their cars for the road home.   It was hard to leave the site of such a fine team building event and the chance to play wine maker for a day.

Leslie Fisher
Leslie.Fisher@gilead.com

photos from the event:

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April 22, 2009

Joint Chapters Event, May 21 at SFO

Registration Open: Joint Chapters Event, May 21 at SFO

San Andreas and San Francisco Bay Region SLA Present:
Honoring the SLA Anniversary: Casting Our Thoughts Toward Another Century

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Our Panel:  Bill Fisher, Cindy Hill, Richard Geiger, Libby Trudell and Deb Hunt
Time:  5:30 - 8:30 p.m.
Location:  San Francisco Airport Commission Aviation Library & Museum
Cost:  $25 Members, $15 Retired/Unemployed Members, $30 Nonmembers, $15 Students

This program is about trying to envision the future through the eyes of information users, whose direct access to digital information sources is much broader than any of us could have envisioned 15 years ago. And it will only keep expanding. How will we change ourselves and how will we develop a new generation of information professionals to address the opportunities?

How do we, as information professionals, leverage our skills and expertise to bring value-added deliverables to our users so that we are seen as integral to the organization, contributing positively to its bottom line? How do we communicate our value to the stakeholders in our organizations?

How can SLA support its members in moving forward, staying contemporary and yet bridging the sometimes gap between historical and still valuable assets and the drive to embrace and adapt to new technologies and generational shift? How do we stay current as a value proposition to our organizations?

Please join a stellar group of leaders in SLA and in their greater professional lives. Bill Fisher, Cindy Hill, Richard Geiger, Libby Trudell and Deb Hunt will comprise a panel of professionals to help us focus and steer a group-wide exploration of the challenges and opportunities ahead of us as we step from a celebration of the first hundred years of SLA into the dawn of a new century.

SPEAKER BIOS:

* Bill Fisher is a past President of SLA (2002-03). He is an SLA Fellow (awarded 1998) and a recipient of the SLA John Cotton Dana Award (2008). Bill also has served as Chapter Cabinet Chair from 1994-95 and is Chair-Elect of the Leadership & Management Division. Bill served as the President of San Andreas Chapter from 1996-97 and President of the Southern California Chapter from 1986-87. He has served on numerous other committees and task forces and is currently serving on the Centennial Commission.

Bill is currently a professor at the School of Library & Information Science at San Jose State University. He has taught 25 years in the library/information science programs at UCLA and SJSU.

* Cindy Hill is an SLA Fellow (awarded 2001). She is a past President of SLA (2003-04), an SLA Director (1997-2000), SLA Secretary (1998-2000), and Metals & Materials Division Chair (1990-99). Cindy  is a longtime and active member of the San Andreas and San Francisco Chapters. She was President of the San Andreas Chapter from 1984-85. Her very first volunteer role was as a member of the San Francisco Chapter’s program committee (the San Andreas chapter didn’t yet exist). 

Cindy has worked as an information professional in a variety of industries including environmental, engineering consulting, executive recruiting and high-technology. Cindy’s two most recent positions include Vice President of Outsell’s Information Management Service, and prior to that, leading Sun's Digital Libraries & Research team. She has her own consulting firm, Hill Information Consulting Group..

* Richard Geiger is the 2009 recipient of the SLA John Cotton Dana Award, to be officially presented at the SLA Annual Conference in June.  He is an SLA Fellow (awarded 2004). Richard served two terms on the SLA Board of Directors -- as Director (1993-96) and as Treasurer (2000-03).  Richard was Chair of the SLA News Division from 1988-89, and served as San Francisco Bay Region Chapter President from 1991-92. He has served on numerous SLA committees and chaired many of them.

Richard’s long career as a news librarian included stints as Library Manager at the San Jose Mercury-News and Library Director of the San Francisco Chronicle.

* Libby Trudell served on the SLA Board of Directors as Chapter Cabinet Chair (2006-08), as a member of the SLA Nominating Committee (2003-04) and is currently on the SLA Public Relations Advisory Council. She has been Section Chair and Strategic Planning Chair for the Information Technology Division (1997-98). She served as President of the San Andreas Chapter of SLA (2003-04) and is currently the chapter’s Public Relations Chair. Previously, she was active in the Library Information Technology Division of ALA, and was a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Library Automation.

