158 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND LIBRARIES | DECEMBER 2009 Michelle FrisquePresident’s Message I know the President’s Message is usually dedicated to talking about where LITA is now or where we are hoping LITA will be in the future, but I would like to deviate from the usual path. The theme of this issue of ITAL is “Discovery,” and I thought I would participate in that theme. Like all of you, I wear many hats. I am president of LITA. I am head of the Information Services Department at the Galter Health Sciences Library at Northwestern University. I also am a new part-time student in the Masters of Learning and Organizational Change pro- gram at Northwestern University. As a student and a practicing librarian, I am now on both sides of the discovery process. As head of the Information Systems Department, I lead the team that is responsible for developing and maintaining a web- site that assists our health-care clinicians, researchers, students, and staff with selecting and managing the electronic information they need when they need it. As a student, I am a user of a library discovery system. In a recent class, we were learning about the Burke- Litwin Causal Model of Organization Performance and Change. The article we were reading described the model; however, it did not answer all of my questions. I thought about my options and decided I should investi- gate further. Before I continue, I should confess that, like many stu- dents, I was working on this homework assignment at the last minute, so the resources had to be available online. This should be easy, right? I wanted to find an overview of the model. I first tried the library’s website using several search strategies and browsed the resources in Metalib, the library catalog, and LibGuides with no luck. The information I found was not what I was looking for. I then tried Wikipedia without success. Finally, as a last resort, I searched Google. I fig- ured I would find something there, right? I didn’t. While I found many scholarly articles and sites that would give me more information for a fee, none of the results I reviewed gave me an overview of the model in question. I gave up. The student in me thought: It should not be this hard! The librarian in me just wanted to forget I had ever had this experience. This got me to thinking: Why is this so hard? Libraries have “stuff” everywhere. We access “stuff,” like books, journals, articles, images, datasets, etc., from hun- dreds of vendors and thousands of publishers who guard their stuff and dictate how we and our users can access that stuff. That’s a problem. I could come up with a million other reasons why this is so difficult, but I won’t. Instead, I would like to think about what could be. In this same class we learned about Appreciative Inquiry (AI) theory. I am simplifying the theory, but the essence of AI is to think about what you want something to be instead of identifying the problems of what is. I decided to put AI to the test and tried to come up with my ideal discovery process. I put both my student and librarian hats on, and here is what I have come up with so far: n I want to enter my search in one place and search once for what I need. I don’t want to have to search the same terms many times in various locations in the hopes one of them has what I am looking for. I don’t care where the stuff is or who provides the information. If I am allowed to access it I want to search it. n I want items to be recommended to me on the basis of what I am searching. I also want the system to recommend other searches I might want to try. n I want the search results to be organized for me. While perusing a result list can be loads of fun because you never know what you might find, I don’t always have time to go through pages and pages of information. n I want the search results to be returned to me in a timely manner. n I want the system to learn from me and others so that the results list improves over time. n I want to find the answer. I’m sure if I had time I would come up with more. While we aren’t there yet, we should continually take steps—both big and small—to perfect the discovery pro- cess. I look forward to reading the articles in this issue to see what other librarians have discovered, and I hope to learn new things that will bring us one step closer to creating the ultimate discovery experience. Michelle Frisque (mfrisque@northwestern.edu) is LITA President 2009–10 and Head, Information Systems, North- western University, Chicago.