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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: surveys, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 25
1. VOTE for the Comics Industry Person of the Year!

enhanced-buzz-2622-1374017569-19 (1)This year we're opening person of the year voting to everyone!

12 Comments on VOTE for the Comics Industry Person of the Year!, last added: 1/3/2016
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2. Must Read: Take the Annual Devastator/Beat Indie Exhibitor Convention Mega Survey

It’s here! Once again, The Beat has teamed with The Devastator magazine for the annual Indie Exhibitor Convention Mega Survey 2015. This is an in-depth look at who is exhibiting, where they are exhibiting and how they are exhibiting at various pop culture shows across North America; whether con, CAF or autograph show. It’s the […]

0 Comments on Must Read: Take the Annual Devastator/Beat Indie Exhibitor Convention Mega Survey as of 11/6/2015 1:29:00 AM
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3. Does anyone care about the artists on comics any more?

1-this-one-summer-opener-580

Art by Jillian Tamaki. Story by Mariko Tamaki, from This One Summer

Yesterday’s retailer poll results, as revealed at Sktchd, made for fascinating reading, but at least one statistic—only 4.8% of retailers order a book based on the artist—got familiar questions being raised about why artists seem to get the short end of the stick so much in today’s comics industry. Declan Shalvey, currently of Injection, written by Warren Ellis, kicked some things off with a tweet and you can check his twitter feed for more conversation on the topic.

The decline of the artist has been getting a lot of play on the twitterverse of late, with Steve Morris also showing a watchful eye for it, even checking interviews to make sure they credit the artist.

Which to be fair, many times they do not.

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Art by Ivan Reis.

The entire “decline of the artist” phenomena has been discussed many times, sometimes at this very blog, and even by Sktchd’s Harper in the past. As I’ve said before, the decline of prestige for comics artists seems especially counterintuitive in an era which is so visually driven by Tumblr, Pinterest and the like. And given the past dominance of artists from Neal Adams on, it seems even odder. The beauty of the comics image has never been more prominent. But the makers of those images aren’t always given the credit they deserve. I have a few more thoughts, which I’ve expressed before but let me throw ’em out there again.

file_171387_5_hawkeye5

Art by David Aja.

There’s a LOT of emphasis on cartoonists these days, the Rainas and Piskors who offer a tightly focused worldview and esthetic. And aside from the VERY rare Tamaki/Tamaki, Morrison/Quitely, Lee/Kirby teams, collaborative comics rarely offer that. I think if you were to ask graphic novel readers they might value the artist more, but might prefer the “creator” category.

Also, as we’ve all been saying, the Big Two, especially have been dead set on promoting the Editor-driven era of comics, and even the finest artists have been cogs in an ever grinding machine. Marvel had a few breakouts along the way, mostly on Hawkeye and Daredevil, but DC’s relentless parade of Jim Lee clones during the New 52 era reduced the role of the artist to interchangeable drone. And as fine an artist as Ivan Reis is, he’s no mold-breaking stylist.

The good news is, the Nü DCYou seems to have thrown house style out the window and allowed more idiosyncratic things to creep in. The bad news is Marvel’s new universe is starting to look as blandly homogenized as the New 52. Always a pendulum, this must be.

What do YOU think? Some wondered if casual readers would reflect the same ratios as retailers. With David Harper’s permission, I’ve recreated his questiosn in an open, public poll which will stay open for two days so hop to it! And as a final plug. Sktchd has a followup podcast with Patrick Brower, owner of Challengers in Chicago which I’m sure is worth a listen.