Libby is currently responsible for global marketing, pricing and customer service for Dialog. This role includes oversight for the Quantum2 leadership development program for information professionals and for Dialog’s Graduate Education Program. Prior to joining Dialog, she worked in several consortia serving the library community, handling customer support, training and marketing for electronic information services including OCLC, RLIN, and a variety of library automation products

* Deb Hunt currently serves on the SLA Board of Directors. She has been a member of the Special Libraries Association since 1982 and served as President of the San Francisco Bay Region Chapter from 2004-05. Deb Hunt is the mastermind and chief engineer behind SLA’s “23 Things.” http://wiki.sla.org/display/23Things/Welcome+to+23+Things%21. She is a past president (twice) of BayNet, the San Francisco Bay Area Library and Information Network, and is active in the Association of Independent Information Professionals (AIIP), serving on the Board of Directors from 2001-03.

Deb Hunt is currently the Director of the Exploratorium Learning Commons, which melds the best of the Exploratorium’s library resources with current and future technologies. She is currently co-chairing the Exploratorium’s Information Infrastructure Initiative to design and implement knowledge services museum-wide to achieve performance excellence of internal staff and their interactions with external clients. She is also an independent information professional and Principal of Information Edge, http://www.information-edge.com.

VENUE:

* Our venue will be the wonderful aviation library and museum at SFO. The facility is modeled on the passenger waiting room of the 1937 San Francisco Airport Administration Building. Its mission is to increase public awareness of the important achievements in air transport by preserving, interpreting, and sharing the history of commercial aviation. The San Francisco Airport Commission has expressed its belief that, "in order to prepare for the future, we must preserve the past." Plan to arrive at 5:30 to register and take in the exhibits and library before dinner.

MENU:

* Hors d'oeuvres buffet -- tomato basil bruschetta, cheese and spinach puff pastry, mixed green salad, penne pasta with creamy tomato vodka sauce, lemon chicken, brownies, beverages

TRANSPORTATION:

* Driving:  http://www.sfoarts.org/about/directions.html

* Parking:  SLA will be able to validate your parking receipt, but must purchase the validation stickers in advance. Please indicate on the registration form if you plan to park in the airport ramp, and bring the parking ticket with you to the event to be validated.

* BART:  The SFO station is at the International Terminal. Enter through the glass doors straight ahead of you. Walk past the bank of elevators, then the exhibit cases, all  on your right. Follow signs to the SFO Library which is on the far side of the terminal near Virgin Atlantic’s First Class lounge.

DEADLINE:  Make sure your registration form & check are received by Thursday, May 14th.

Thanks to Dialog, whose generous donation has helped make this event possible. If you aren't familiar with the products and services of Dialog, you might want to take a look now: http://www.dialog.com/

Leslie Fisher
2009 President, San Andreas Chapter SLA
---------------------------------------

To register, download, print and mail this May 21 registration form with your check to:

  SLA Reservations
  c/o AIM Library & Information Staffing (AIM)
  P.O. Box 391210
  Mountain View, CA 94039-1210

Name: ___________________________________________________

Telephone: ________________________________________________

E-Mail: ___________________________________________________

Employer/Affiliation: _________________________________________

SLA Member (@$25) ____   Retired/unemployed Member (@$15) ____

Non Member/Guest (@$30):  ____    Student (@$15): _____

Cuisine for this event will consist of a generous hors d'oeuvres buffet.

Please check here ____ if you will be driving to the venue.

Check (payable to San Andeas Chapter of SLA) enclosed for:  ____________

DEADLINE: Make sure your registration & check are received by Thursday, May 14th.

Cindy Hill to receive prestigious global award

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On May 14, 2009, SLA past-president Cindy Hill will receive the John Jacob Astor Award in Library and Information Science in Berlin. Awarded annually by the Checkpoint Charlie Foundation in cooperation with the Continuing Education Initiative for Special Research Libraries and Related Institutions, the award enables Germans or Americans who have made a special contribution to transatlantic knowledge transfer to come to Berlin to participate in a professional meeting on the latest developments in the field. Two other SLA members, Mary Ellen Bates and past-president Guy St. Clair, have received this award in the past.

