91. Who can support me in decision-making concerning new software and digital services?

There is a wealth of support and advice available to help you in the important decisions concerning what new technology to use in your heritage organisation. Determining the most useful will go a long way to ensuring that you select the digital tools that will work best for you.

A view of old stone buildings on a street, illuminated at night with red and yellow lights
Image courtesy of VisitBritain © Pearl Lung
A view down a street at night with many lit up bars
Level 3

This guide outlines some key sources of information available to support your decision making on the suitability and application of new technology and digital services.

Levels


Level 11. Beginners
You're starting from scratch, or you need a digital skills and knowledge refresh. You're time poor and need a quick fix.



Level 22. Development
You've mastered the basics and now you want to fine tune your digital skills and knowledge. You're looking for new ideas and inspiration to achieve what you want to achieve.

Level 33. Advanced
You know what you're doing digitally but you want to do it better. You're keen to test and experiment and take your heritage organisation to the next level.

Digital Heritage Hub is managed by Arts Marketing Association (AMA) in partnership with The Heritage Digital Consortium and The University of Leeds. It has received Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and National Lottery funding, distributed by The Heritage Fund as part of their Digital Skills for Heritage initiative. Digital Heritage Hub is free and answers small to medium sized heritage organisations most pressing and frequently asked digital questions.

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Heritage Digital
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