<a href=”http://polldaddy.com/poll/8992024/”>What’s the most important reason for you to buy a comic?</a>
<a href=”http://polldaddy.com/poll/8992024/”>What’s the most important reason for you to buy a comic?</a>

16 Comments on Does anyone care about the artists on comics any more?, last added: 7/22/2015
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4. Survey: 3 ot of 4 comics shops have at least a quarter female customers

10387690_711498702293853_5674193789108294445_n.jpg
[PHoto from the FB page of our own Brandon Schatz’s new store Variant Comics in Edmundton, AB]

David Harper of Sktchd is at it again with the survey! This time it’s comics retailers. The respondent base is only 25, so a high margin of error, but it does provide a useful snapshot and lots of on the ground observation from the merchant class. Just to cut to the nut pie chart:

11-Influx-of-New-Readers.png

More Readers! Bob Wayne! We did it! We made the pie bigger!

I spoke of new and casual readers earlier, and as you can see in the chart above, they’re coming, and they’re coming worldwide. Over 90 percent shared they have seen an influx of new readers in the past five years, with Brower saying, “I can’t tell you why, but every week we experience someone who is in their very first comic shop.” That’s amazing, and promising for the comic industry even if some shops shared their growth is moderate. But at least they are seeing new readers. Even better? They’re being generated by several disparate sources.

Leef Smith of Mission: Comics & Art in San Francisco shared, “Even though I’ve only had the store for just over a five years, I can already tell that there’s been a large influx of cross-over readers, drawn in especially by Saga, The Walking Dead and webcomics.” Neil Farris of Hijinx Comics in San Jose cited comic movies as another boon to his shop, and he wasn’t the only one. Five in total shared that movies and TV shows have driven new readers into their shops.

Hibbs cited digital as a big driver, saying, “digital appears to be functioning as the ‘new newsstand’, introducing people to the market so they can come buy ‘real’ versions.” To have a retailer say that is huge, as years before, digital was oft cited as a potential harbinger of doom for print comics. Now? It’s additive, as several retailers shared.

The most mentioned reason was simple though: women are reading comics more than ever, or at least at the shops I spoke to.


I remember when Brian Hibbs was the leader of the Nights Watch guarding the wall from the digital wildlings, but now, just like Jon Snow, he found out they are valuable allies after all! And unlike Jon Snow, Hibbs won’t be stabbed by his fellow retailers for saying so.

I’ll also share the female customer chart because it’s pretty interesting:

10-What-Percentage-of-Comic-Customer-Base-is-Women.png
The 25-50% range is well within the 40-50% range we’ve established in numerous demographic studies, numbers which we went over just a couple of weeks ago at the comics readership panel at SDCC. So yeah. WOMAN BUY COMICS. [sic] And we’re saving the industry, just like I predicted! HAW HAW HAW.

You’ll want to read the whole thing but one other interesting statistic. 42% thought it’s the golden age of comics while 38% thought things were good but could be better. I know things can always be better; I also know that comics retailer love to complain about things, so this is a highly sanguine group on the whole.
And finally this piece of wisdom for EVERYONE to digest:

“Like a marriage or any other long-term relationship, it’s something you need to constantly work at,” Thompson said. “Just because you knew comics two, five or ten years ago doesn’t mean you know them now…but if you’re committed to staying on top of things then it’s a rewarding business that can still thrive in this day and age.”

4 Comments on Survey: 3 ot of 4 comics shops have at least a quarter female customers, last added: 7/23/2015
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5. Please take the Devastator/Beat Convention Exhibitor Mega Survey 2014

Floor SPX 2 1024x768 Please take the Devastator/Beat Convention Exhibitor Mega Survey 2014

Last year our good pals at The Devastator magazine made news with an anonymous survey of convention exhibitors that showed average sales of $1300 at the shows surveyed, the differences between indie and comics shows and more.

Well, as you MAY have NOTICED, there has been quite a bit of talk of late about exhibiting at conventions, profits and how it is changing. I thought it might be interesting to revisit this survey and after contacting Amanda Meadows at the Devastator, The Beat is proud to be co-sponsoring this year’s survey.  

This survey covers sales at shows this year and general trends in staffing tabling and money making. It’s intended for anyone who exhibits at Cafs or Cons, artists, small presses or crafters.