“I'm honored to be in the company of other library and information professional luminaries in receiving this award, commented Hill. “My leadership activities with SLA have been instrumental in helping me reach to new levels throughout my career.”

Cindy Hill has worked as an information professional in a variety of industries including environmental, engineering consulting, executive recruiting and high-technology. Cindy’s two most recent positions are Vice President of Outsell’s Information Management Service and prior to that, leading Sun's Digital Libraries & Research team. Cindy is a frequent speaker at national and international conferences on the information profession, innovation, technology uses, trends and issues, and leadership and management topics. She has her own consulting firm, Hill Information Consulting Group.

A long time SLA member, Cindy has held many SLA leadership roles including President (2003-04), Secretary and member of the Board of Directors (1997-2000), Chair of the Metals & Materials Division (1990-99) and President of the San Andreas (California) Chapter (1984-85). She was made an SLA Fellow in 2001 and received the 2008 Karen J. Switt Leadership Award from the SLA Leadership & Management Division, recognizing her significant leadership in the information management profession. Cindy holds a Master’s in Library Science and a Bachelor of Arts in English, both from San Jose State University, where she also serves as Adjunct Faculty at the School of Library and Information Science.

Congratulations Cindy!!

Libby Trudell
VP, Market Development
Dialog

April 20, 2009

"Career Agility: The Brand is You"

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Advocacy, professional development, and networking highlighted in this talk on the "Resilient Career."

San Andreas Chapter's first breakfast program of the year got off to a great start on April 9th with this timely presentation (PDF) given by Cindy Hill, Affiliate Associate at Outsell, Inc. and founder and president of Hill Information Consulting Group, and by Christian Gray in charge of Business Development at Reprints Desk. Lee Pharis graciously hosted the event at Exponent's Menlo Park headquarters.

The talk spanned a variety of topics from identity management and personal branding to LinkedIn best practices and social networking etiquette.

  • How do you ask for a recommendation on LinkedIn?
  • What is the risk of identity theft?
  • How should you manage your LinkedIn connections?
  • Are there examples of effective LinkedIn profiles for librarians/information professionals?

The "Resilient Career" is one that is agile, opportunistic, and sustainable. Cindy and Christian demonstrated how librarians and information professionals can use Web 2.0 tools to develop

  • professional portfolios
  • visibility
  • a community of colleagues

Cindy and Christian encouraged information professionals to start building their own reputation, to push their boundaries and reach out to people beyond their immediate circle of colleagues and friends, and to explore professional options. Christian Gray showed a "before" and "after" page SLA and former San Andreas Chapter member Jeanie Fraser developed.

LinkedIn Recommendations

  • Use the Summary section to develop an introduction to who you are and what you are passionate about and remember to include important keywords that search engines can find.
  • Use results-driven examples of past accomplishments but be careful not to use proprietary information.
  • Invite people
  • Search and surf. Search for hobbies and favorite past-times to see who might also share your interest in peregrine falcons, for example. Social networks are about people. Have fun with this!
  • Consider adding a photo and remember to include your activities outside your day job.
  • Turn on some of LinkedIn's applications such as SlideShare, TripIt, Company Buzz, etc.
  • Look at Groups and add some.
  • Consider using LinkedIn answers as a way to position yourself as an expert.

Rocky Mountain Chapter SLA member Kim Dority has written and presented on career agility for information professionals. Christian had arranged to make several copies of her recent book "Rethinking Information Work" available which were then raffled off at the end of the session.

San Andreas Chapter's own Jean Bedord contributed her poster, "Building a Web Presence from Domain Name to Website" and offered helpful suggestions for librarians and information professionals wishing to build an online identity.

The message was start marketing yourself now before you need to start looking for another job. These are difficult times but sites such as LinkedIn offer opportunities to take advantage of the power of networked relationships to get your name "out there" and to let a larger circle of potential employers and colleagues know who you are and what you can do. Cindy Hill's parting comments were to anticipate, look for opportunities, enjoy the ride, and remember that career development is a continual cycle.

