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Get Help in Telling the Story of Your Nonprofit's Impact

Tech Soup

Decatur, Illinois: Storytelling, Planning, and Scheduling Content for Your Nonprofit #Storymakers2017. Research Triangle Park, North Carolina: The Content Marketing Blueprint. Atrisco, New Mexico: Working Group and Help Desk: Bring Your Projects and Tech Challenges. Storytelling and Content Strategy Best Practices.

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Arts 2.0: Examples of Arts Organizations Social Media Strategies

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The content is focused on the professional area of expertise. Fresh + new(er) is an institutional blog from the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney Australia written by staff member Seb Chan. Tate's Mobile Blog is collecting audience input on the new building design at the Tate - via mobile phones to blog - or mob blogging.

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Museums and Flickr

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

online exhibit developed by the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico and Ideum. In designing and developing The American Image: The Photographs of John Collier Jr. (used with permission). This photograph is part of The American Image: The Photographs of John Collier Jr.

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How Your Museum Can Be an Online First Responder

Museum 2.0

Imagine that your museum is ready to start creating content on a small-scale in Web 2.0. You're ready to write commentary about content related to your institutional goals. efforts than you can if you focus on creating your own little world of content. You're ready to make a few videos to post on YouTube. Where should you start?

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Plants! Natural Materials! Review of Explora!, a Peaceful, Delightful Science Center

Museum 2.0

The overwhelming experience I had while touring it wasn't excitement or craziness or childishness - it was contented wonder. There were plenty of screaming kids, but the design of the whole place absorbed and tempered their noise rather than frothing it up. First, the exhibits are designed for focused, prolonged engagement.

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"It Is What It Is," and the Challenges of Dialogue-Focused Exhibits

Museum 2.0

From my perspective, It Is What It Is was not designed with sufficient structure to robustly and consistently support dialogue. But they are a lot less likely than in designed settings like the Living Library. How will we design the experience to encourage participation by those people? But museum staff rarely have this luxury.

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