The Devastator team will be tallying the results and making yet another informative infographic. that may give som ehard numbers to the heretofore speculative view of the changing face of conventions.

This survey drills down quite a bit on individual convention sales, so grab a beverage and get set to share your knowledge.

To take the survey go here.  

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6. What do women want …in their comics?

201101061058.jpgErica Friedman, president of Yuricon Publishing, recently ran a survey on what women want in their comics

. It was unscientific and had an agenda, obviously, but got some 424 responses, which is a decent sampling number. The results are what anyone with common sense could tell you but are worth spelling out:

1. When you were young, did you read comic books you bought for yourself? (As opposed to reading your brothers’ comics or getting them from a parent or relative.)


1. Yes 286 67.77%

2. No 136 32.23%


2. What kind of comic books did you buy most (Choose One)?


1. Superhero 249 59.86%

2. Romance 7 1.68%

3. Horror 9 2.16%

4. War 0 0.00%

5. Manga 94 22.60%

6. Other 57 13.70%


Four more questions in the link. We’d like to see a cross-tab on the age of the respondents, but, informal and all that. Friedman sums up the message “as she sees it” of the poll thusly:

Dear Marvel and DC - 

Women read comics. Women who read comics have been reading comics since they were children, just like men who read comics.

Women who already read your comics like superheros – male or female – who are strong, independent and who fight for justice.

Women who already read your comics would like to see female superheros with a dark side, and who don’t need to be rescued, but can find their way out of danger *on their own.* 

Women who already read your comics, would like to see more diversity, including more superheros of color, more LGBT characters and more body-type diversity. 

Above all, women who already read your comics, would like to see you figure out that what women want isn’t that complicated.

Sincerely,

Women Who Read And Buy Comics 

2 Comments on What do women want …in their comics?, last added: 1/7/2011
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7. Report: Children like reading on digital devices

kid_iphone.jpg
Okay, so far today we know senior citizens are reading comics, millennials are using Wi-Fi to have human contact…but WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN?????

Well according to a Scholastic study, they are reading things on handheld devices We’ll just jump ahead to the nut graph:

Many children want to read books on digital devices and would read for fun more frequently if they could obtain e-books. But even if they had that access, two-thirds of them would not want to give up their traditional print books.


You see? Kids are going to be BILINGUAL in the future.

Why, just a few posts ago we were saying how important reliable demographic information is and here is Scholastic Books, which surely has a stake in finding out whether kids are jut going to toss their paper-based texts out in the trash, trying to decide whether they need to abandon ship or their jobs have a future.

The survey — which you can download here — looked at 1,045 children age 6–17 and their parents and focused on kids’ attitudes towards reading in an era where they are turning their brains to total neuron soup by spending all day typing, tweeting, texting and playing video games on their handhelds. The results showed, unsurprisingly, that youngsters are adapting quickly to reading books on these devices:

About 25 percent of the children surveyed said they had already read a book on a digital device, including computers and e-readers. Fifty-seven percent between ages 9 and 17 said they were interested in doing so.

Only 6 percent of parents surveyed owned an e-reader, but 16 percent said they planned to buy one in the next year. Eighty-three percent of those parents said they would allow or encourage their children to use the e-readers.


Unsurprisingly, Scholastic execs were AMAZED to finds out that kids are adopting the technology to read; evidently these execs have not been out in public lately and noticed everyone in the world gabbing on their phones and texting while they walked, drive and watch movies, and unaware that kids are very imitative.

“I didn’t realize how quickly kids had embraced this technology,” Ms. Alexander said, referring to computers and e-readers or other portable devices that can download books. “Clearly they see them as tools for reading — not just gaming, not just texting. They see them as an opportunity to read.”

Milton Chen, a senior fellow at the George Lucas Educational Foundation, said the report made the case that children want to read on new digital platforms.

