I believe that as a new professional in the information industry, you’re better off with a plan of where you want to be, and specifically HOW you want to get there. Some people (who I respect very much) have advocated a ‘relax and see what happens’ approach, pointing out the need to be able to try new things you’d never have thought of, and be taken off in new directions. I agree with this, but I still think this:
The profession is SO competitive now, if you can come up with a plan of how you’ll move through it then it’s worth doing so, even in the knowledge that it’s perfectly okay not to stick to it if something interesting comes up.
So how do you go about this? Well first of all you need to know where you’d actually like to end up. (And by ‘end up’ I don’t necessarily mean the job you’ll retire in – just the one you’re aiming for in the medium term.) There are various ways of getting a feel for this:
- Talk to people in those roles (seriously do this – it’s MUCH more effective than anything else I can think of. If you’d like to chat about what being a Subject Librarian involves and the skills it requires I’m very happy to do so)
- Try and get some work-shadowing in those roles, or an actual job in a more junior version of the same role
- Read about how people got where they are today via the many excellent stories on the Library Routes Project
- Keyword search the Library Day in the Life wiki for the kind of job titles you’re interested in, and see how people in these roles actually spend their days
- (I’m probably missing something useful so please leave a comment with more suggestions if you have them…)
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Once you’ve formulated an idea as to where you want to get to (and keep in mind this may evolve or change completely as you go along, which is fine), you can start to plan how to get there. Relating to this there are two important things which I’ve mentioned on here before, and in talks to New Professionals.
Firstly don’t think of Librarianship as having a career-ladder, think of it is as having a career-climbing wall. Ladders go straight up and have evenly spaced rungs; climbing walls require a certain amount of traversing or diagonal movement, and a certain amount of inching forward followed by ambitions stretches, to get to the top of them. The example I always give is if you want to be a Customer Services manager for your library – the natural place to start is in Customer Services itself as a lending assistant (or whatever – the terminology is interchangable here but hopefully you know what I mean) but there’s often a 3 pay-grade gap between asssistant and manager, with no obvious jobs in between. It’s very, very rare for anyone to jump three grades in one go – so you need to go diagonally upwards so you’re high enough up the grade structure to get a high-graded role, whilst trying to retain the relevant experience necessary to become the Customer Services manager. This improvisation and flexibility is not very ladder-like, and much more akin to a climbing wall.
The second thing I always advocate is to find the job you really want (Head of Special Collections, Subject Librarian, Children’s Librarian, Law Librarian or whatever) and when you see it advertised at the kind of place you want to work, download the job spec and save it in a folder even when you have absolutely zero chance of being able to apply any time soon. Look at the person specification and make sure you shape your professional experiences to hit every single one of the essential and desirable skills over the coming years (either through jobs or involvement with professional bodies or writing papers or giving presentations or all four of these) so that you’re in a position to nail the application in the future. Luck is when preparedness meets opportunity as they say – every time a great job comes up, you have a chance to try and manipulate your future luck in your favour…
The Organisational Chart
So to the point of this post, the Organisatinal Chart (known also as Organisational Structure, Staffing Framework and, apparently, an ‘organogram’). The Organisational Chart shows how the hierachy of any given organisation works – who is at the head, who is responsible to and for whom, how the teams fit together, and who manages what. It’s quite hard to get hold of ones for organisations you don’t work for, so I’d recommend finding your own library’s (it’s probably in the intranet somewhere…) and saving a copy into the same folder as your ideal job spec. Obviously libraries in different sectors have very different charts, so if you’re aiming to work in the academic sector then a public sector chart may not be of much use to you.
I can’t find a single Creative Commons example online (for obvious reasons) so here’s a link to a publicly available chart for a big library. Obviously the point of this chart is to detail the positions and how it all fits together, but for the excited new professional it’s a chart to literally plan an upwards trajectory with a highlighter pen (if you print it out – I wouldn’t recommend using one on your monitor). Ask yourself, which of the higher jobs than mine can I get next? Does it lead to the job I really want (or the job before the job I really want)? Could I stand doing X for a year if it helped me get to Y the year after, or am I better off doing Z for two years and getting more relevant experience outside of the workplace at the same time?
I think it’s particularly important to look at where the tree structure stops or hits a dead-end. Look at the role you’re in now – is the only position directly above that your boss? Is your boss likely to leave any time soon? If not, you need to make proper plans for progression or you’ll be doing the same thing you’re doing now in 5 years time. Is there a path which opens up lots of possibilities for you, as opposed to the ‘dead-mans shoes’ syndrome of waiting for one or two people to retire or leave? Is the division you’re in one with many holds on the climbing wall or just one or two (both of which someone else already has a firm grip on)?
