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International best practices for heritage collections management
Nick Poole, CEO, Collections Trust
Introductions!
I’m Nick Poole
CEO of Collections Trust, Chair of ICOM UK
Working in cultural heritage management for 15 years
I believe that museums, archives and libraries play a unique role in building a healthy, prosperous and tolerant society. My work is inspired by Article 27. of the declaration of Human Rights, that ‘everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of their community’.
About the Collections Trust
Working internationally in the field of museum, gallery, library and archive management since 1977
Our mission is to work with cultural organisations to promote excellence in collections management.
Not-for-profit organisation based at the Natural History Museum in London, but working worldwide
Our role
Helping individual practitioners and volunteers to develop skills and leadership in collections management
Working with galleries, libraries, archives and museums to define and achieve excellence in collections management
Helping cultural heritage organisations share their collections online safely and sustainably
Working with commercial partners to share expertise and best practice
A note about SPECTRUM
SPECTRUM is not a standard – it is the accumulated practice of 450 libraries, archives and museums
SPECTRUM is a community of 7,500 people working together in 40 countries to share best practice
You don’t start at ‘A’ and work through to ‘Z’ – you choose the elements that are useful/relevant and adapt them to your work
SPECTRUM is a perpetual beta – we hope the SA community will join the international community to bring your knowledge and experience to the development of SPECTRUM
Objectives for the day:
To learn from the SA museum, library and archive community and to share best practices in Collections Management worldwide
Agenda
• What are the challenges facing cultural heritage institutions?• What can collections management do for you & your users?• How is collections management developing around the world?• Where does the SA community want to go next?
Some questions to consider:
What do you want to get out of today?
What does ‘collections management’ mean to you?
What are you going to take from today and apply to your work?
What would you find most useful to support this process?
Session 1: Managing the modern museum, archive or library
What are the key challenges and opportunities confronting your organisation?
What do they mean for your work?
Key challenges
Cultural heritage organisations all over the world are confronting some common challenges:
• Achieving relevance• Increasing efficiency• Supporting multiple narratives• Enabling new types of collecting• Meeting changing user expectations• Embracing digital, social and mobile technology
Achieving relevance
How can we ensure that the services we are delivering are relevant and meaningful to audiences, and reflect the way they live?
“Down the Back of the Sofa”
Derby City Museums & Leisure Service were looking for ways to make collections accessible and interesting to younger people.
Using objects from the collections, they created a ‘pop-up’ display and exhibition space in central London. They used the space for events, DJ nights, informal meetings and conferences.
The experience engaged 9,000 people in 2 days with collections in new ways, and brought new audiences to the museums & library service.
Increasing efficiency
How can we maximise the resources and capacity available to us to manage collections as efficiently as possible?
Saving time at the V&A
The Victoria & Albert Museum in London has an ‘Accessions File’. To accept a new item into the collections required 15 signatures. The process took many months.
The Collections Management Team analysed the Accessions process, and found that they were duplicating many steps in the process.
They reduced the number of signatories to 2, and in the process saved themselves 100’s of hours of effort per object.
Multiple Narratives
How can we collect, curate and share multiple narrative viewpoints and the contexts associated with them?
Yorkshire’s ‘Precious Cargo’
2,000 young curators (18-24) from a range of social and ethnic background worked with 60 collections to reinterpret them from different perspectives.
Using a methodology called Revisiting Collections, they recorded their perspectives alongside the collections information of the museums, making it accessible to future curators when planning exhibitions and loans.
New types of Collecting
How can our collecting practice adapt to reflect the changing needs of users and the proliferation of culture?
BFI Collecting Policy
The British Film Institute combines an audiovisual archive, library and museum on London’s South Bank.
Working with a cross-departmental team, the BFI has reviewed and rewritten its Collections Policy to provide a clear strategic mission statement, and then to incorporate new types of collecting activity including paper, born-digital material, DVD and computer games.
Defining the scope of collecting activity has also allowed them to say ‘no’ with confidence!
Changing expectations
How are consumer expectations of the range, quality and accessibility of our services changing?