“The very same device that is used for socializing and texting and staying in touch with their friends can also be turned for another purpose,” Mr. Chen said. “That’s the hope.”


All of this points up a marketing theory which we don’t know the technical name for…we’ll call it the You’re F*cked Theorem. It worked for piano rolls, radio, TV, internet, handhelds…all advances in communications technology. Basically if you suddenly notice that everyone around you is adapting a new platform and your products are not available or adaptable on that platform….you’re f*cked. <

6 Comments on Report: Children like reading on digital devices, last added: 9/30/2010
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8. Mockingjay Survey Results

This article contains MAJOR SPOILERS. If you haven't yet read Mockingjay, go buy it, read it, and then come back. Whatever the survey results, you will kick yourself if you don't read this book.

So... 100 people took the survey after reading Mockingjay, and the results are as mixed as the reviews. Marissa and I have been thinking about this, and we've come up with a number of points we'd like to throw out. First, a young adult book that gets people talking is a wonderful thing. Second, it would be great to see into the heads of the people who made the decisions about ending this series. Why did Suzanne Collins make the choices she made?

Don't get me wrong. Neither Marissa nor I are in the "disappointed because the love story didn't end well" camp. We could care less who Katniss chose. And based on what we've heard and seen in the survey, the fact that Katniss didn't actively make a choice isn't significant because she didn't pick one "team" or the other. What seems to disappoint people is that Katniss didn't make any choices--after two books of being a complex, flawed heroine willing to sacrifice for others, she becomes a weak character who mimics what she herself despised at the beginning of the series. Yes, war is horrific. Yes, war leaves people changed and not always for the better. But to many, the ending felt rushed and there were critical plot points that weren't addressed. Believability became an issue when Katniss agreed to the final Hunger Games, but then that issue disappeared without resolution. Do we believe Katniss would have let that happen? No. According to the survey, we don't. Does that change the fact that this is an amazing book? Also no. But the survey shows it's by far the weakest of the trilogy. And I wonder whether there was an obligation to the readers that wasn't met.

Is it fair in commercial lit to make a point at the reader's expense? Not all books need to end with a happy ending, but do we need to give the reader something to take away after such a major investment of time, energy, and emotion?  Something as small as having Katniss help Peeta plant the primroses might have been enough for me. What would have done it for you? Do any of the survey results below surprise you?

Martina


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9. Mockingjay Poll

With Mockingjay released and heavily discussed, we're finding it interesting that the reviews are almost universally positive, but the discussions are frequently very negative. What does that mean? We thought we'd try to track down why, so we've compiled a poll to get some additional perspective. It's anonymous, so please be honest.

And be aware, there are SPOILERS, so if you haven't read Mockingjay, don't look. This is a book that you must read, whether or not you end up loving it.

Happy reading,

Martina & Marissa

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10. Blogging Survey

I am doing a double experiment; first, using Survey Monkey for the first time. Second, I'm a bit curious about how my online time working on the blog compares to others.

In terms of how I define "working on the blog": I don't include reading the actual books, but I do include drafting and posting; working on the blog template, sidebars, design; reading other blogs and commenting; Twittering and other related online activities that tie back to my blog; and reading news about books and publishing.

Here it is: my first survey. Click Here to take survey

Since, as with many things, I look at this as not only the survey itself but also the process involved, any comments/ suggestions on both using survey monkey and the survey itself would be informative. I'm not quite satisfied with the questions, but I'm not quite sure how I would tinker with them or what I would add. I know asking on average can be a bit tricky; some days are more than others, like days off I spend more time!

Why I'm including things outside of the actual blogging: because, like others, I view the social networking of blogging as just as important as the blog itself, so I tried to capture that time also in the survey.