Did you attend this session? What did you think? Please feel free to post your comments to the Blog.


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March 04, 2009

Reminders from SLA HQ -- Member Services Highlight

Janice LaChance, SLA's Chief Executive Officer, recently distributed a communication through the Association's "Leadership List," a distribution list for communications to/from Janice, the Association Board, and the unit Presidents and President-Elects.  ("Units" means both Divisions and Chapters for those of you wondering.)  This list is used for various distributions, such as noteworthy events, news about HQ activities, leadership tips and more.  It helps leaders stay tuned-in with the Association as a dynamic and evolving entity.  It helps me keep a perspective on the Association and our profession beyond San Andreas Chapter and my friends and colleagues in this region. 

For instance, a chapter survey is conducted annually and results are made accessible to chapter leaders through the Leadership List.  It has been fascinating to review the variables across the Association and to hear the "voices" of other leaders sharing the perspectives of members and chapters in other places.  It has really opened me up to a new understanding and ownership of the Association.  Whereas once I held the thinking that "I belong to the Association," now I think more along the lines of "the Association belongs to me"--to us.

And with that shift of perspective, I find myself thinking of how I cultivate, nurture, caretake the Association--just as I do about other things that "belong" to me.  I've started to steer away from thinking about what I can get from the Association and instead am turning toward what I want the Association to be, to do, to become.  A variation on "pride of ownership" has sprung up.  The little cotyledon of my "member as consumer" self has fallen away and baby leaves are sprouting a self-identity of "member as participant."  It is exhilarating, in a quiet and harnessed kind of way.

Anyway, back to the list--the list that lets me feel connected to so many more members of SLA and such diversity of humanness.  I want to share with you some of the latest news distributed by Janice.  She has shared with us some of the analysis provided by SLA's Chief Policy Officer, Doug Newcomb.  Doug has analyzed the Obama Administration Agenda and has relayed to us, through Janice, his perspectives on what impact the Agenda will have on our profession.  I have forwarded Janice's message in full to the San Andreas Chapter's discussion list.  But for the Chapter's blog, I will just post a section of the message that pertains to the SLA Public Policy blog, where you can find news on a lot of things going on in our world and how SLA is responding.

From Janice on 25 February 2009:  SLA works hard to keep members informed on a variety of issues that may affect the profession, and we encourage you to provide your input and perspective.  One of the most efficient ways to do this is to read SLA’s Public Policy blog located at http://slaconnections.typepad.com/public_policy_blog/.  This is where you will find news and information about SLA's efforts to shape legislation and regulatory proposals.  I also recommend signing up to receive email updates from the SLA Pubic Policy blog on the link above—it is a great way to have this information delivered directly to you.  (JC)

If you are reading this blog posting but are not a member of the Chapter's discussion list and want to see the full set of comments from Doug, please let me know.  Also, if this is the case, I encourage you to subscribe to the San Andreas discussion list.  San Andreas leadership is developing use policies for the blog and the discussion list, so that in the future you will receive different types of postings in each medium.

As Janice said in the greeting in her recent posting, "Good day to you all."

Leslie R. Fisher

2009 President, San Andreas Chapter, SLA

leslie.fisher@gilead.com

February 13, 2009

SLA Alignment Presentations

SLA President Gloria Zamora and CEO Janice Lachance made a presentation at the Leadership Summit on the results of the research from the alignment project.  We've posted this presentation on the Web site at http://www.sla.org/content/SLA/alignment/index.cfm   We've also posted Janice and Gloria's presentation – a transcript of their conversation and the slide presentation. Here is that link http://www.sla.org/content/SLA/governance/bodsection/ceocorner/index.cfm

We hope that you will take this message forward and use these presentations for unit programming and continued dialogue.  Then, let us hear from you.

Linda N. Broussard
Chief Community Officer
SLA

February 11, 2009

Report on the SLA Leadership Summit, January 14-16, Savannah, GA

High Level Innovations in the Association

The SLA Leadership Summit, held this year in Savannah, GA, is an annual two-day event with a primary focus on bringing new leaders into the fold.  The Chapter and Division Cabinets also have a chance to meet collectively at this event.  There is some annual conference planning as well; and, of course, the Association Board meets. 

