Distinctly Black Country

Post on 03-Jul-2015

114 views 0 download

description

Building an online community to promote understanding of the history of the black country and its legacy.

Transcript of Distinctly Black Country

"Building an online community to

promote understanding of the history of

the black country and its legacy.”

Emma Neil

Volunteer Social Media Assistant

Distinctly Black Country

Social Media

www.facebook.com/distinctlyblackcountry

@distinctlybc

http://distinctlyblackcountry.org.uk/

Aims

• To gain an understanding of the Distinctly Black Country

network

• Raise an awareness of what to consider before building

an online community

• How to keep an online community interested and

engaged

• Understand some of the challenges and obstacles of

developing an online community

• Link people who are interested in the way the past has made the

modern Black Country landscape

• Describe the distinguishing landscape features of the Black

Country

• Get people out exploring the features that make the area special

and different

distinctly black country

Why was Distinctly Black Country set up?

The Black Country

Landscape

• Natural - rich geology

• Period before the industrial

revolution - relatively

isolated

• Industrial age

• The last century -

residential neighbourhoods

Why an online community?

• Distinctly Black Country started out as a collaborative research project

• It wasn’t the intention to use social media

• A WordPress site was created in 2011

• Hesitant to use other social media platforms

• The project evolved which led to the establishment of Facebook and Twitter in 2012

Building an online community

Brand Staff /

Volunteers Social Media

Audience Offline Community

Time

Brand and Identity

• The name for the network was originally the ‘Black

Country Landscape Character Network’

• A logo which is distinctive, simple and memorable

• Many social media platform have space for a

‘banner’ image

• Creating a strap line

Staff and Volunteers

• One part time member of staff Paul Quigley, Landscape

Archaeologist

• Two long term volunteers – Social Media Assistant and

Photographer, Matthew Whitehouse

• Volunteer recruitment

• Volunteer training

• Volunteer management

Social Media

Audience

• A local audience

• A younger audience

• What audiences already existed online?

- Local historians

-Arts and Heritage services across the four local

authorities

Time and Costs

• In-house resources of the Arts and Heritage Service have been invaluable (volunteer recruitment and management).

• Never enough hours in the day - finding time to create new content

• Social media tools are free, but investment in manpower and brainpower isn’t

• Internal communication teams

• Future of the network without funding

My Postcode History

• My Postcode History is a participative online project

designed to demonstrate the heritage of apparently

ordinary places.

• Project launched in the summer of 2012

• Open for entries during two periods in 2012: for the month

from 15th June to 13th July; and for four days of the

Heritage Open Days weekend in September.

• A total of six histories have been published.

How old is my street….and how do we

know?

What was there before?

What else links the area to the

story of the Black Country?

Can you add to this story?

Where can I find out more?

My Postcode History – DY5 4LJ

Results

• Today if you typed 'history of my road' into Google, My Postcode History is the first webpage recommended (higher than the BBC's Secret History of our Streets)

• Made local historical and archaeological evidence more accessible

• My Postcode History has supported the identification of new heritage assets, such as a previously unrecorded castle and a surviving legacy of the architect Charles Reilly's greens.

This project is training and supporting residents to investigate the history and heritage of 1960s high-rise council flats in the centre of the Black Country.

Keeping the Momentum

• There is a wealth of information relating to the Black Country

• We just need to keep trying to present this information to our audiences in an interesting way

• Pictures and events seem to attract the most interest and online engagement

• Connecting with audiences through their emotions and memories stimulates conversation

• Posts which link in with particular anniversaries and events

• Twitter hours - #hours

Obstacles and Issues

• Demands on staff/volunteer time in maintaining the social media

• The project under-estimated the amount of time it would take to edit content provided by volunteer contributors

• In terms of future financial support for the project, it has generated many more ideas for fundable projects. Which has resulted in successful initiatives, for the time being at least, come to an end for example My Postcode History.

• We still have a skew in the geography of our audience towards Wolverhampton

Can social media help us appreciate the

history around us?

Two in every three agreed that “the distinctly black country network has

helped me appreciate the area’s history and heritage”.

Social Media Platforms

Connections with the Black Country

Statistics

• In terms of social media outputs, we have published 27 web pages and 37 blog posts (with 200 images), 250 Facebook posts, 1550 tweets and 50 circular emails.

• The website/blog has had over 50,000 page-views and has attracted 122 blog followers.

• Our competition ‘My Postcode History’ attracted 300 entries

• 561 Facebook Likes, 1100 Twitter followers and more than 600 email contacts.

• We have also attracted several volunteers as a result of our social media profile, and a proportion of the content is now generated by volunteer input.

Facebook / Twitter

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

May-12 Jun Jul Aug Oct Jan-13 Mar Apr Jul Oct Feb-14

Twitter

Facebook

Summary

• Building a network takes time to establish relationships. A digital social network is not necessarily different.

• Be open-minded about your definition of heritage – there’s a lot of relevant activity already out there which isn’t branded as heritage.

• Social media isn’t free. The tools can be, but with limited staff resources it will replace other forms of community engagement

• Better liaison between planning departments and museums can pay dividends for Historic Environment Records.

• Talk to your communications team if you aren’t doing so already.

• Built heritage is photogenic! Share your photos.

• People are interested in ‘recognised’ heritage, but they are also fascinated by the history of their own house & street.