© Elizabeth Burns of A Chair, A Fireplace & A Tea Cozy

4 Comments on Blogging Survey, last added: 8/25/2009
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11. The Sudden Realization That I Am Old

I was at home the other day, just sitting down to have lunch, when the telephone rang.I picked it up and the male caller immediately launched into his obviously well-rehearsed spiel, informing me that he was from blah blah research company who are conducting a survey about blah blah and would I mind answering a few questions about blah blah?

Now normally I would make an excuse to get out of this chore, especially as he offered me no incentive such as a free cinema ticket or something else of interest.Perhaps I was just in a good mood, because  I heard myself say:  “O.K.”

He then casually asked me my age and I answered honestly that I am 52.Well my 53rd birthday isn`t till august 29th (yes I share the same  birthday with the late great Michael Jackson, although he was two years younger).

That`s when the bombshell hit! There was an audible sigh on the other end of the line, a muttered reply of “never mind” and then a click as HE HUNG UP ON ME!

There I was left with the receiver to my ear and my good mood shattered!Suddenly I lost my appetite for lunch, my bones seemed to start creaking and I felt depressed.Am I that old? Does my opinion really have no value anymore?

The only other time I felt so deflated was when I once jokingly said to a teenager who was playing a game of pool: “You`re dropping dandruff on the table” as I pointed to the sprinkling of white chalk dust on the green baize.He immediately retorted:”Well at least I have enough hair to have dandruff!”

Touche! or should that be Toupee!?

Image via Wikipedia

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12. The Sudden Realization That I Am Old

I was at home the other day, just sitting down to have lunch, when the telephone rang.I picked it up and the male caller immediately launched into his obviously well-rehearsed spiel, informing me that he was from blah blah research company who are conducting a survey about blah blah and would I mind answering a few questions about blah blah?

Now normally I would make an excuse to get out of this chore, especially as he offered me no incentive such as a free cinema ticket or something else of interest.Perhaps I was just in a good mood, because  I heard myself say:  “O.K.”

He then casually asked me my age and I answered honestly that I am 52.Well my 53rd birthday isn`t till august 29th (yes I share the same  birthday with the late great Michael Jackson, although he was two years younger).

That`s when the bombshell hit! There was an audible sigh on the other end of the line, a muttered reply of “never mind” and then a click as HE HUNG UP ON ME!

There I was left with the receiver to my ear and my good mood shattered!Suddenly I lost my appetite for lunch, my bones seemed to start creaking and I felt depressed.Am I that old? Does my opinion really have no value anymore?

The only other time I felt so deflated was when I once jokingly said to a teenager who was playing a game of pool: “You`re dropping dandruff on the table” as I pointed to the sprinkling of white chalk dust on the green baize.He immediately retorted:”Well at least I have enough hair to have dandruff!”

Touche! or should that be Toupee!?

Image via Wikipedia

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13. Google Book Search Settlement

Take this survey and let them know what you think. You don't need to have standing to give your opinion.
www.zoomerang.com/Survey/?p=WEB229EB66ZEQ5

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14. The Deck Ad Network Readership Survey

deck network survey

The Deck Ad Network survey.  Answer a few questions, have a few laughs and enter to win some goodies.

No Tags

Congrats to our two winners in the Human Empire/Andreas Samuelsson t-shirt giveaway. 1st place winner jessicat - 2nd place winner - Hamsterfish



©2009 Grain Edit

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15. Have you *ever* visited WebJunction?

If yes, please take a moment to tell us about it. All you have to do is complete this short survey about your experiences with our service and about your current concerns and interests in Libraryland. Good? Bad? Meh? We want to hear it all.

We report all the results back to the field (on our site), but the open-ended responses to the field-based questions never fail to provide me with new insights on what we're thinking and doing (in aggregate).

Many thanks in advance to over 1000 of you who have already sent in your responses.

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16. GIFT CARD - THE GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING ALL YEAR

NOTE TO SELF: USE GIFT CARD


There used to be a time when store clerks and shoppers dreaded the day after Christmas in anticipation of the post-holiday return madness. The endless line-ups to bring back items that were the wrong size, bad color selection, vile scent or mis-guessed sizes appear to be on the wane with the growing popularity of gift cards.