A good chunk of the Summit is orientation to what unit leaders are responsible for.  There are, of course, deadlines, and form and reports and responsibilities.  The Summit is a good place to bone up on these matters and a great place to pose questions, quandaries, ideas, complaints and approval.  And, by the way, the Summit is open to all.  You do not have to be filling a unit leadership position to attend.  The Summit is much more intimate than the annual conference.  You really have a chance to network with lots of folks.

At this year’s Summit, my second, there was a lot of buzz.  Everyone was excited about the Association’s 100th anniversary.  We also heard a lot about the Association’s "Alignment Initiative" which has taken some powerful strides since the report out at last year’s Summit in Louisville, KY. 

Last year in Louisville there was ice on the sidewalks.  Brr!  Likewise there was a rather tepid response to the progress of the alignment efforts as reported at that event.  Though the weather once again dipped below freezing at least one night of the Savannah event, the conference room was glowing with warm sentiments following the report out on progress from February 2008 to January 2009.

I wanted to share with you some of the keen stuff we heard at the Summit.  I’ll address several points of change in the Association and at HQ.  I’ll review the "Alignment Initiative" at a high level, sharing some of the tangible research efforts that have been executed.  I’ll toss out some bits and pieces from the Keynote Speaker’s address.  And of course, I’ll highlight key Centennial news in the following article.

Here are bullet points of some major news, changes and innovation coming from HQ.  The Staff and Board are doing a great job of proactively meetings our uncertain times face-on.  Go team!

 •In case you hadn’t heard, there is a new dues tier of $35 annual membership fee for members earning under $17,000.  This is a full membership qualifying for all member benefits.  Over 100 new, non-North American members have joined since this was instituted!

 •SLA is now over 11,000 members strong with members in over 70 countries.

 •Click-University is now FREE – all live and replay courses are available to members at no charge!!!

 •HQ has taken measures to adapt to our uncertain economic era.  There will be no salary increases at HQ this year.  And staff will adopt a co-pay system to defray health care costs.  These measures have enabled the organization to maintain the staffing that is in-place.  Yea team!

 •Again for costs containment, publication of Information Outlook will be reduced from 12 to 8 times per year.

 •Once more, to control costs, there will be no Salary Survey in 2009, which is a very costly production.

 •Association Board meetings will be run virtually to a significant degree.  Face-to-face meetings will still happen at the Annual and Summit events.

Alignment Initiative

My interpretation of the purpose of the Alignment Initiative is to bring cohesiveness of self-identity to the Association.  Yes, we are many and diverse in professional purpose.  But while the many variables we deliver as projects, tasks and responsibilities, what our specific skills and titles say about us may be enfolded into the description of our profession, those are not what we must "sell" to our organizations as our worth.  With the Initiative, the Association is looking for, and facilitating, a shift in member self-reference.  We are moving from an identity of a knowledge worker with XYZ skills and capabilities to that of a key corporate contributor who brings significant ROI to their organizations.

If your first thought on the above is to remark that we need our organizations' management-think to change, I challenge you to ponder how that is going to happen.  If you think you can't do it alone, then consider what the alignment and integration across the members and an 11,000-strong professional association can do.  With the Initiative we are being propelled toward a re-thinking of our meaning as professionals, that we may express an essential identity and core purpose in common.  From this we will be empowered collectively to speak of a common framework for communicating our value.

From the Association's website:

"The need to generate a sharper focus on the perceived value of the Association and the profession is pressing …"

"…SLA has embarked on a thorough examination to bring clarity and unity to the core identity and values of the Association and the profession. We are working with a multidisciplinary team of research and communication professionals, led by the international communication firm, Fleishman-Hillard, and supported by futurist Andy Hines of Social Technologies and the information analytics firm, Outsell Inc.

