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Member Spotlight – Kim Dority

Name: Kim Dority

Where do you live? Centennial, Colorado, about 20 miles south of Denver

Where do you work, and what’s your title? I’m the president of Dority & Associates, Inc., an independent information strategy and content development company.

What’s the mission of your organization? Mission is to help individuals and organizations (for-profit and nonprofit) use information as a strategic asset. This may involve auditing their existing information resources; aggregating, licensing, or creating additional information; and packaging, presenting, and/or promoting that information in ways that align with the client’s strategic goals.

URL for your organization: www.dorityassociates.com

When did you become an SLA/RMSLA member? Boy, tough question! Maybe 25 years ago?

What drew you into an information career? I’ve always been an information junkie – I was one of those odd kids who would sit around reading the encyclopedia (okay, or the cereal box in a pinch)! Once I realized that librarians learned how to do research for a living, I was hooked on the MLIS path. I also loved to write and became skilled at combining research and writing to do content creation for clients. I think good information can be the most powerful change agent for good on the planet – I love that we have the skills to be part of that. I’m also drawn to how infinitely adaptable the skill set it.

What’s the best thing about being an information professional? Knowing that in a world where information is the primary currency, we can be critical parts of the flow of that currency. Again, it’s that whole “infinitely adaptable skill set” thing. And also, it’s just really, really fun!

What’s the next great thing you want to learn? How to present information as effectively as possible, including graphically for written documents and persuasively for teaching situations. Whether I’m working with a corporate client or teaching a course or workshop on LIS career options, I’m usually in a position of providing information that (on a good day!) will help the recipient make a strategic decision or take a positive action. Sometimes that’s more easily done with a visual representation, or through a compelling story that helps a workshop participant feel confident that he or she can successfully set and achieve a goal. So I want to learn how to present all types of information most effectively for the client or audience at hand.

Are you a member of any other professional associations? Yes: the American Library Association, the Association of Independent Information Professionals, and the National Association of Employers and Colleges.

What do you love to do in your non-work time? Read, tai chi, learn any new skills, hang out with friends, write books, find a beach to explore, go see trashy movies with my 89-year-old dad, who is always game to go see movies with me that my other friends would rather die than have to see! (Usually involves lots of action and a distinct lack of character development….)

Tell us something about yourself that we’d never think to ask. I set my career goals at an early age! By age ten, I knew I either wanted to be Annie Oakley (she got to ride horses, shoot guns, and never had to hang around the house doing any of that boring domestic girl stuff) or Sandy Koufax, the legendary pitcher for the Dodgers. As I grew older and wiser, however, I realized that working with information was my true passion, so I transferred my earlier career goals into an amazing ability to avoid that “boring domestic girl stuff” whenever possible, often by watching in agony the truly terrible pitching skills of the Colorado Rockies….

What’s your favorite thing about SLA and/or the Rocky Mountain Chapter?

Getting to learn cool stuff from good friends, the professional and personal gratification of getting to hang out with people who “get” information work in all its diversity, and the amazing opportunity to connect with so many information professionals doing diverse, creative, and often fascinating things with their knowledge.

 

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RMSLA Board Profile: Treasurer Barbara Durland

Getting to know: RMSLA Treasurer Barbara Durland

Where do you live?

Parker, CO

Where do you work, and what’s your title?

I just graduated from Emporia State University with my MLIS last December. I was working at Platt College as a Library Assistant. However, in February I became a mom and am staying at home to care for our son. I do some freelance work part time.

What’s the mission of your organization?

N/A

When did you become an SLA/RMSLA member?

When I was in graduate school two years ago I found out about it from my boss at Platt College, Laura Cullerton and joined right away.

What drew you into an information career?

I had considered a degree in library science for many years. However, instead I pursued a master’s degree in social work and worked as a therapist for several years. I saw how important it was for individuals to have hope in order to change. Being able to access and use information gives hope.

What’s the best thing about being information professional?

Helping others learn how to help themselves.

What’s the next great thing you want to learn?

How to start and run a great Independent Information Professional business.

Are you a member of any other professional associations?

Yes, ALA, MLA

What do you love to do in your non-work time?

Take care of my son, read, exercise, and I am learning to knit.

Tell us something about yourself that we’d never think to ask.

The other career I have considered (but will never pursue) is something with animals. I love animals and have had dogs, cats, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles, rats, and fish. I particularly like rescuing animals.

What’s your favorite thing about SLA and/or the Rocky Mountain Chapter?

I enjoy the friendships I have made. Librarians are great people!

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RMSLA Board Profile: Secretary Carol Stahlberg

Getting to know: RMSLA Secretary Carol Stahlberg

Where do you live?

Westminster, I-25 and 136th Ave, but my heart resides in Boulder.

Where do you work, and what’s your title? 

I am a human resources specialist for the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies.  Responsibilities that fall under this general title include technical recruitment (I speak engineer), training manager, EEOC officer, ADAAA coordinator, technology advisor for website conversion, and software testing.

What’s the mission of your organization?

DORA is dedicated to preserving the integrity of the marketplace and is committed to promoting a fair and competitive business environment in Colorado. Consumer protection is our mission.

When did you become an SLA/RMSLA member?

Fall 2008.

What drew you into an information career?

I’m driven to provide solutions. In grad school, I focused my studies on KM and IT. I am looking to transitioning into an independent info pro.

What’s the best thing about being an information professional?

While I am currently not a full-fledged info pro, I have a following of engineers and researchers that love the services I provide.  When I go pro, energy, ecology, privacy, IA, and UX are areas of interest to me.

What’s the next great thing you want to learn?

I love the technological aspect of information.  I’m learning PL/SQL, and am hopefully becoming a SharePoint guru.  I’ve also been toying with InfoPath lately.

