This document provides an action plan for the Europeana Communicators group for the first quarter of 2019. It outlines several activities and ways for members to get involved, including: contributing to a community calendar, participating in Europeana Women's Season on International Women's Day, adding themselves to an interactive map of members, creating "how-to" videos on communication tools, using recommended hashtags on social media, participating in "solve-it" sessions on communications issues, and monitoring the success of outreach efforts through surveys and engagement metrics. The overall aims of the group are to promote digital cultural heritage and support each other's professional development in communications.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Slides 2 - 39:Europeana Network Association General Assembly by Marco de Niet, Georgia Angelaki, Erwin Verbruggen, Fred Truyen and Sara Di Giorgio
Slide 40: Keynote Frédéric Kaplan
Slide 41: State Secretary Angela Ferreira
Slide 42: Wrap up day one by Marco de Niet
Slide 45: Welcome by Marco de Niet
Slide 46: Welcome by Maria Ines Cordeiro
Slide 47: Europeana Strategy 2020+ by Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak
Slides 48 - 142: Developments at Europeana by Harry Verwayen
Slides 143 - 147: Welcome & Introduction to the conference programme by Marco de Niet
Slides 149 - 191: The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Ina Blümel, Johan Oomen, Sara Di Giorgio, Lorna Hughes, Pedro Santos and Andy Neale
Slides 193 - 194: Introduction of the afternoon programme by Fred Truyen
Slides 195 - 231: We transform the world with culture by Harry Verwayen, Elisabeth Niggemann, Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak, Katherine Heid and Merete Sanderhoff
Slides 232 - : The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Gregory Markus, Chris Dijkshoorn, Maarten Dammers and Harald Sack
Slide 285: Pitch your project (See pitch your project presentation slides)
Slides 286 - 290: Unsung Heroes by Marco de Niet
Slides 291 - 292: Wrap up and closure of day two by Sara Di Giorgio
Culture Untapped: inspirational content & fresh ideas for your gamesMilena Popova
Games are often brain- and resource-intensive projects. Why not save precious time and exploit untapped, powerful sources of inspiration and material? Discover Europeana, a digital platform for culture giving access to over 43 million records of great thematic and media variety, coming from 3300 heritage organizations and available in 31 languages.
This presentation shows how this huge database can help game creation process with fresh ideas and “building blocks” of diverse and high-quality digital content. Game developers will look at inspiring content picks, learn more about technical tools and services to access and use the digital material and see some real-life examples of creative re-use of cultural content in educational and tourism games.
Promoting Austrian Cultural and Scientific Heritage via EUROPEANAEuropeanaConnect
Mag. Gerda Koch, AIT Angewandte Informationstechnik Forschungsgesellschaft mbH
14th International Congress Cultural Heritage and New Technologies Vienna, 17 November 2009
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
A guide to using Europeana for education Europeana
This guide introduces the basic principles of searching for and using Europeana’s content in education. It covers topics like copyright and licenses that allow educational reuse, and how you should credit Europeana content when you use it. It also gives an introduction to the Europeana APIs. It is of use to educators across all subjects, students and lifelong learners, developers of educational resources and educational publishers. Find out more: http://pro.europeana.eu/use-our-data/education
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Slides 2 - 39:Europeana Network Association General Assembly by Marco de Niet, Georgia Angelaki, Erwin Verbruggen, Fred Truyen and Sara Di Giorgio
Slide 40: Keynote Frédéric Kaplan
Slide 41: State Secretary Angela Ferreira
Slide 42: Wrap up day one by Marco de Niet
Slide 45: Welcome by Marco de Niet
Slide 46: Welcome by Maria Ines Cordeiro
Slide 47: Europeana Strategy 2020+ by Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak
Slides 48 - 142: Developments at Europeana by Harry Verwayen
Slides 143 - 147: Welcome & Introduction to the conference programme by Marco de Niet
Slides 149 - 191: The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Ina Blümel, Johan Oomen, Sara Di Giorgio, Lorna Hughes, Pedro Santos and Andy Neale
Slides 193 - 194: Introduction of the afternoon programme by Fred Truyen
Slides 195 - 231: We transform the world with culture by Harry Verwayen, Elisabeth Niggemann, Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak, Katherine Heid and Merete Sanderhoff
Slides 232 - : The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Gregory Markus, Chris Dijkshoorn, Maarten Dammers and Harald Sack
Slide 285: Pitch your project (See pitch your project presentation slides)
Slides 286 - 290: Unsung Heroes by Marco de Niet
Slides 291 - 292: Wrap up and closure of day two by Sara Di Giorgio
Culture Untapped: inspirational content & fresh ideas for your gamesMilena Popova
Games are often brain- and resource-intensive projects. Why not save precious time and exploit untapped, powerful sources of inspiration and material? Discover Europeana, a digital platform for culture giving access to over 43 million records of great thematic and media variety, coming from 3300 heritage organizations and available in 31 languages.
