090122 MLA South East Museums and The Web - Presentation Transcript
Museums and The Web Mark Walker Robert Taylor
About SCIP
Not for profit social enterprise
Training inc Net:Gain
IT Support
Web Design
Databases
Community Projects
SCIP support for museums in south east England
Funded through Renaissance SE
Working with Museum Development Officers
Initial health check
Diagnose key issues
Quick fixes
Ongoing technical support
Training
Projects ends 31 March 2009
This workshop
Review key issues for your organisation
Help you review your own website
Identify specific actions for using the web
to promote your museum
make your collections available
You and your organisation
Your name and your role
Current number of staff and volunteers
Current turnover
Your role in relation to website in the organisation
Current website budget
Why are you here?
What do you want to know?
Specific questions
Knowledge and experience
Why have a website?
Exercise in pairs
What can a website do for your museum?
What do you think is the most important thing that people will want from your website?
Why have a website?
Promote your museum
Encourage visitors to come to your museum
Make your collections available
Engage new audiences
Receive comments and feedback
Your options
Build your own
Pay someone
Advantages and disadvantages?
Key steps
Define what you want = the brief
Design a solution
Build the site
Test the site
Update and amend the site
Sign off
Ongoing updates to the site
Review and improve the site
Preparing a website brief
Not a technical task but needs some technical insight
Involve other people
Staff, volunteers, trustees
What do they think you need? How can they help?
Link it to your overall planning process
“ In the next 12 months we want to increase the number of visitors to our museum by 25%. To help achieve this we will use our website to raise our profile amongst families looking for a day out.”
A website brief
Summary
Current Situation
Aims and Objectives
Budget
Timescale
Audiences
Functionality
Design Requirements
Managing the Site
Domain Name
Suggested Site Map
Promoting the Site
Training
Next Steps
www.ictknowledgebase.org.uk/websitebrief
www.ictknowledgebase.org.uk/websitebrief
Budgeting
What do you think you can get for your money?
Nothing
£500
£1,000
£5,000
£10,000
Wordpress.com
Realistic, low cost option
Not an answer to every need but good place to start
Easy to share the workload
Reliable service
FREE!
With one or two low cost paid-for options that are worth considering – esp domain name
Working with volunteers
Need to think about job description and recruitment process
May have technical skills
May be administration eg data entry
What support and training do yu need to offer?
How do they link to staff?
Passwords and security issues
A ‘good enough’ website?
Exercise in pairs
Identify three things that you think your website MUST do for your museum
Identify three things you WOULD LIKE your website to do for you museum.
What makes a good website?
Up to date
Opening times
Contacts
Accessibility
Ease of use
Clarity
Preferences
Search engine friendly
Links to other sites
Standards
Easily updated by us
Where are we going?
Accessibility - DDA
Interactive sites - Amazon, Facebook, etc
Online participation - communities
Search engine optimisation
Content management systems
Mobile information
Online payments
Blogs and wikis
… .?
Lunch
Why have a website?
Promote your museum
Encourage visitors to come to your museum
Make your collections available
Engage new audiences
Receive comments and feedback
Promoting your museum
Tourist sites
www.visitsoutheastengland.com
Local authority sites
www.visitwinchester.co.uk
www.visitbrighton.com
www.buckscc.gov.uk
www.visitbuckinghamshire.org
24 Hour Museum
24 Hour Museum
new funding from DfES, through MLA to develop as a ‘cultural sector broker’
search service to enable teachers and schools to more easily find out about educational opportunities offered to them by cultural sector organisations
enable teachers to find out the education resources that are available to them from the cultural sector, such as online content, educational workshops and visits to exhibitions
open source, open standards
able to support web services / Web 2.0
http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/
Making your collections available
The MLA Knowledge Web
Cornucopia, MICHAEL and the MLA Institutional server.
Cornucopia covers physical collections
MICHAEL, in the UK, focuses on digital collections.
It links to other platforms
It will provide public knowledge of your collections in UK and across Europe.
Cornucopia
online database of museum collections
system for collection descriptions – different interfaces for different user communities
http://www.cornucopia.org.uk/
Cecilia – music libraries
Inspire – cross-sectoral library collections
Subject Specialist Networks-e.g. Egyptology
People’s Network Discover Service
harvests other databases (OAI, web services)
MICHAEL and Cornucopia
PAS, BL Collect Britain, Fitzwilliam
more to come - a condition of Renaissance / Designation Funding
being used as basis for other projects
20 th Century London, NE ‘Single Point of Access’
access to object / item level content
http://www.peoplesnetwork.gov.uk/discover/
Inspire-find it!
A library system
Cross-sectoral library collections
www.findit.org.uk
MICHAEL
A software platform that signposts data to other public sites
In Europe MICHAEL includes data that relates to cultural institutions, their physical and digital collections. In UK focus is on digital collections.
It is an e-opportunity.
Who is MICHAEL for?
Organisations wanting to promote knowledge of the content of their digital collections:
How can museums use the web to promote themselves? more
How can museums use the web to promote themselves? And which national and international databases should they be using to share their collections? less
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