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Why impact?

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Image credits: Europeana DCH impact evidence bank workshop. Sebastiaan ter Burg, 2018. CC BY.

Why impact?

It’s important to ask ourselves why it’s important to think about impact. Some high-level reasons for Europeana, for example, include demonstrating the value we create for the heritage sector and progressing our understanding of the digital transformation of the heritage sector. At a more micro-level, it will be to understand how we bring value through specific projects and to learn how we can improve. 

“In the cultural heritage sector, we work for a great cause, for the good of society as a whole, and we have ambitious goals. But it's not always easy to see whether we're achieving them. The fact of the matter is that - as a cultural institution - we have very few instruments at our disposal to assess the results of our actions. Of course, we count the direct outputs of our work fanatically - visitor numbers, Facebook likes, ticket sales. But we don't dig into the deep outcomes that result from our work - changes to attitudes, new friendships, new ideas and values.” Phase one

Why is it important to collect data and measure your impact? 

  • Stay relevant in a changing world - think from the perspective of your audience and respond to their feedback

  • Inform evidence-led decision-making and iterative improvement cycles

  • Inform strategies and ways ahead

  • To contribute to the bigger narrative about what is the value of (digital) cultural heritage and our work

  • Help make change happen and make a better world

  • Contextualise your work (e.g. nationally, internationally) in comparison with others

  • Influence better policy making by creating more appropriate recommendations and advocacy narratives

  • Attract more funding and to help make your work more financially sustainable (and impactful for your audiences) 

  • Identify the gaps and capitalise on opportunities to create impact through your work

  • Improve your organisation’s processes and learning processes

Read more about why and how institutions are thinking about and measuring their impact

  • Interview with Helen Hardy at the Natural History Museum, London, about the economic impact of digitisation

  • Feature about impact awareness training and what it means for DEN, the Netherlands

  • Interview with Ana Aziza at the Fondation du Patrimoine about how impact assessment helps us to understand the value of built cultural heritage

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