Planning Shifts of Collections:

Paper Shift


  1. Get lots of sets of blank maps of each floor. With luck, they'll be architectural drawings with the ranges already drawn in. DOUBLE check the architect's ranges: count each and every one of them, if you intend to rely on these maps for your shift planning. This one comes from experience.

  2. Also with luck, you already have drawings of current stacks configuration.

  3. Decide how large your mini-shifts should be (we chose three-range clumps.) This decision will be based on whether you'll run into construction folks, whether a range isn't yet empty when you're trying to put another set of books there, etc. We'll find that out in the paper shift.

  4. Color the current map into your clumps. Hang that on the wall so you can see it as you go. You're going to make another one that hopefully looks just like it when you're done.

  5. Get another copy of the "current" map, and color in the first clump.

  6. Using the spreadsheet, figure out how many sf sections you'll need for the call number areas in your clumps. The spreadsheet tells you how many sf sections you need for that call number area.

  7. On a map of the new area, use the same color as the original clump to color in the expanded number of sections that call number clump will need. Remember which way the call numbers run.

  8. If you're moving collections to a new building or to an empty floor, you have it easy. If you're simply moving things around on floors that already have books on them, be sure you look at your "before" map to see if it has colored ranges in the place you're putting your "after" books. That's why we start a second version of the "before" map and only color in the mini-shifts (clumps) that we are actually working on. If you're putting books onto ranges in the "after" map that are still white on the "before" map, you have a problem.

  9. That's all there is to a paper shift, really. It's tedious. It probably should be done by two people or should be double-checked by somebody after it's done.

  10. When you have your "before" and "after" maps done, hang them on the wall and stare at them.
You may find that you cannot finish the blue mini-shift until the purple mini-shift gets the current books out of the way. However, you need to have the space in which the blue books are currently sitting vacated because the green shift will grind to a halt if you don't get it, and that means 20 people standing around doing nothing.

Do The Paper Shift
At Least Twice.

Do it three or more times
if it is a complex move.

The more you don't want to re-do your paper shift

the more reason you have to re-do it.

You can tear up pieces of paper: you can't tear up a shift crew.




Next:
  • determine # simultaneous shifts
  • update Library Administration
  • tell library staff what's up






Page created by
sstevens@darkwing.uoregon.edu
Last substantive update: 9705