I’m not advocating naked ambition – ambition for ambition’s sake is something I’m not a fan of at all. But you DO want to be fulfilled, and ultimately you will want to earn a decent wage rather than get stuck on an okay one forever. If your current path hits the buffers in one job’s time, think about the fact that you’re going to be in this for 20, 30, 40 years so even if it’s worthy and fulfilling now, it may not be stimulating when you’re still doing it in 2020. Because as much as the rhetoric around library jobs is often about how ‘none of us are in this for the money’ and ‘I just want a job I’m happy doing’ the fact is there are lot of frustrated librarians who have just got mired in a certain part of their library and can’t see an obvious path forward. So I really think it’s worth being aware of what the future possibilites are, so you can start planning how you’ll meet the challenges and achieve whatever it is that will make you happy.
It is, in my view, much better to be happy than successful. Being the ‘best you can be’ is only worth it if it makes you happy – I see a lot of people putting pressure on themselves, hitting great heights, but not being overly content. But forward planning never hurts, so even if you’re not aiming for Head Librarian (I know I’m not – I’m going to completely ignore all my own advice and stagnate in my current job forever, although I did a lot of the above into practice to get to this position that I actually like in the first place) then knowing what you ARE aiming for will help you stay fulfilled.
If you’re interested, there’s a whole page of essential advice for new professionals elsewhere on this website, put together from the quotes of loads of librarians who have been there and done that…
Good luck!
- thewikiman





*deep breath…* New Professionals! Get hold of a Library organisational chart and start plotting your path… http://t.co/A0VdtTei
I just want to applaud you for saying ‘It is, in my view, much better to be happy than successful’! It is something that I have come to realise over the last few months. I admit, I do get career-jealousy when I see people getting amazing jobs and relocating and moving up the career ladder but to be honest, I am too happy living where I am to do that.
I am still in the same position that I got when I finished my MA nearly 3 years ago and I do worry that having only one position on my CV will make me look ‘bad’ in some way, but being here for a good length of time has helped me carve out my niches, try different things with the support of my manager, work on projects and decide what I really want to do. Obviously if I was in a stagnate position for 3 years with none of these opportunities, then this would be bad, but overall I don’t think it is. Going to have a browse on the library day in the life for some positions I’m interested in!
Thanks Helen!
I honestly think the whole ‘be the best you can be’ thing is very detrimental to a lot of people – neither me or my wife ever had that instilled in us and we’re both very happy not achieving our potential but having lots more time for ourselves and a lower level of stress! That said, for some people being the best they can be IS what makes them happy, which is fine. I just think some people are on autopilot and not considering if what they’re doing is actually working.
Anyhow, I don’t think being in the same position for 3 years is a bad thing on a CV – it’s certainly far less important than what you’ve done in the role and outside it. So don’t worry about that; as you say, you’re not stagnating.
Have fun on #libday.
*deep breath…* New Professionals! Get hold of a Library organisational chart and start plotting your path… http://t.co/A0VdtTei
New post for New Professionals: Get hold of a Library organisational chart and start plotting your path… http://t.co/A0VdtTei
I like your idea of diagonal movements. I’m in the process of writing a presentation to give to my company on CPD. My central point is that you are constantly developing, learning new skills, taking on new tasks etc. Staying in the “same job” for some time doesn’t indicate career stagnancy or lack of ambition, because no job (that I’ve been in any way) remains exactly the same, so you can still demonstrate development.
I like the idea of looking at organograms (it is a word!) for inspiration, I sometimes look at job adverts for the same purpose – you don’t know what’s out there until you start looking. I recently put together a five year plan and found it very useful to do an evaluation of my current role – what I enjoyed and enjoyed less. This helped me to think about what aspects of my current work I would like to continue with in future roles and which ones I would be happy to let slip. I then used this as a basis to think about what kinds of roles I was interested. I think this will help me to be focused in my current development and choice of any future roles I may apply for.
New Professionals! Get hold of a Library organisational chart and start plotting your path… http://t.co/A0VdtTei
[...] Ned Potter’s latest blog post is very good on trying to work out what you do want to do and how to get there, but I know from past experience what it’s like to be in a job that doesn’t work for me. Not in the way that a lot of younger people have, as a temporary-ah-well-I-am-better-than-this-and-it-will-stop-soon holiday job, part-time position alongside study or stopgap with the end in sight, but being stuck in an unsuitable job and work environment for years and getting nowhere with applying elsewhere. The stats for people with my disabilities are poor, only 15% are in full-time employment, much of it short-term and inappropriate, and my own experiences bear that out. Therefore, a) I will find it harder to get a professional or even paraprofessional role than my peers and b) it is even more important to me to find the right role at every stage, not just any job in libraries that might get me to the next level. A “diagonal” move has to still be right for me at that time, because there’s no guarantee I would be able to move on at my preferred pace. [...]
wow, awesome article post.Thanks Again. Really Great.