Senior Program Officer
OCLC
Rebecca Bryant, PhD, serves as Senior Program Officer at OCLC Research, where she conducts research and develops programming to support 21st-century research libraries and their parent institutions. She has published five OCLC Research reports on research information management.
Prior to joining OCLC in 2016, Rebecca held several roles at the University of Illinois, including Assistant Dean in the Graduate College and Project Manager for Research Information Services in the University Library. She also served as Director of Community at ORCID, leading outreach and engagement activities worldwide. She earned her PhD from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
As Research Information Management Systems (RIMS) become more central to institutional research infrastructure, library professionals are increasingly recognized as essential partners in their implementation and ongoing management. This panel will explore the metadata expertise and service orientation that library workers bring to RIMS, especially in managing the complexities of research output metadata across disciplines and platforms.
Panelists will discuss how their work contributes to RIM system stewardship, from developing metadata crosswalks and interpreting publication data to integrating open access resources and institutional repositories. Specific challenges, such as copyright compliance, data deduplication, and reconciling repository content with RIMS, will be explored, along with lessons learned from outreach, cleanup, and system configuration efforts.
We will also address how library values—privacy, transparency, responsible metrics, and user-centered support—inform how library staff design services and workflows. This includes support strategies like documentation, workshops, one-on-one consultations, and acting as a liaison with both faculty as well as offices across campus.
Finally, the panel will spotlight the unique challenges of representing creative and performing arts outputs in RIMS, where standard data structures often fall short. Presenters will discuss the hands-on work of structuring data for arts activities, the high-touch support this requires, and the importance of incentivizing and recognizing faculty participation in the system.
Attendees will come away with practical insights into the evolving role of library workers in RIM system management, and the competencies that position them as both technical experts and trusted campus partners.





