LexisNexis Releases Survey on Information Professionals Use of Web 2.0
and Knowledge Management to Add Value to Their Organizations
Intranets Dominate for Managing Information, Newer Technologies Emerging
DENVER, CO, June 3, 2007 -
LexisNexis, a leading provider of information and services solutions,
today announced the results of a nationwide survey to provide insights
into how Information Professionals (IPs) are adding value to their
organizations through technology and knowledge management. The survey
also explores where IPs see the future of technology. LexisNexis is
exhibiting this week at the Special Libraries Association (SLA) Annual
Conference at the Colorado Convention Center, Booth #319.
Information professionals are
savvy when it comes to leveraging technology to make information more
valuable, relevant, and accessible, with 93% of librarians saying they
currently use intranets for managing and distributing information, and
seeing collaborative workspaces (57%), wireless (44%), and portals
(51%) as very important for the future.
The survey revealed an interesting breakdown and frequency of information sources accessed. With Web 2.0 it's no surprise that
information professionals are
very in-tune; nearly four in ten access Weblogs at least weekly
(39%), and more than a third access wikis (34%).
For more traditional sources
there was even greater usage. More than nine in ten surveyed access
news Web sites (92%), and company Web sites (93%) at least weekly (or
more often). Video or audio podcasts were rarely accessed. Less than
two in ten access video podcasts (16%), or audio podcasts (15%).
When respondents were asked,
"What is the most successful new initiative/service that you have
launched in the past year?" the top
five responses were:
1) document search, retrieval,
delivery, and access enhancements, such as centralizing the
document collection into a common ILS or Integrated Library
System, OpenURL linking, RSS feed, taxonomy, and library portal
integration, development and/or
enhancement;
2) embed and/or migrate IP services within business units;
3) increase, provide, and/or offer new training;
4) enhance or standardize process and quality control procedures; and
5) provide assistance and services proactively.
Other notable mentions
included digitizing important and/or historical print sources,
providing collaborative workspaces, and creating wiki-type databases.
"The time is ripe for
information professionals to step up to new opportunities and this
study shows they are doing it," said Joanne
Lustig, vice president &
lead analyst at Outsell, Inc. "These findings mirror our own and
affirm that ongoing success and growth will be in the implementation of
tools and applications to better organize, mine, and analyze
information and enable connections and linkages among users and
knowledge."
As part of fulfilling its
Total Solutions strategy, LexisNexis has taken many steps in the
content and knowledge management area to help information
professionals, such as licensing its taxonomies, acquiring additional
data mining and analytics capabilities through the acquisition of
Datops to spot emerging market trends, and enhancing LexisNexis(r)
Publisher for current awareness.
In the Web 2.0 arena, LexisNexis teamed up with Newstex Blogs on Demand in 2006 and recently won an SIIA Codie Award
for the best blog aggregation via LexisNexis.
For more information on LexisNexis Corporate Knowledge Solutions, go to http://www.lexisnexis.com/librarian/corp/
The survey also revealed
insights into IPs current challenges and future obstacles. These
findings will be reported in a separate press release.
Survey Methodology
The Web survey invitations
were emailed to a random selection of approximately 1,500 LexisNexis IP
customers during the month of May 2007, resulting in 107 completed
surveys (with a +/-9.5% level of precision at the 95% confidence
level).
In order to participate in the
survey, respondents needed to confirm they were an Information
Professional as defined by the Special Libraries Association - as
someone who strategically uses information in his/her job to advance
the mission of the organization. This is accomplished through the
development, deployment, and management of information resources and
services. The IP harnesses technology as a critical tool to accomplish
goals. IPs include, but are not limited to, librarians, knowledge
managers, chief information officers, Web developers, information
brokers and consultants.
About LexisNexis
LexisNexis(r)
(www.lexisnexis.com <http://www.lexisnexis.com/> ) is a leading
provider of information and services solutions, including its flagship
Web-based Lexis(r) and Nexis(r) research services, to a wide range of
professionals in the legal, risk management, corporate, government, law
enforcement, accounting and academic markets. A member of Reed Elsevier
[NYSE: ENL; NYSE: RUK] (www.reedelsevier.com) , LexisNexis serves customers in 100 countries with 13,000 employees worldwide.
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