User-focussed Library Services in Chicago
Chicago Metropolitan Library Services used best practices from retail and customer service to redevelop their offer to the public.
Based on observational research, they updated their service to diversify their book stock, provide informal meeting spaces, provide ‘plain English’ browsing terminology and enable patrons to approach any service desk for help and guidance.
Ultimately, the process enabled Chicago libraries to redefine their services around new forms of use and interaction.
Digital, social, mobile
What opportunities are presented by the rise of digital, social and mobile technologies?
A History of the World in 100 Objects
In June 2010, the British Museum collaborated with the BBC to create 100, 15-minute films each of which used a single object to tell the story of a significant social, economic or industrial development.
The films were supported by radio advertising, online content, social media and mobile content. It enabled users to participate, comment and share content.
The campaign achieved a significant new audience demographic for the collections.
Changing inputs
The range and scope of material which we need to be able to collect has increased dramatically in the past 10 years:
• Physical collections• Digital surrogates• Audiovisual material• Born-digital material• Learning content• Narratives• Administrative information• Ephemera• Social media
Changing outputs
The range of platforms and interactions which we need to be able to support has also increased dramatically:
• Collections management• In-gallery interactives• Online interaction• Learning experiences• Federated use in 3rd party platforms• Printed content• Audit and administration
The importance of integration
For all type and scales of museum, archive and library, the critical challenge is in getting the different people, systems and departments of the organisation working together effectively to achieve a common aim.
We can’t afford practices which reinforce silos…
The ‘traditional’ organisation
Most cultural organisations operate in ‘vertical’ silos
Education Management Collections Retail IT
The ‘integrated’ organisation
Making the most of collections depends on integration of all of the functions into a common strategic aim
Strategic Objectives
Visitor experience
PeopleCollections
Facilities
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
Evaluation & improvement
‘Strategic Collections Management’
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
Evaluation & improvement
Rich online and offline experiences for users
Conclusions
Our common aim is to create rich, meaningful and relevant experiences for our real and virtual users
Every decision about collections has to be based on a strategy that is built around the needs of users, the type of material and the capacity of the organisation.
Strategic collections management is not about perfection, it’s about making sensible, pragmatic and proportionate decisions.
We need to be able to support an increasing range of types of material and an increasing range of forms of use.
BREAK
Session 2: Collections Management and SPECTRUM
What is a ‘Collection’?
What does ‘Collections Management’ mean to you?
How does your organisation manage collections at the moment?
What is a Collection?
A ‘collection’ is not just a group of physical objects, books or records. It is the total body of material, knowledge, narrative, digital assets and other information resources which your organisation collects, manages and shares with the public.
A ‘collection’ may be 1 item. It may 1m items. What makes it a collection is the cultural, social and intellectual capital it represents.
What is ‘Collections Management’?
Defined as:
“Strategies, policies, processes and procedures related to collections development, information, access and care”
Collections Management is about balance:
•Between access and preservation•Between the needs of current and future generations•Between economic, social and environmental impact
Case Study: National Museums Wales
National Museums Wales is a consortium of 7 different museums
1.They began by setting a shared Strategic Vision
2.They then created Collections Management policies that were shared across all sites
3.Policies were approved by Trustees, then integrated into staff feedback & development
4.Policies are reviewed on a 5-yearly cycle, and procedures are subject to a periodic audit. Findings are fed back into future planning
Why manage Collections?
Collections Management delivers a number of key benefits for your museum, archive or library:
•Governance and accountability•Supporting your mission•Facilitating meaningful engagement•Reducing costs•Reducing effort•Reducing duplication•Supporting more active use•Providing a shared professional practice•Protect against theft
Anatomy of Collections Management
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
Evaluation & improvement
Rich online and offline experiences for users
Anatomy of Collections Management
Users Funders Politicians
Organisational Mission
Collecting Policy
UseDevelopLearnCare
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
Evaluation & improvement
Rich online and offline experiences for users
Anatomy of Collections Management
Collecting Policy
InformationProceduresSystemsPeople
Anatomy of SPECTRUM
InformationProcedures SystemsPeople
Collections & collections-related knowledge
What are workflows…?
