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Recommendations and Next Steps
In addressing the short- and long-term needs of museums and libraries,
participants identified four distinct areas that deserve the greatest
attention: the elements of a sound business plan; the elements needed
to sustain digital efforts at all types of institutions; interinstitutional
issues; and funding.
Business Models
Concerns
- What things can or should be done in the commercial world, and
what can or should be done only by mission-driven organizations?
- How do we develop cross-community business models; standardize
training; measure institutional readiness?
Next Steps/Actions
- Study costs and benefits of collaboration through case studies.
- Develop criteria that institutions can use to assess their readiness
to engage in collaborative digital library or digital museum developments.
- Develop a framework for business planning-a document identifying
the components of a business plan, the options available for any
component, and the interrelationships of the components.
Elements of Sustainability
Infrastructure/Institutional Issues
Concerns
- How do we prepare staff members for their new roles?
- How do we turn projects into sustainable programs?
- How do we transform legacy institutions?
Next Steps/Actions
- Host cross-domain discussions about common professional developments,
awareness raising, and training needs within libraries and museums.
Involve professional associations such as the American Library
Association, the American Association of Museums, the Society of
American Archivists, and the Museum Computer Network.
- Host a workshop to compare methods for organizational restructuring
for large public institutions; then scale this session down to
make it useful for other institutions.
- Describe the benchmarks in the transition from project to program
in leading to the transformation of legacy institutions.
- Apply rigor to descriptions of what library and museum staff
members do; share position descriptions and develop role descriptions
rather than job descriptions.
- Examine the role of curators and specialists and develop a profile
of e-curatorship.
- Determine the balance between the benefits of income from digital
assets and the possibility of eroding the "specialness" of
an institution when digital assets become widely available.
Infrastructure/Technical Issues
Concerns
- How do we share best practice between and among libraries and
museums?
- How do we develop interoperable systems?
Next Steps/Actions
- Undertake more research on interoperability.
- Map metadata schemes, along the lines of the metadata mapping
schemes registry that exists at the United Kingdom Office for Library
and Information Networking (UKOLN).
- Share good or best practices through targeted workshops.
- Develop a mechanism for exploring common institutional information
architectures internationally.
Users and Audiences
Concerns
- How do we determine the needs and preferences of our users?
- How do we conduct market research and target segments of our
audience?
- How do online users interact with virtual collections, and how
does this use compare with on-site use?
Next Steps/Actions
- Gather studies of users and nonusers to share with museum and
library communities.
- Host a cross-domain meeting (i.e., libraries, museums, archives)
to discuss common measures, trends, and related matters.
- Conduct research into the impact of the virtual and real library
and museum experiences.
- Conduct applied research on how people expect to interact with
digital materials.
- Conduct market research of library and museum users to determine
what they want from virtual and real museum and library experiences.
- Adopt a segmented approach to the user population, based on market
research.
General Cross-Domain and Interinstitutional Issues
Concerns
- How do we support the needs of small institutions?
- How do we share assets developed at considerable expense by various
groups?
- How do we assess the impact of changes in copyright law on how
libraries and museums manage intellectual property, and how can
we shape the law in ways that reflect our interests in fair use?
Next Steps/Actions
- Reconvene museum and library leaders periodically to discuss
changes.
- Consider more involvement by organizations in other countries.
- State the problems facing museums and libraries clearly in nontechnical
terms; museums asked libraries to formulate "the green, red,
and caution lights."
- Specify requirements of some of the infrastructure services to
be provided at the regional level, e.g., digitization, cataloging,
distribution, and preservation.
- Identify governance issues for services and convene groups, including
funders, to address them.
- Develop a statement about the larger ecology to which both large
and small institutions can contribute.
Funding
Concerns
- How do we educate funders about the issues that are and will
be of concern to them?
- How do we help funders incorporate best practices for sustainability
in their grant requirements?
Next Steps/Actions
- Convene funders to educate them about the issues facing cultural
institutions.
- Encourage funders to incorporate the best practices we have identified
into their requirements.

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