This presentation shows how this huge database can help game creation process with fresh ideas and “building blocks” of diverse and high-quality digital content. Game developers will look at inspiring content picks, learn more about technical tools and services to access and use the digital material and see some real-life examples of creative re-use of cultural content in educational and tourism games.
Promoting Austrian Cultural and Scientific Heritage via EUROPEANAEuropeanaConnect
Mag. Gerda Koch, AIT Angewandte Informationstechnik Forschungsgesellschaft mbH
14th International Congress Cultural Heritage and New Technologies Vienna, 17 November 2009
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
A guide to using Europeana for education Europeana
This guide introduces the basic principles of searching for and using Europeana’s content in education. It covers topics like copyright and licenses that allow educational reuse, and how you should credit Europeana content when you use it. It also gives an introduction to the Europeana APIs. It is of use to educators across all subjects, students and lifelong learners, developers of educational resources and educational publishers. Find out more: http://pro.europeana.eu/use-our-data/education
To celebrate our 1 year, tonight we will host another CMX Connect with Ricardo López Páramo, CM from SPEAK - Share your world!, sharing the challenges about being a solo community manager running a global community, you cannot miss it !
The concept of 'social media' is vast and therefore this presentation looks at three key areas:
- The origins of social media
- Where social media is today + case studies of best practice
- Where we expect social media to go next
Social media has always been a personal and professional passion of mine so I wanted to tell story. Much of the research about the history of social media is taken from the work of Tom Standage, deputy editor of The Economist and author of 'Writing on the Wall', a historical look at social media over the last 2,000 years.
One of the key aspects of the presentation I would like people to take away is what I defined as the 'five key tenets of social media':
• Connection
• Engagement
• Shared interests
• Content
• Conversation
A Museum Journey from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0Conxa Rodà
A quick overview on museums of the world 2.0 presence and presentation of Museu Picasso of Barcelona 2.0 process. Slides are probably not of the best trendy multimedia design, but content is tasty (hopefully!).
Similar to Europeana Network Association Members Council Meeting 2019, The Hague by Emily D’Alterio (20)
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
Slide 2 - 66: Shaping innovatin in education with cultural heritage by Fred Truyen, Steven Stegers, Evita Tasiopoulou and Marco Neves
Slides 67 - 152: Multilingual access and machine translation by Andy Neale, Antoine Isaac, Pavel Kats, Alex Raginsky and Sergiu Gordea
Slides 155 - 164: How to implement the FAIR principles in digital culture by Sara Di Giorgio, Saskia Scheltjens and Makx Dekkers, Seamus Ross, Franco Niccolucci and Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra
Slide 166: EuropeanaTech Unconference by Clemens Neudecker
Slides 2 - 35: Introduction to Impact Workshop by Dafydd Tudur, Maja Drabczyk, Julia Fallon and Simon Tanner
Slides 36 - 68: Music to my ears: Making rights understandable by Juozas Markauskas and Jurga Gradauskaite
Slides 70 - 92: Achieving inclusivity & diversity in the Europeana Network by Killian Downing, Larissa Borck and Tola Dabiri
Slides 94 - 123: Communicating the value of digital culture to stakeholders by Susan Hazan, Eleanor Kenny and Katherine Heid
Collapsing Narratives: Exploring Non-Linearity • a micro report by Rosie WellsRosie Wells
Insight: In a landscape where traditional narrative structures are giving way to fragmented and non-linear forms of storytelling, there lies immense potential for creativity and exploration.