Workflows are flow-diagrams which help map out a sequence of steps in a logical way
Every organisation has workflows, whether they are expressed or not, which define how you work
Workflows connect different people along the process so that everybody understands their role & responsibilities
A workflow is often expressed as a Procedural Manual or Staff Handbook – a written document of how your organisation does its work.
Introducing SPECTRUM
SPECTRUM is essentially a collection of best practices from 450 people who work in museums, archives and libraries
The SPECTRUM user community includes 7,500 organisations in 40 countries worldwide
SPECTRUM is an open framework – nobody owns it, everybody can contribute to it or adapt it to suit their needs
If you are working with a collection, the chances are that the best practices in SPECTRUM will be familiar to you
SPECTRUM Procedures
SPECTRUM describes 21 procedures which commonly occur in cultural organisations
Each procedure is essentially a workflow for how to do something
The procedures are connected, so that there is a logical interaction between them!
SPECTRUM Procedures
Pre-entryObject entryLoans inAcquisitionInventory controlLocation/movement controlTransportCataloguingCondition checkingConservationRisk ManagementInsurance
ValuationAuditRights ManagementUse of collectionsObject exitLoans outLoss and damageDeaccession & disposalRetrospective documentation
‘Primary’ Procedures
Pre-entryObject entryLoans inAcquisitionInventory controlLocation/movement controlTransportCataloguingCondition checkingConservationRisk ManagementInsurance
ValuationAuditRights ManagementUse of collectionsObject exitLoans outLoss and damageDeaccession & disposalRetrospective documentation
‘Primary’ Procedures
Object entryLoans inAcquisition
Location/movement control
Cataloguing
Object exitLoans out
Retrospective documentation
‘Primary’ Procedures
Object entryAcquisitionLocation/movement controlCataloguingObject exitLoans inLoans outRetrospective documentation
‘Primary’ procedures are defined as the minimum set of processes required in order for an organisation to manage its collections.
Example: Pre-entry
Definition
The management and documentation of the assessment of potential acquisitions before their arrival at the organisation
•Clarify the organisation's acquisition policy and conditions for deposition of objects and documentary records to the potential depositor;
•Ensure that the organisation is fully aware of the quantity and type of material that is on offer;
•Assess the impact on the organisation of acquiring the items, in terms of space, manpower, financial, legal and conservation issues;
•Ensure that a global organisation accession number has been assigned to the site (for fieldwork) or collection(s) (for bequests or purchases) if necessary;
•Ensure that an expected date of deposition and responsibility for the items in transit is agreed with the depositor
Using SPECTRUM
SPECTRUM works best when used as a reference tool
It helps define the ‘roles’ involved (even if they’re all done by the same person)
It helps review and simplify your existing practice
It helps ensure you are making the most of your collections and the information associated with them
It helps establish shared practices, for example for loans or disposals
It isn’t perfect! If it doesn’t fit your practice, help us develop it!
BREAK & NETWORKING!
Session 3: Collections Management in practice
Case Studies
Retrospective Documentation in Wakefield
Developing the Women’s Library Mission Statement
LED lighting at the National Portrait Gallery
Documenting photographs at the National Railway Museum & Archive
User-generated Content at the London Transport Museum
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Situation:
In 1995, Wakefield Cultural Services carried out a review of collections, which highlighted a significant backlog in collections documentation. This backlog was preventing them from undertaking rationalisation to ease the pressure on their stores.
Task:
Wakefield needed to establish a methodology to resolve the backlog, provide an inventory of their collections and use this to rationalise what they held.
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Action:
Wakefield began with a physical inspection of the collections, checking for inventory numbers. Where no number was available, a temporary number was assigned.
Temporary numbers used a different format from accession numbers to facilitate identification.
For each object assigned a temporary number, a basic inventory-level record was created on the computer database.
