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Managing a Consultant   
How to make sure that you have a successful experience working with a consultant.
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Once you choose a consultant to work on a particular project, your job is not over. Unfortunately, setting them loose and leaving them alone will seldom get you the results you want (and may cost a fortune!) Your active involvement and communication will make or break the project. Here are a few tips on working successfully with a consultant:

  • Assign a point-person. The consultant should have one person to report to. The point-person should be the only one who gives the consultant instructions or new tasks.

  • Establish expectations. Before the consultant starts, make sure you have a meeting to go over the contract and work plan. Clarify upcoming milestones and plan your next check-in.

  • Communicate Regularly. What progress is the consultant making? What does she or he need to know to continue? What problems is s/he encountering? Have your needs or situation changed in a way that might impact the project? It's best to set a time for regular check-in between the consultant and the point-person, perhaps weekly. In addition, the consultant should be documenting his or her work so that you can refer to a written record of what has been done. Someone in your library should work closely with the consultant to make recommendations, so that the final set of suggestions aren't wildly divergent from your library's reality.

  • Obtain staff buy-in. Keep the staff informed about what the consultant is doing, and set up procedures for them to give the consultant input early on and to comment on the draft recommendations. These opportunities for comment will help to minimize staff fears and resentments and will give you a plan that has a greater chance of implementation once the consultant is gone.

  • Give yourself an out. In a worst-case scenario where a consultant does not meet deadlines or communicate with you about progress, follow through with the consequences. If your work plan and contract are divided up into phases, you can pull out at the end of a phase if things are not going well.

  • Keep an eye on security & liability. Be aware that you are responsible for:

    • Consultant safety and liability in case of an accident onsite.

    • The security of your library's confidential information. If you keep confidential information about your patrons, make sure you communicate to the consultant what they can and cannot access.

  • Make the project sustainable. Once the consultant leaves, it is you who will need to use and maintain what they have done. No project is complete without an element of training and planning for the future. Becoming too dependent on a consultant can be extremely risky. The consultant may not be available forever, or they may not be available right when you need them. Even if they are, you will waste large amounts of money paying them to fix each little problem that comes up. The ideal solution is to insist that they document their work thoroughly and ask them to train you on basic aspects of maintaining it. If training you is a substantial task, it might be a sign that you need a system administrator, or that your system administrator needs additional formal training. See the articles What a System Admin Does and Hire a System Administrator.

  • Finish the project on your own terms. It's important to set the exit terms yourself. Don't let the consultant walk out until you are satisfied that your original goals have been met. Will you be able to contact the consultant with questions and problems? How much will it cost you? Establish expectations about ongoing communication and availability.

If you follow these suggestions, you should be able to complete your project successfully and establish a successful working relationship with your consultant.


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