'Collapsing Narratives: Exploring Non-Linearity' is a micro report from Rosie Wells.
Rosie Wells is an Arts & Cultural Strategist uniquely positioned at the intersection of grassroots and mainstream storytelling.
Their work is focused on developing meaningful and lasting connections that can drive social change.
Please download this presentation to enjoy the hyperlinks!
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
2. Europeana Communicators
A community of the Europeana Network
Association, formed in August 2018.
For more information, and to join go to
pro.europeana.eu/network-
association/special-interest-
groups/europeana-communicators-group
Once you have read these slides, please take
the short survey presented at the end. Thank
you!
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3. In this presentation
What we’re all about
Aims, people, audiences, process, channels and tools
Taking action: Activities for Q1 of 2019
A community calendar
Europeana Women’s Season
Members on the map
Helpful how-to videos
A guide to hashtags
Solve-it sessions
The future
Monitoring our success
Take our survey
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5. Our aims
As cultural heritage activists, members of Europeana Communicators aim to:
a. Promote digital cultural heritage - members create and share examples from
around the world demonstrating that access to and use of digital cultural
heritage (via Europeana or elsewhere) is critical, both for the sector and wider
society.
b. Be the best comms people we can be - members support each other’s
professional activities and development by sharing knowledge, expertise, and
examples of communications tools and best practice.
How does what we do contribute to the bigger picture?
By supporting each other to be the most effective communicators we can be, and by
sharing examples of digital cultural heritage in action, together, we are building an
evidence base that will encourage policymakers at both national and European levels to
put digital cultural heritage at the heart of their discussions about the future.
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6. Our people
Chair: Peter Soemers
Co-chair: Susan Hazan
Managers: Emily D’Alterio, Beth Daley
As of Febuary 2019, the community has a mailing list of 89 and a LinkedIn community of 77
people, including Europeana Network Association Members Councillors: Karin Glasemann,
Rob Davies, Marta Musso, Antje Schmidt, Dafydd Tudur and Erwin Verbruggen (also on ENA
MC Management Board).
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7. Our audiences
1. Each other. We share our stories and best practice examples for the attention of
fellow members - communications professionals, bloggers and other social media
influencers who prioritise the cultural sector. We do this so that they will pass it
forward - sharing to their own networks, multiplying the reach of our messages.
2. Cultural heritage professionals. We share our stories to raise awareness of the use
of digital culture in a range of different contexts and from different countries. We do
this to inspire CH professionals to champion such uses and develop new ones.
3. Policymakers. We share our stories using strategic hashtags on social media to
make policymakers aware of the cultural heritage sector’s diverse examples of the
benefits of access to and use of digital cultural heritage. This way, cultural heritage is
never far from their minds when discussing future policy.
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8. Our process
The chair, co-chair and managers meet
virtually once a month to discuss direction
and actions and to review progress. Minutes
of these meetings will be available on the
community’s Europeana Pro page. Contact
the chair/co-chair to contribute to the
agenda.
All members of the team contribute to the
smooth running of the LinkedIn group.
The chair and co-chair are Europeana
Network Association Members Councillors
and report to the Members Council.
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The newsletter is sent out mid-month -
items for the next month can be sent to
Beth.Daley@europeana.eu to be received
by the end of the first week of a new
month.
9. Our channels and tools
We use a portfolio of platforms, appropriate to the task in hand. We continually review
available platforms to best suit our needs.
● LinkedIn group - for all members to share, comment and discuss
● Webpage on Europeana Pro - includes newsletter sign up and link to LinkedIn group.
● Monthly email newsletter (via Mailchimp) with roundup of discussions/events/posts -
created by Europeana Foundation, with input from members
● Other free-to-use collaborative tools e.g. Google Sheets/docs, online meeting,
messaging or organisational platforms - the management team are investigating
using Taskade.
● Twitter accounts - of organisations and individual members
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11. 1.A community calendar
See what events and activities the Europeana Foundation has planned for 2019
and how you can contribute to them.
You can: Add your organisation’s events.
You can: Add promotion of events and activities to your own planning schedules.