Wakefield then cross-referenced the temporary numbers with the accession records for which the object couldn’t be located
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Result:
Over a period of 8 years, Wakefield was able to document 110,000 objects in its database
In the process, it reconciled 2,000 of it’s 10,000 ‘temporary’ accessions
The museum was then able to undertake strategic rationalisation of 8,000 of its largely unprovenanced ‘orphan’ objects
The result was a significant improvement in documentation over an 8-year period, a reduction in unprovenanced items and a framework for strategic rationalisation, alleviating pressure on its stores.
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Lessons learned:
Accurate descriptions of format and material were vital in helping re-connect ‘orphan’ objects with their catalogue records
Retrospective documentation must be a long-term managed process, not a short-term project
Basic documentation is essential for effective, responsible rationalisation.
Case Study: Wakefield Cultural Services
Questions:
What is the status of your organisation’s backlog?
Do you have a plan in place to address it?
Do you have a system for reconciling ‘orphaned’ objects?
Do you have an idea about how long it should take?
Case Study: Women’s Library
Case Study: Women’s Library
Situation:
The Women’s Library is an archive, special library and museum collection founded in 1926. Despite its distinct identity and independent tradition it has been housed successfully within the London Metropolitan University since 1977
Task:
The Women’s Library needed to establish a strategic framework for its collecting activity which reflected its own specific needs and priorities while responding to the strategic framework of the University
Case Study: Women’s Library
Action:
The team at the Women’s Library first reviewed the strategic mission of the University to identify shared principles and values.
The University has a strong commitment to social justice, access to education and a clear research agenda.
The Women’s Library adopted these values, but extended them to demonstrate how they had a duty of care to the collections they hold.
The Women’s Library then established a Collections Policy which set out a clear scope for its collecting activity in the broader university context
Case Study: Women’s Library
Result:
The work of the Women’s Library team was acknowledged when the library was integrated as a supported service into the University’s overall library provision.
Because of the alignment of strategic priorities, this helped the University to understand how the Women’s Library fit within their priorities.
The approach has now been adopted across the University’s other special library collections, and the Women’s Library team have been invited to share their expertise and best practice.
Case Study: Women’s Library
Lessons learned:
Collections management is most effective when based on a clear strategic mission
The strategic mission can demonstrate how your collecting activity can add value for a funder or governing body
Case Study: Women’s Library
Questions:
Does your organisation have a Mission Statement?
Does your Mission Statement reflect your collecting activity?
Does your Mission reflect the aims of your governing/funding body?
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
Situation:
In 2010, the National Portrait Gallery decided to review its use of traditional tungsten halogen bulbs for lighting, and to investigate the use of LED as a lighting solution throughout their galleries
Task:
The Gallery had to demonstrate that LED lighting would reduce energy use and save money as well as delivering a comparable or better quality of light for the display and enjoyment of their collections.
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
Action:
A team at the National Portrait Gallery undertook a project to review the impact of LED light on the user experience of the gallery.
The team reviewed the available literature and examined similar projects in other locations before trialling Erco Optic 14 watt spotlights in a small public gallery.
The team worked with scientists and curators to assess the ‘spectral range’ of the lights and their impact on the accuracy of the colours.
As a result, the team replaced the existing lights with LED in most public areas of the gallery
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
Result:
The replacement of the bulbs with LED required a large capital outlay. However, it is estimated to have saved 11,802 kWh and 6.7 tonnes of CO2 per annum, resulting in better environmental performance and reduced costs across the gallery.
LED were not appropriate for all areas – works of art predominantly featuring red-spectrum colours could not be lit, and some visitors have reported a ‘washed out’ look to some gold frames.
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
Lessons learned:
Collections management encompasses not just documentation, but also security, environmental management and display
Collections management strategies based on informed research can deliver significant cost benefits
Decisions about collections management need to be accountable
LED at the National Portrait Gallery
Questions:
How could collections management help you save money?
Does your organisation have an environmental policy?
Photos at the National Railway Museum
Photos at the National Railway Museum
Situation:
In the mid-1990’s, after 20 years of acquisitions, the National Railway Museum in York found itself with a collection of more than 1.5m photographs in various formats and at various degrees of stability. There was a pressing need to improve cataloguing and storage.
Task:
The museum had to establish a strategy for recording information about the photographs, digitising them and making them available for public access.
