Exploring librarians’ social media use intentions: Insight into university libraries online service readiness
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Date
2025
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Librarianship and Information Science
Abstract
The successful adoption of technology in organizations requires an adequate understanding of the end-user’s perception and intentions
regarding the use of such a system, as ignoring these factors leads to avoidable resource wastage. This phenomenon underscores the
overall objective of the current study, which is to examine librarians’ social media use intentions in university libraries, employing
performance expectancy (PE), effort expectancy (EE), and facilitating conditions (FC) from the unified theory of acceptance and use
of technology (UTAUT) framework. The survey research design and multistage sampling procedure guided the study. Data were
collected from 286 (88.8%) out of the 322 librarians surveyed in the selected university libraries in Southwest Nigeria. Findings
revealed that PE had the strongest effect on librarians’ intentions to use social media tools in university libraries, while EE had
the weakest effect. In between these two extremes is FC. While each construct moderately predicted librarians’ social media use
intentions independently, the composite effect of the three constructs yielded a low prediction of the dependent variable. The study
concludes that widespread adoption and use of technology by library stakeholders are more likely when individuals perceive the
technology to have high-performance potential, find it easy to use, and benefit from adequate and sustainable institutional support.
Description
Keywords
Effort expectancy, facilitating conditions, performance expectancy, service provision, social media use intentions, UTAUT