Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Recession's Possible Effect on Museum Attendance

This just in - March 10th in Shaila Dawan's NYT article "A Casualty of Recession": "Holly Moreno, 30, a part-time Web site manager in the Dallas suburb of Rowlett, Tex., whose husband is a business analyst, said she had been taking their 2-year-old son to indoor playgrounds at the mall and free story-times at the library instead of paying to get into the children’s museum, their favorite wintertime haunt." http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/10/us/10reset.html?th&emc=th

This is the time to promote museum membership as low-cost,unlimited access: a recession-minded, cost-effective for everyone positive leisure-time activities. Right now museums should see memberships grow the way we can expect to see YMCA/YWCA memberships grwo.

Your museum or site is a safe and smart place to play with the kids, a safe and smart place to walk safely, and a safe and smart place to walk your dog safely (think Trustees of Reservations' Green Dog plan). Encourage folks to think creatively:
  • "Meet your friends for a picnic"
  • "Have coffee with The Masters every Saturday morning",
  • or "Remember when you could spend all day wandering?"
Think about it, a solid percentage ofyour members are movitated by commitment to our institution, the rest by the return on their membeship cost. I've never been a fan of membership, but I can see how in this economy membership is a way to encourage increased visitation as users chase more bang for the buck. It's our opportunity to turn the economic transaction into a long-term friendship; but you can't do that if they're going to the library or mall instead.

Museums should be a balm to recession-weary citizens. If you're looking for a way to build public currency right now, this is it.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Watch the UK's Creative Spaces

Keep an eye on Creative Spaces, the National Museums Online Learning Project. By connecting the collections of nine National Museums, the site offers users a chance to learn from all the collections.

I particularly like the notebook feature. If you were Darwin, you'd be creating a field notebook and collecting specimens. Here, you can do it, and save it, online. That's terrific public engagement.

The site launched just last week - with much pomp and circumstance. Looks worth it! Try it - http://nhm.nmolp.org/creativespaces

~ SB