Photos at the National Railway Museum
Action:
The museum began the process with an audit of the collections and the creation of basic inventory records at ‘group’ level (a group referring to a collection of photographs).
This resulted in unsatisfactory information – one group of 400,000 photographs was described with a single record.
Reviewing catalogues and card indexes provided by photographers allowed the museum to begin cataloguing at item-level. As the retrospective documentation continued, museum & archive practice converged – the museum adopted the archival ISAD(G) standard for its photographic collections, mapped to SPECTRUM
Photos at the National Railway Museum
Result:
This retrospective process has now enabled the National Railway Museum to provide catalogue-level access to all of its photographic collections.
At the same time, the inventory-level information has allowed them to prioritise collections for digitisation. They have been able to extend this work through partnership with local ‘expert amateur’ groups.
The result is a significant improvement in public access to and use of the rich photographic collections.
Photos at the National Railway Museum
Lessons learned:
The accessibility of large collections can be improved significantly through group or collection-level inventory
Overall documentation can be improved through successive processes moving from group to catalogue to individual item level
Although not perfect, collaboration with external expert amateurs can be a pragmatic solution to issues of capacity and resources.
SPECTRUM can be applied effectively in conjunction with other frameworks
UGC at the London Transport Museum
UGC at the London Transport Museum
Situation:
The London Transport Museum holds significant collections of archival, photographic and other documentary material alongside its object collections. Although it had good documentation of most items, it lacked richer narrative descriptions of the collections.
Task:
The museum had to find a way of enabling users to add descriptive information and narrative connections to the catalogue information it had made available via its website.
UGC at the London Transport Museum
Action:
The London Transport Museum created a User Generated Content server, which was integrated alongside their main Collections Management System.
Visitors to the website were invited to ‘Share a story with us – comment on this image’ – which led, via a registration process, to a form which allowed the user to upload comments, views and observations about the collections.
User-generated comments were reviewed by collections staff and posted to the museum’s website.
UGC at the London Transport Museum
UGC at the London Transport Museum
Result:
The results of the project were mixed. While a significant number of website visitors contributed comments, this led to an increased workload for the existing collections staff.
Further, it was found that many of the comments were either of relatively little cultural value (being either frivolous, or subjective reactions to the image) or inaccurate.
Ultimately, the decision was made not to integrate the user responses into the core Collections Management System. It is still possible to comment, but comments are heavily contextualised & moderated.
UGC at the London Transport Museum
Lessons learned:
Crowdsourcing and user-generated content present a significant opportunity to enrich our knowledge about collections
Organisations have to plan for the capacity, and have clear policies in place for moderation and quality-control
It is possible for inaccurate user-generated material to undermine the credibility of the organisation.
What are the challenges your organisation currently faces?
What one part of your collections management could you improve to help overcome this challenge?
Workshop session: Creating a Digitisation Strategy
Creating a Digitisation Strategy
Time: 40 minutes
Working in groups, we’d like to ask you to create a Digitisation Strategy for an integrated museum, archive and library service.
Please nominate one person from your group to act as reporter and to present your Strategy to the room.
It can be a real place, or feel free to make one up!
Creating a Digitisation Strategy
Things to think about:
•Strategic mission•Scope •Audience•Access•Preservation•Copyright•Sustainability•Ethical responsibility
Creating a Digitisation Strategy
Feedback from exercise
Collections Link
Further reading
Collections Link – www.collectionslink.org.uk
Cultural Property Advice – www.culturalpropertyadvice.gov.uk
CHIN - http://www.rcip-chin.gc.ca/index-eng.jsp
Collections Management LinkedIn - www.linkedin.com
10 things you can do tomorrow for no Rand
1. Start something2. Look at your space 3. Look at your policy and mission statement4. Tell your colleagues about today5. Throw some stuff away6. Go into the gallery and talk to a user7. Tidy up8. Phone a colleague in another museum9. Go surfing10. Be positive!
Keep in touch!
Fill in your forms!
Nick PooleCollections Trust
www.collectionstrust.org.uk
www.slideshare.com/nickpoole
www.twitter.com/nickpoole1