Posted: May 16th, 2010 | Author: Jasper Visser | Filed under: Inspiration, Technology | Tags: advice, conversation, do's and don'ts, energy, experience, guidelines, lessons, tips | 10 Comments »

Photo from the Flickr Commons (Field Museum Library)
I’m relatively new to museums. Apart from a short intermezzo in an ecomuseum, the last year has been my only year within the walls of a museum. I do new media and technology. We do a lot of innovation. This is what I learned last year.
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Posted: April 22nd, 2010 | Author: Jasper Visser | Filed under: People | Tags: community, connections, energy, experience, lessons, mw2010, practice, tips | 14 Comments »

Everybody’s talking about community building these days. Often we forget how easy it is (can be) and how frequently it happens. A volcano, some stranded Europeans and Denver. This is how you build a community:
- Get a bunch of people together with more or less similar values.
E.g. museum professionals working on participation.
- Urge them to do something, change their status quo.
E.g. by having a volcano erupt and cause huge ash clouds.
- Make them understand that they’re involved in the new situation.
E.g. by cancelling their flights home.
- Have a community leader/manager take the lead in collaborative action.
E.g. Jennifer Trant who starts a system to find those stranded lodging and something to do.
- Find some early adopters and encourage them to participate and take group action.
E.g. by setting the example yourself and offering your lodging.
- Give the community the freedom to develop by offering tools, not rules.
E.g. pen and paper, a common media channel and enthusiasm.
- Put emphasis on the positive behaviour of individuals in the community.
E.g. by talking to them or retweeting their initiatives.
- Think beyond social media.
E.g. by hosting unconference sessions, meetups and drinks. Or by putting up a pen and paper registration system (see photos).
- Have an open attitude to newcomers.
E.g. by stressing how everybody is in the same situation.
- Ensure and celebrate tangible outcomes within the community.
E.g. by blogging about their events and applauding the success of individuals reaching home.
- Take action over time to reinforce the community.
E.g. by hosting a little event at next year’s conference for those affected by the volcano.
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Posted: April 18th, 2010 | Author: Jasper Visser | Filed under: Inspiration, Technology | Tags: advice, building, do's and don'ts, experience, mw2010, practice, tips | 2 Comments »

A lot of great thing came out of Museum and the Web 2010. I’ll be blogging about some of them over the next week (as I’m stranded in Denver due to #ashtag). One of the best, without a doubt, was the Spinny Bars Historical Society, or SBHS.
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Posted: March 21st, 2010 | Author: Jasper Visser | Filed under: Inspiration | Tags: exhibition, experience, lessons, museums, practice, review, showcase | 2 Comments »

The most important lesson I learnt when I tested Amsterdam museums with Seb Chan is ‘deliver what your visitors expect’. Last Friday I visited the Ruhrmuseum in Zollverein, near Essen. It’s one of the best museum I’ve ever visited in my life. Most of its success, I think, is due to them delivering what people expect to find in this museum: a full sensory experience that makes you discover the Ruhr area as it really was (and is).
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Posted: November 8th, 2009 | Author: Jasper Visser | Filed under: Expositions | Tags: amsterdam, exhibition, experience, museums, photography | No Comments »
Yesterday during the MuseumNacht (Museum Night) in Amsterdam, I had the chance to visit ‘Intimate Strangers‘, a temporary exhibition in the FOAM Photography Museum on the work of the Dutch photographer Sanne Sannes.
The MuseumNacht is an annual event in which 26,000 people visit the museums of Amsterdam at night, often for the first time in their lives. Sanne’s work is slightly erotic and intimate in its nature. On top of that, although photography is a very popular form of art, I think it’s one of the more difficult ones to engage your audience with. It’s easily accessible, but difficult to have people take their time to really discover the layered experience good photography can give you.
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