Surveys according to America's Research Group, which polls shoppers for retailers, indicate that significantly fewer shoppers would be returning gifts this year. Ten years ago, the group found, 38 percent of consumers said they had an unwanted gift to return after Christmas. Five years ago, that number was 33 percent; this year, it is 14 percent.

The National Retail Federation surveyed shoppers and found that 64.3 percent didn’t return anything last holiday season, up from 62.4 percent in 2005.

When you think about it a gift card makes a lot of sense since it allows the recipient a good span of time to reflect upon what they really want or need. However, the trick is to remember that you received one and to check on the expiry date. Also, you can't re-gift a gift card!

Read the rest of the story here: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/27/business/27returns.html

What gifts did you return this year?

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17. The Librarians Choose

The initial response result from a poll of librarians reveals a strong preference for three candidates:  Democrats Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, and Barack Obama.

Clinton received 25.5% of the votes, Edwards 23.1% and Obama 21.2%.  Following them was Dennis Kucinich, with 5.3%. 

The results were heavily in favor of Democratic Party candidates; when asked to describe their own party affiliation, 58.1% of respondents picked the Democratic Party and 11.2% Republican; 3.7% chose the Green Party.  Of special note:  21.9% picked Independent or no affiliation.

Respondents chose as the most important considerations for the 2008 election the Iraq War (35.8%), The Economy (12.1%), International Relations (10.2%), Health Insurance (9.3%) and Social Inequality (8.4%). 

The results are not unusual given the generally liberal bent of most librarians; what is most interesting is the fairly even division of support for three Democratic candidates, with none taking an insurmountable lead over the others to this point.  What this means is that the eventual Democratic candidate will be faced with gathering in supporters from at least two other strong candidates; this may mean sharing the ticket with one and absorbing platform elements from the other as the cost of an endorsement.

Latest results may be viewed at:  http://www.surveymonkey.com/sr.aspx?sm=bis829Rs47bbbv6RhcAm63gxPHR_2bH9vWUy42K3HUbI4_3d

Michael McGrorty

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18. 2008 Presidential Election Survey for Librarians

As I have done in previous years, here is a survey, intended for librarians, on the subject of the 2008 Presidential Election. Librarians who wish to take this survey can click on the link below; results will be provided as we go along.  Note:  The response order has been randomized; what you see is not necessarily what others will view.  Thanks in advance for your consideration.

Michael McGrorty

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19. Survey Shutting Down on Sunday

Y'all. Y'all. Nearly 750 of you have started the survey, and nearly 350 of you have completed it. Thank you so, so much. We never anticipated such an incredible response, and are bowled over by how generous you have been with your time, your thoughtful responses, and your ideas. Again: thank you.

For those of you who have been putting off responding to the survey, or forgot about the survey, or have no idea what I'm talking about, first, read this entry. (Briefly, Liz & I are writing a book on pop culture & libraries. The survey is designed to find out what you're doing to leverage your pop culture collections at your library.) Then, if you are still interested in helping us out, please take the survey. It'll take you 15-30 minutes, tops, and will help us out immeasurably.

Like all good things, however, the survey is coming to a close. I'm shuttering the windows & rolling up the carpets on Sunday evening, around 5 PM EST. So speak -- er, type -- now, or forever hold your peace. At least until the book comes out.

Thank you, once more. We are in your collective debt, and we will do everything we can to ensure the book delivers on the promise of your contributions.

0 Comments on Survey Shutting Down on Sunday as of 8/23/2007 1:52:00 PM
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20. Pop Goes The Book

You may have noticed not as much posting, or not as much substantial posting. Well, here's the thing. Sophie Brookover and I are in the midst of writing a book. It's called Pop Goes the Library: Using Pop Culture to Connect With Your Whole Community, and the good folks at ITI are going to publish it, sometime in 2008.