Are you a member of any other professional associations?

Currently AIIP, ALA and SLA.

What do you love to do in your non-work time?

Having graduated this past June, a lot of my time has been focused on attending to tasks (read home maintenance) that were  neglected over the last three years.  But for fun, I like to read (currently involved in Jon Krakauer’s Under the Banner of Heaven), spoiling my two nephews (ages five and eight), baking, gardening (something I haven’t done for the last three years), and indulging in a pint of Dale’s Pale Ale at the Tasty Weasel Tap Room in Longmont.

Tell us something about yourself that we’d never think to ask.

I’ve lived in Colorado for 97% of my life and have never skied, but I have snowboarded. I’ve never seen the movie ET. Having said that, I can never see the movie ET.

What’s your favorite thing about SLA and/or the Rocky Mountain Chapter?

This one is easy…it’s our members and the camaraderie.

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RMSLA Board Profile: Director Connie Clem

Getting to know: RMSLA Director Connie Clem

Where do you live?

Niwot, Colorado

Where do you work, and what’s your title?

I’m the owner/principal at Clem Information Strategies.

What’s the mission of your organization?

CIS creates change through information for government and nonprofit clients.  My main focus is justice and corrections, including the human services fields that are connected with justice-involved people or that relate to prevention and rehabilitation – community health and mental health, housing, employment, women’s services. . . This year I’m celebrating 30 years in corrections information. (Wow!)

When did you become an SLA/RMSLA member?

I had to check the SLA site for this one. It says 2003. But I think it was 1996, in time for the conference in Boston.

What drew you into an information career?

When I got out of college with a biology degree, I wanted to do research, but not the kind that happens in a laboratory. (Electrophoresis was fine, but for a lifetime? Admittedly, I didn’t know what topics had the day’s most riveting lab research.) Information environments drew me. Turn a few pages and I was working in a federal information center in acquisitions, learning about the types of information our varied clientele needed to make their organizations more effective. This led me to information-sharing and research projects, publishing, web development, and supporting online communities. We were so thrilled to get our Inmagic library catalog online in 1998! And it was an adventure to publish some of our research databases online after that.

What’s the best thing about being an information professional?

For me, the fact that you can do so many different things within the ”information” umbrella. You can work with people or code or both. You can find and distill new information to make it easy for end-users to act on it. You can make information findable online. You can develop your tech skills and juggle multiple projects at once.

What’s the next great thing you want to learn?

I would love to study how people apply and use information once they’ve got their hands on the good stuff. But that’s a little abstract. What I’ll actually learn next depends on where my projects this year take me.

Are you a member of any other professional associations?

A few of them include the American Jail Association, the American Correctional Association, the Colorado Nonprofit Association, and the Association of Independent Information Professionals.

What do you love to do in your non-work time?

Being out in the garden I have my best ideas. I collect tough native and xeriscape perennial plants that manifest amazing beauty right here in our semi-arid climate. (It’s my inner biologist.) I have orchids in a sunroom to get me through the winter. I’ve been through a quilting phase, I like to cook Indian and Moroccan food, and through the talents of my husband have remodeled two houses, going on three. Once in a while we still get out for a mountain hike or camping trip. I practice yoga, and there are always 5 or 10 books next to my pillow.

Tell us something about yourself that we’d never think to ask.

I am the former holder of records in South Dakota AAU and college swimming. Mainly the 100 meter butterfly. Looking at the times people are posting now, I just slink away. Also, I’m a middle child with four brothers.

What’s your favorite thing about SLA and/or the Rocky Mountain Chapter?

Meeting new people and realizing we all have that passion for recognizing precious or pivotal information. So many people here are givers and sharers, and there are vast amounts of creativity and expertise. Being on the RMSLA board has made me appreciate the generosity of people who make associations work. Everything anyone does for SLA or our chapter – whether a big or small gesture – really makes a difference. It all adds up.

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RMSLA Board Profile: Director Jason Youngstrom

Getting to know: RMSLA Director Jason Youngstrom

Where do you live?

Harkness Heights in NW Denver

Where do you work, and what’s your title?

National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Technical Librarian

What’s the mission of your organization?

NREL develops renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies and practices, advances related science and engineering, and transfers knowledge and innovations to address the nation’s energy and environmental goals.

When did you become an SLA/RMSLA member?

My first position after earning my MLS was as a solo librarian at a pharmaceutical company.  I joined SLA immediately and found the virtual community of peers essential to get the job done.  Since then I have continued to rely on SLA as a ready source of objective advice and support.

What drew you into an information career?

I have always been interested in technology and using it to spread information.  As my career progressed a series of lucky connections guided me from IT to Librarian.

What’s the best thing about being an information professional?

I love being required to know a little about a lot and having to ramp up to an in depth knowledge on a project by project basis.  The constantly changing technical landscape also requires constant exploration of new systems to deliver information.  Basically being a librarian in a special libraries environment means constantly learning new things and applying that knowledge immediately.

What’s the next great thing you want to learn?

NREL is on the cusp of deploying a much more diverse IT environment.  Our patrons have become more mobile as desktops have evolved to laptops, and tablets and smartphones are coming fast.  This explosion of technology presents exciting challenges as the Library strives to deliver content when and where it’s needed.

Are you a member of any other professional associations?

SLA is it right now.  For a long time I was active in the Utah Museums Association, but that was at another time in my information career.

What do you love to do in your non-work time?

Riding my bike.

Tell us something about yourself that we’d never think to ask.

I have been told that I have a very high capacity for suffering (in the context of riding my bike).

What’s your favorite thing about SLA and/or the Rocky Mountain Chapter?

The community.

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