Toward this end, a body of research has been executed.  This global research has been conducted in the U.S., the U.K., Australia, and Canada.  The following are two examples of research that have already been conducted that were presented at the Summit:

"Positioning Statements":  In this exercise, statements about the profession and the association were evaluated by info pros and other professionals, including middle and upper management of some major organizations.  The results were arrayed using a typical quadrant rating with axes of Favorability (of perception of term) and Frequency (of use of term). 

"Dial Sessions" were another form of testing in which statements about the profession and Association were recorded by Association staff and leadership.  These were then analyzed by various listeners who ranked impressiveness or effectiveness of the statements.  We were able to view various segments of dial rating overlaid on recorded sessions.  Some of the results were predictable, but some were startling.

Next steps in the Alignment project are to determine how to re-focus our image.  The membership is to steer this effort with support from the Association.  There are no details at this time. Of note: While an ad campaign is anticipated, it will not be in a televised format.  Think "virally," such as U-tube.

For more information on purpose, process and results about the Alignment project, see the Association's website.  A link to the Alignment project is found on the home page.  Of note: new information has been added since the Summit.

Keynote Speaker

Stephen Garvey was our keynote speaker, addressing us on the fundamentals of "Influence."  He invoked the adage that "perception = reality" and invited us to take ownership of that matter in any given circumstance.  To understand a current state is to give possibility to a future state and to begin to speak to a future state.  Language is our key form of influence in the professional sphere.  And Stephen’s invocation was to the effect that positive communication has the highest degree of influence, especially in a volunteer organization.  To influence behavior, influence imagination.  Get beyond facts and stimulate the imagination using the "story factor."

To test this yourself, check out the following art communication.  I’ll be interested to hear if – regardless of ideology – you don’t find the communication gets through to your heart.  (-; You've got to use the down arrow button underneath the visible "Hot on Dipdive" list.  "Yes We Can Song" is about 11 clicks down.  http://dipdive.com/.)

There was a lot more to this presentation.  Garvey’s presentation is to be posted to the Association website.

Want to review a few of the references Garvey cited?

 •Fleming, Coffman & Harter.  “Manage your Human Sigma.”  Harvard Business Review Jul-Aug 2005.  Free at http://qep.nova.edu/gallup/forms/human_sigma.pdf .

 •"What the Bleep Do We Know?" [documentary; available on CD] See http://www.whatthebleep.com/ .

 •Zaltman, Gerald.  How Customers Think.  Harvard Business School Press, 2003

 •Author John C Maxwell writes on leadership ["read anything of his."]

 Centennial Activities

A really lovely display has been designed in honor of the Centennial.  It reflects our legacy and our future.  It is a mini replica archive of events and publications, people and accomplishments.  It will be traveling, so keep your fingers crossed SA and SF will be able to get on the travel calendar.

A centennial tool kit is being developed with useful resources for units.  It is an ever aggregating source of "then & now" info, digital photo archive, factoids, stump speeches for us to use, sponsorship proposals, etc.  The centennial toolkit will be relocated to the PR wiki after the centennial year.

This tool kit can be found in the wiki space under the "SLA Community" drop-down list on the main page of the Association website <http://www.sla.org>.  Check out the wiki labeled "Centennial Celebration Ideas." [You will need to log in as a member to get to the wiki spaces.]

Never been to the SLA wiki space?  Check out the wiki "sandbox" – a place for getting your feet wet [dry? (-; ] in "wiki-land" http://www.sla.org/content/community/wikis/index.cfm.

In honor of the Centennial, an oral history project is underway.  Budget for this year’s activities was approved by the Centennial Commission.  A core body of work already exists, courtesy of work done in the 1990’s by none other than San Andreas Chapter!  Doreen Cohen’s work includes interviews with four members of the Chapter.  These, and a projected five new interviews, are expected to be available in transcript form – perhaps with some sound bites – by the 2009 Annual Conference.

The PR Council will outreach to all units during 2009.  There will be an international centennial event in the fall.  No details on this yet.

Going to DC?  Keep your eyes on the Centennial year wiki at http://wiki.sla.org/display/SLA2009/ 

OR not?  Check out what the Centennial Commission is up to at  http://wiki.sla.org/display/CentCel/Centennial+Commission

Or simply visit the Association’s Centennial website:  http://www.sla.org/centennial/

Here’s to a super-charged Centennial year!