So while we're researching, writing, revising, etc., we have a request for those of you readers who work in libraries.

We have this survey, you see, and it would help us out tremendously if you'd be willing to answer our questions. It's one thing for us to write about what we think makes a great marriage between pop culture & libraries; it's quite another, more powerful thing to quote our experienced colleagues on this topic. So, if you're willing, our survey is right here.

We apologize in advance if you see e-mail survey-related e-mails on various list-servs. We're trying to gather as many responses as the library community is willing to provide. Thank you so much for taking the time to participate. We know our book will be that much better for your contributions!

Adapted from Sophie's post at Pop.

8 Comments on Pop Goes The Book, last added: 8/13/2007
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21. Pop Goes The Book (AKA, Take This Survey, Please!)

So, Liz and I have been sitting on some fairly big news for a while now: we're writing a book. It's called Pop Goes the Library: Using Pop Culture to Connect With Your Whole Community, and the good folks at ITI are going to publish it, sometime in 2008.

So while we feverishly research, write, and revise the manuscript, we have a request of all of you, dear Readers & Friends of Pop: we have this survey, you see, and it would help us out tremendously if you'd be willing to answer our questions. It's one thing for us to write about what we think makes a great marriage between pop culture & libraries; it's quite another, more powerful thing to quote our experienced colleagues on this topic.

So, if you're willing, our survey is right here.


We apologize in advance if you see e-mail survey-related e-mails on various list-servs. We're trying to gather as many responses as the library community is willing to provide.

Thank you so much for taking the time to participate. We know our book will be that much better for your contributions!

Cross-posted by Liz at Tea Cozy.

ETA: Despite our early testing of the survey, there were some problems. They are now fixed, or should be -- if you have problems, leave a note in the comments or e-mail sophie DOT brookover AT gmail DOT com. Thanks!

2 Comments on Pop Goes The Book (AKA, Take This Survey, Please!), last added: 8/8/2007
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22. Friends, Helping Out Old

Do you blog? If yes, then please consider participating in an online survey from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Information and Library Science. The study, Blogger Perceptions on Digital Preservation, is being conducted under the guidance of the Real Paul Jones. The study team is interested in hearing from all bloggers on their perceptions on digital preservation in

0 Comments on Friends, Helping Out Old as of 5/7/2007 2:16:00 PM
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23. Where My Librarian Peoples At?

Let no one say I do not love my alma mater. A fellow Earlhamite (KILL, QUAKERS, KILL!) who is also a librarian sent this info to me recently. Person in question is an ALA Emerging Leader and they want all of us librarians to take a survey.

We've decided to survey as broad a spectrum of library professionals as possible in order to see what we think of ourselves. Please take a few minutes to fill out our survey. We'll be presenting the results and a plan of action as a poster session at ALA annual conference.
Your goal, oh fellow children and YA librarians, is to tip the balance towards the kidlit spectrum. It takes like three minutes anyway. Non-librarians, I'm afraid you'll just have to hold off on this one. My apologies.

2 Comments on Where My Librarian Peoples At?, last added: 5/3/2007
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24. Student Loan Debt Survey Results

Responses to the librarian student loan debt survey have now passed six hundred.  The report of returns is available here: 

http://www.surveymonkey.com/Report.asp?U=337466510113

In part, the response summary indicates that:

--74% of respondents have used student loans to finance their library/information science education.

--6.1% of respondents report that they are, or have been in default on student loans.  The national average for student loan default was 5.1% in 2006, and 4.5 percent the year before.

Michael McGrorty

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25. Student Debt Survey

I have put together a twenty-question survey for graduates of library and information science programs.  The survey is intended to determine the degree to which student loan indebtedness affects that population.  The results will be used in a study of the subject, and released when compiled.  Thanks in advance for your participation.
Michael McGrorty

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