Abstract:
The assessment of knowledge and leadership quality is crucial in ensuring the
effectiveness of university library services, as these factors directly influence user
satisfaction and the library performance. There are no specific efforts to evaluate how
leadership quality and knowledge affect user pleasure. This study examined how
library professionals' knowledge and leadership quality influence user satisfaction
and identified variations and gaps in leadership quality across user and university
categories. A Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) was developed where knowledge
competency, technical competency, negotiation skill, visionary, and responsiveness
were used as independent variables and user satisfaction as the dependent variable.
User and university types computed individual differences in leadership quality and
adequacy, superiority, and realistic gaps in leadership quality by ANOVA. Several
statistical methods supported sampling adequacy, reliability, validity, and fitness of
the SEM model that attained specific objectives and hypotheses. The SEM approach
was established as significant and indicated that leadership quality dimensions
positively impact user satisfaction. The study found that technical competency (beta
coefficient = 0.331, t-value= 2.21 and p-value < 0.027) and responsiveness (beta
coefficient = 0.445, t-value = 3.954, p-value = < 0.000) dimensions have significant
positive impacts on user satisfaction. ANOVA indicated that the users of private
university libraries get significantly qualified leadership performance. The study
recommended maintaining technical competency, emphasizing responsiveness
approach, improving knowledge competency, increasing negotiation skill, enhancing
visionary approach, reducing realistic gap in leadership quality. The authorities
would be benefitted from this study in planning and executing library leadership
performance to satisfy their users. More studies would be expected to make it a well
accepted model that will prompt further research in academic libraries locally and
globally.