Leslie R. Fisher

President, San Andreas Chapter

Leslie.fisher@gilead.com

 

February 03, 2009

Changes at SLA

There's much more to Learn about on the Association website and from your colleagues.  But here are a few tidbits:

  • New dues tier of $35 annual membership fee for members earning under $17,000.  This is a full membership qualifying for all member benefits.  Over 100 new, non-North American members have joined since this was instituted.
  • SLA is now over 11,000 members strong with members in over 70 countries.
  • Click-University is now free.  All live and replay courses are available to members at no charge!
  • HQ has taken measures to adapt to the uncertain economic times.  There will be no salary increases at HQ this year.  Staff will begin a co-pay system to help defray health care costs.  But there will be no staff lay-offs.
  • Publication of Information Outlook will be reduced from 12 to 8 times per year.
  • There will be no Salary Survey in 2009.
  • Association Board meetings will be run virtually to a significant degree.

Interested in more?  I will post a larger report to the Chapter blog and Discussion list in the next week or so.  And a less formal letter with a link to survey will go out to the Chaper membership in early February.

Leslie R. Fisher
San Andreas Chapter President
Associate Manager, Records & Information Management
Gilead Sciences
650-522-4299
leslie.fisher@gilead.com

September 10, 2008

A Glimpse at the SLA Director Candidates

Eric Schwartz, New Jersey Chapter President-Elect, has posted reviews of the bios and videos of all ten candidates running for a position on the 2009 SLA Board of Directors on the New Jersey chapter's website http://sla-divisions.typepad.com/njsla/2008/08/a-glimpse-at-th.html.

Eric's post states, "The reviews provide just a sample of the creativity, passion, knowledge and skills each person brings to our association. For each office, I attempted to post a more-or-less equal amount of information from each candidate's bio and video speech. But you should judge for yourself, by reading the bios, watching the videos and participating in the call-in sessions."

Below is a recap of the reviews:

  * Comments on SLA President-Elect Candidates
    http://sla-divisions.typepad.com/njsla/2008/07/comments-on-sla.html

  * Passionate Connections: Barrancotto and Wolfish Stump for Chapter
    Cabinet Chair-Elect
    http://sla-divisions.typepad.com/njsla/2008/08/passionate-conn.html

  * Giving Back and Expanding: Chong-Williams and Sweeney Run for
    Division Cabinet Chair-Elect
    http://sla-divisions.typepad.com/njsla/2008/08/giving-back-and.html

  * Director Candidates: Breaking Barriers in Industry, Geography,
    Technology and Diversity [Includes links to videos of several candidates' speeches.]
    http://sla-divisions.typepad.com/njsla/2008/08/director-candid.html

The election runs Sept. 10-Oct. 1. Complete information on voting and the candidates is on the SLA site http://www.sla.org/content/SLA/governance/2009bodelect/index.cfm.

Lee Pharis Recipient of 2008 North American InfoStar Award

Thomson Reuters, the world’s leading source of intelligent information for business and professionals, announced two recipients of its 2008 North American Quantum2 InfoStar Awards, which are presented annually to information professionals whose achievements demonstrate leadership and inspire others in their industry. Lee Pharis from the San Andreas Chapter was one of this year's recipients, as announced during a special ceremony at the Special Libraries Association (SLA) conference on June 17 in Settle, WA.

Lee, manager, Information Services, Exponent, Inc., (Menlo Park, CA) was honored for her ability to innovate, while also finding practical ways to enhance existing processes. She has evidenced these qualities in her work with Exponent, as well as her leadership role with SLA. As president of her SLA chapter, Lee was instrumental in establishing a new strategic plan and discovering new ways to recognize those who contributed to SLA.

“The InfoStar Awards recognize information professionals who demonstrate leadership and exemplify innovation in their industry,” said Libby Trudell, Vice President, Market Development. As part of its Quantum2 program that offers professional education and career development services to information professionals worldwide, Thomson Reuters annually designates recipients of its InfoStar Awards in various regions around the world.

For additional information about the Quantum2 program, please visit http://quantum.dialog.com.

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