Implementing RFID Without Turning Your Library Upside Down

about this Video

When your library implements an RFID system, the RFID tag is the least expensive piece of hardware. But with tens or hundreds of thousands of tags to be placed, tagging your collection is the stage of implementation that will take the most time and has the most potential to disrupt staff workflows and interfere with patron access to your collection. Issues to address range from planning how to manage consistency and quality control, to deciding whether to close the library during tagging, to establishing workflows for intercepting untagged items while the collection continues to circulate. In this webinar, Jacob Bastian, vice president of on-site services at Backstage Library Works, walks you through these decisions and highlights areas that need your attention from the early planning stages.

Related Content

A Cataloging Framework: The Backstage Record Element Set

A Cataloging Framework: The Backstage Record Element Set

We prioritize having a flexible approach to cataloging. Underpinning our project planning stage, the period of time in which Backstage and the library arrange how a collection will be processed,…

Championing the Wellness of Physical Collections

Championing the Wellness of Physical Collections

Collection management projects are ultimately tools to optimize the space and discoverability of library collections. Inventories, reclassification, RFID implementation, and shelf-shifting projects are great projects to consider outsourcing, which allows…

From Publisher to Shelf: Cataloging for Acquisitions

From Publisher to Shelf: Cataloging for Acquisitions

What if your recent purchases arrived cataloged and neatly labeled, ready to hit the shelves? Backstage refers to this scenario as ‘shelf ready processing’, and it’s a phrase we use…

Looking for Something?

Search our site below