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AAM Webinar on Social Media and Museum Advocacy

In early December, AAM sponsored a webinar on social media and museum advocacy. Led by Stephanie Vance of Advocacy Associates, the presentation provided basic lessons in how to use newer tools like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter to cultivate supporters and engage elected officials. Here are some of Vance’s suggestions:

Blogs: If you’re writing on behalf of an organization, Vance advises avoiding politically partisan messages, but there’s no reason you can’t talk about legislation that affects your museum or ask your audience to let their representatives know how important your museum is to them. She cites I Heart Art: Portland, Small Museum
Association
, and Exploratorium Explainers as examples of blogs that do a good job informing and inspiring their audience beyond just marketing.

Twitter: Search for your museum’s name to see who is already talking about you, and respond to those people. Cultivate followers and let them know about issues your museum is facing, locally or nationally. You can follow AAM (@AAMers) to get advocacy action alerts that you can share. Sign up for your legislators’ Twitter feeds and tag them in relevant messages. For example, Michael Capuano (@mikecapuano) is the congressional representative in Tufts’ district, so you might ask your audience to retweet a message asking him to support FY12 funding for IMLS.

LinkedIn Connect to your city councilors, congressional representatives, mayor’s office, etc. and see if you share any 2nd-degree connections. You may find that a former classmate or colleague has a connection that could help your message find its way to a legislator’s desk more quickly.

Facebook The fastest-growing demographic on Facebook are users who are 35 and older, Vance says, and more and more legislators are using it as a major communication tool. You can “like” your legislators’ pages and post on their walls about upcoming events and community partnerships. Search for your museum on Flickr or YouTube and repost links to any user-generated content that shows their constituents are engaging with your organization.

Once you get the hang of in social media as a way to communicate with legislators and cultivate community supporters, make sure you teach these tools to volunteer committees or friends’ groups who are already valuable “real-world” advocates for your museum.

Speak Up for Museums is AAM’s museum advocacy initiative. Check there for more tips and webinars, and to find out more about AAM’s Museum Advocacy Day, February 28 and March 1 in Washington, D.C. You can view a recording of this webinar as part of AAM’s advocacy trainings website.

Kris Bierfelt is a student in the Tufts Museum Studies certificate program, and works as a freelance writer and editor.

Know Your Professional Organizations: AAM’s Emerging Museum Professionals

Next up in our series of know your professional organizations, we have a sub-category of last week’s featured organization: the AAM’s Emerging Museum Professionals.

Now, not all of you are just emerging. Some of you have been out there in the ranks for years. But even if you’re fully emergent, you can surely keep an eye on this group, because they do great things. (For that matter, the definition of an EMP is someone who’s been in the field for less than ten years.)

Look over the website – there are resources there for the national organization, such as the EMP blog, Facebook page, and listserv.

What you will find most helpful, however, is the local Boston group. It’s starting up again after a bit of a hiatus. Email the coordinator, Leslie Howard (BostonEMPs[at]gmail[dot]com) to be added to the email list, and you’ll be invited to terrific events like the upcoming highlights tour of the new MFA wing. Follow them on Facebook and Twitter, too.

There aren’t a lot of concrete benefits to becoming involved in the EMPs like there were for AAM. Think of the benefits for becoming involved as more intangible – meeting great people with your own interests who are all in the same boat, tapping in to a network of great minds who are about to go out and change the museum world. It’s a way to get in on the ground floor, as it were.

Know Your Professional Organizations: American Association of Museums

Everyone’s telling you that you have to network. Go out there and meet people! they say. Make your voice heard! Introduce yourself and make connections and do favors and it will all pay off down the road! And you say…that sounds great. Where on earth do I start?

We’ve got you covered. Over the next few weeks, we’ll be doing overviews of organizations for museum professionals. All of them offer benefits to their members, and all of them are great places to meet other like-minded museum geeks. It’s up to you which ones to join, but speaking for myself – I’d join as many of them as you can.

First up is the 800 pound gorilla of museum professional organizations: the American Association of Museums.

The AAM was founded in 1906, and its mission is to “strengthen museums through leadership, advocacy, collaboration and service.” They represent over 15,000 museum professionals and volunteers, 3,000 museums, and 300 corporate members. The AAM is all-inclusive; every kind of museum you can think falls under its purview.

Membership is $50 for students (be sure to include a copy of your Tufts ID!) and $90 for professionals. That’s relatively steep in the scheme of museum professional organizations, but it does come with some pretty sweet benefits. You can read all about them here, but the highlights: free or reduced admission to many museums, a subscription to Museum magazine, steep discounts in the AAM bookstore, and access to all sorts of free and/or reduced price professional development opportunities.

The AAM’s big bash is the Annual Meeting, an absolutely enormous conference and expo. This year it’s being held in Houston, Texas, from May 22 – 25, with the theme “The Museum of Tomorrow”. Early bird registration for $375 ends on February 18. Yes, it’s a lot of money. But if you really want to go, there are ways and means. The AAM itself offers several fellowships, including one for emerging museum professionals. And if you’ll remember, on this very blog we conveyed news of fellowships offered by NAME, the National Association of Museum Exhibition. You’ve still got time to apply for both of those.

The AAM does LOTS more, and I’d encourage you to spend some time exploring their website. Right  now they’re focusing on a big push for museum advocacy, and their accreditation program is a source of continual focus (and some debate). Don’t forget, too, that AAM President Ford Bell spoke at the NEMA fall conference and you can download his talk on their website. He had some very thoughtful and interesting things to say about the future of museums.

If you want to join the AAM, start here.

(Watch this space: every Wednesday, we’ll do a short overview of a different professional organization. There are more than you can imagine – we might be done sometime in 2012…)

AAM Webinar – Social Media as Advocacy Tools

On Thursday, December 2 at 2:00 p.m., the American Association of Museums will be hosting a free webinar titled “Social Media as Advocacy Tools.” It’s part of their “Speak Up For Museums” initiative, which is planning all sorts of advocacy events over the next year.

From the website:

Many museums are already using Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and other social media tools to engage the public. Learn how to use these powerful tools to engage your elected officials at all levels about the vital role that museums play. See how to effectively develop your message for these platforms, and take your online resources to the next level.

Register today!

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