Go to the calendar
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12. 2. Europeana Women’s Season
As part of Commissioner Mariya Gabriel's strategy to empower women and
increase their participation in the digital economy, Europeana and the European
Commission present Women's Season.
You can: Take part in a Twitter 'go viral' campaign on 8 March (look out for more
details).
You can: Join a Twitter chat on 29 March. We will be discussing topics from a series
of features on Europeana Pro, and any up-voted topics suggested on Twitter.
You can: Take over the @Europeanaeu Twitter. Women in the sector are invited to
share behind-the-scenes moments from their working day. This is a chance to
promote your activities and spread a message about women and culture to our
large online following (throughout March). Contact emily.dalterio@europeana.eu
More information
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13. 3. Members on the map
Find out where our Europeana Communicators
members are on a map. (We were inspired by
the map produced for Europeana Transcribe.)
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You can: Add yourself to the map. (Here’s our how-to video guide.)
You can: See who is near you and arrange your own local comms meet-ups and
networking activities.
You can: Take the opportunity to brainstorm, problem-solve and potentially forge new
friendships and working partnerships.
14. 4. Helpful how-to videos
We will create ‘how-to’ videos using screen
capture software to demonstrate some of
the comms tools we use.
First video: how Emily made the members'
map.
You can: Use the videos to inform your
choice of tools for your own activities.
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Instructing men on how to avoid injuring horses feet,
National Library of Scotland, CC BY-NC-SA.
15. 5. A guide to hashtags
To make sure our tweets and posts reach the people we want to reach, it’s
important to use the correct hashtags. The Europeana Foundation will create an
infographic guide to the social media hashtags that anyone tweeting about digital
cultural heritage should be aware of.
This will be promoted via LinkedIn and the newsletter when available.
You can: Use the infographic to increase the reach of your tweets.
You can: Share the infographic with your organisation’s social media managers.
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16. 6. Solve-it sessions
A virtual meeting or webinar to solve or discuss issues
related to working in communications in the cultural
heritage sector. We get in a specialist, brainstorm,
work through steps - solve it! First session to run
during Q2.
You can: Suggest topics or problems you’d like advice
on.
You can: Put yourself forward as a specialist to
present/lead on a topic.
You can: Join the webinar.
Respond on LinkedIn or by contacting
emily.dalterio@europeana.eu
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Learning to solve problems. Bill
McConkey. Wellcome Collection. CC BY.
17. More ways to be an activist for
Europeana Communicators
You can: Be on the look-out for examples of digital cultural heritage being used to
improve lives. Share those examples with the community and beyond, in English and in
your own languages.
You can: Share your organisation’s news/events/activities with the community so that
the community (via its newsletter), the Europeana Foundation (via its newsletters, news
feeds, blogs and social media work) and the Europeana Network Association (via its
large membership) can all help to promote them.
You can: Be on the look-out for innovative digital channels/platforms/tools as they
evolve and share what you’ve found with the community.
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19. Monitoring our success
● Quarterly - review member engagement with action tasks of previous quarter
● Evidence the promotion of digital cultural heritage, e.g. sharing in LinkedIn, using
strategic hashtags/handles on social media
● Evidence supporting each other to be the best comms people we can be , e.g.
number of meetups, taking part in Solve-it Sessions
● Growth in number of LinkedIn members/mailing list subscribers - a goal of 100.
● Maintain monthly newsletter open rate (50-60%) and clicks (15-20%)
● End 2019 - review activities and progress against goals
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20. What do you think?
Please take this short survey to let us know
a bit more about who you are and what
you want to contribute to the community.
Your input is hugely important to the
success of this community.
TAKE THE SURVEY NOW at
https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/LetsTalkCulture
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ROMAN UNIDENTIFIED OBJECT A hooked
fitting shaped like a question mark. The
Portable Antiquities Scheme, CC BY.
22. Europeana is an initiative of the European Union, financed by the European Union’s Connecting Europe Facility and European Union
Member States. It is operated by a consortium led by the Europeana Foundation, under a service contract with the European
Commission.
The sole responsibility for this publication lies with the author. Neither the European Commission, nor any person acting on the
European Commission’s behalf, is responsible or liable for the accuracy or use of the information in this publication.
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