NDSA:Public Awareness of Digital Preservation Issues and Challenges: Difference between revisions

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==Overview==
=Overview=


The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This includes at least two high-level activities:
The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This includes at least two high-level activities:
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The high-level messages are then implemented in a number of discrete activities:
The high-level messages are then implemented in a number of discrete activities:


==[[NDSA:Digital Preservation in a Box]]==
==[[NDSA:Digital Preservation in a Box]]==


== Large-scale national-level Public Awareness Campaign ==
== [[NDSA:Large-scale national-level Public Awareness Campaign]] ==


Any possible work with the Ad Council is only one possible path that the group might take. There are a number of advantages to working with the Ad Council, and even if a partnership with the Ad Council is never achieved, the work that leads to that can inform many other activities.
== [[NDSA:Tech Community Engagement]] ==


Carol Minton Morris and Butch Lazorchak held phone call with Kate Emmanuel of the Ad Council on [[NDSA:Ad Council Call Dec. 21, 2010 | Dec. 21, 2010]].
== [[NDSA:Organizational Outreach]] ==


== [[NDSA:Clearinghouse of Digital Preservation Information]]==
== [[NDSA:Clearinghouse of Digital Preservation Information]]==
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*2 of the HDD companies that sell into the professional audio environment have already offered to preinstall the PCA project metadata collection app (http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/partners/bms_chace/bms_chace.html)
*2 of the HDD companies that sell into the professional audio environment have already offered to preinstall the PCA project metadata collection app (http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/partners/bms_chace/bms_chace.html)


== Participation in Digital Preservation BarCamps ==
Several excellent examples included partnering with storage device providers to get an “NDSA-approved” message included with each drive; targeting non-professional photographers by extending the dpBestFlow.org web site; etc. This could involve the creation of something like a “Contacts” database to keep track of potential outlets for future engagement such as the Ad Council and other non-profit marketing entities.
 
== Social Media ==
 
Do we want an NDSA Facebook page? Twitter account? How to best distribute the NDSA message? What social media tools, services and processes does your institution utilize? Slideshare? Vimeo? Flickr?
 
This work can start already without establishing an NDSA-specific foothold in the market. Join the conversation on the [http://www.facebook.com/digitalpreservation NDIIPP Facebook page](anyone can post!). If you tweet, please include the [http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23ndsa hashtag #NDSA] when appropriate so that we can start building the NDSA brand on Twitter.
 
===Marketing Plans (both Library and Non-Library)===
 
[[File:Marketing_plan_handout.pdf‎ Building a Marketing Communication Plan Handout]]


[http://www.madetostick.com/ Made to Stick] - Companion website to book [http://alaskastatelibrary.worldcat.org/oclc/68786839 Made to Stick] about crafting compelling messages.
== [[NDSA:Public Events]] ==

Latest revision as of 14:18, 11 February 2016

Return to NDSA:Outreach Working Group Home


Overview

The activity of raising public awareness is the most significant activity of the NDSA Outreach Working Group. This includes at least two high-level activities:

Authoring/framing/describing the high-level “ Statement of Purpose” that drives any digital preservation public awareness campaign, at whatever level. Is there a single dominant message that the NDSA hopes to propagate regarding the preservation of digital information? Are different messages (or variations on a single message) necessary to reach different audiences? What are the 1-word, 3-word, sentence and paragraph messages that NDSA is trying to propagate?

The NDSA:“Audience” explorations touch on the different audiences for digital preservation information, working to paint a clearer picture of the issues facing each audience, and considering ways that the mission of the NDSA can be presented to each audience. Audiences include the general public, practitioners, funders, legislators, etc.

The high-level messages are then implemented in a number of discrete activities:

NDSA:Digital Preservation in a Box

NDSA:Large-scale national-level Public Awareness Campaign

NDSA:Tech Community Engagement

NDSA:Organizational Outreach

NDSA:Clearinghouse of Digital Preservation Information

Storage Vendors

There were several excellent ideas to engage storage vendors in putting "digital preservation" messages in the README files of their devices. Or other ways of engaging with the storage vendor industry. Some thoughts:

  • Are there current initiatives with storage vendors by the digital preservation community?
  • Are the storage industry events that the NDSA should participate in?
  • Are the activities currently being practiced within the storage industry that the NDSA can leveraged to support digital preservation?
  • 2 of the HDD companies that sell into the professional audio environment have already offered to preinstall the PCA project metadata collection app (http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/partners/bms_chace/bms_chace.html)

Several excellent examples included partnering with storage device providers to get an “NDSA-approved” message included with each drive; targeting non-professional photographers by extending the dpBestFlow.org web site; etc. This could involve the creation of something like a “Contacts” database to keep track of potential outlets for future engagement such as the Ad Council and other non-profit marketing entities.

NDSA:Public Events