Flickr Commons: Coping with a Small Staff and Community Ideals
One of the interesting things about The Commons is anyone can do it, which is pretty cool. Often, I think, larger institutions have an advantage over the smaller ones in that they get to put personnel behind coding projects to get their materials out the door. For a smaller institution, the coding barrier can be a difficult one—it makes projects expensive and often not doable. Here at Brooklyn, we fall somewhere in between—we are lucky to have a talented team of developers on staff, but it’s never enough for all the projects we’d like to do or to keep up with the demands of our existing infrastructure. As readers of this blog (or if you’ve ever seen me speak at conferences) already know, we will often try and find a Scrappy-Doo solution to get us through, which allows us to experiment before committing resources to major project or, sometimes, the scrappy solution enables us to do a project that we could otherwise never commit staff time to.

The Commons can help smaller institutions by eliminating the coding barrier. Flickr already has ways to upload and change data in batch and there’s a strong community of developers coding Grease Monkey scripts to help add functionality where Flickr stops—thank you Flickr, for a rockin’ API. While some members of The Commons created their own batch upload tools to draw directly from their internal systems, Brooklyn just used existing tools (Flickr’s Uploadr and Organizr paired with Steev’s GM scripts) and this worked well for us without the need of another big project, but it didn’t eliminate issues of workload—it just transferred them to another area.
As I mentioned in my last post, what was once a small town turned into a big, booming metropolis when we joined The Commons. Previously there had been a lot of discussion going on about the current happenings of the institution and those discussions were quick, easy and (most of all) fun exchanges. We could get back to people within 24 hours and really engage in a personal way—it was clear to everyone (we hope) that someone was home—that we were there to put a personal face on the institution and we took that very seriously.
We find the exchanges at The Commons are fundamentally different than what we had been experiencing and they tend to be more time consuming for us. This is high-traffic, so we exponentially increased exposure to all the materials on our account by a lot more than what we had been used to. Each time a new institution joins The Commons, the publicity from it drives more traffic our way. This issue doesn’t really go away—it just becomes an even greater challenge to manage our time. You might be asking at this point, don’t we all want higher traffic for our materials? What could possibly be the problem here and why could it possibly outweigh the benefit of more exposure?

True enough, we’ve seen a lot of fantastic things happen with the material because of this exposure, but we’ve also been grappling with the staff time it takes to respond to people in a meaningful way. For one, often people just tell us how much they really like something we’ve uploaded, and while that’s really nice, it creates a lot of filtering through those responses to ensure we don’t miss the questions people may have or the contributions they have to offer. For instance, I once missed a major contribution for way too long just because it got buried (ummm, yikes).
Also, it’s been more difficult to get to know this group of people on a personal level. This rolls round to the big, bustling city again. In the small town, we thrilled to see responses like the above because we knew (or were getting to know) the people who were leaving the comments. Now, it’s a bit overwhelming and I often feel as if we can’t engage the way we used to (there have been some exceptions here, but this is my general feeling).

Sometimes we see that visitors to The Commons will ask questions casually (example above) as a way of engaging, but it can provide us with a difficult task—meaningful responses take a decent amount of research and time.

When we get contributions that can lead us in the right direction and fill in a missing piece of the puzzle, we want to verify that before changing our own records and this verification process takes time. It’s pretty fantastic that we are getting this kind of response, but the verification takes enough time that I often feel it gives the impression there is a void of interaction on our account because we don’t respond as quickly as we’d like. The kind of response time shown above is an eternity on the www, but a reality for us given the amount of resources we have (read on…).

As we take this break to examine the cause and effect of all of this, we have to consider just how strapped we are for staff time. To give you an idea, we have one Archivist (Angie) who’s been working with a volunteer researcher (Ed, you are awesome) in order to maintain the account. I help by going through the incoming responses and manage things by sending things to Angie and Ed that need a response or those really whiz-bang cool things they will want to know about. Given that this needs to be less than 1/10 of what we do on a normal basis, keeping up can be a bit stressful for all of us. It’s ironic that smaller institutions can now take advantage of a system like this since it may create other problems when there are fewer people to share the workload (or, at least, this has been a challenge for us).
What’s interesting for me personally is that this equation—our presence on social networks, our e-comment books, the Posse, this blog, etc.—had never, ever presented a problem. It was always a very doable amount of time and always, always, always a very personal engagement, but the higher traffic at The Commons has somewhat tipped the balance in this one instance and it makes it an interesting case study.
The great news is the assets are being seen by a broader audience (another primary part of our mission), we are gaining a better understanding of how people are using our materials (something we really need to know) and we’ve seen a lot engagement (which can be really awesome), but in trying to maintain our own ideals in how we approach community on the web, we are cautious moving forward. In thinking about how to resume our uploads to The Commons, I have a feeling you’ll see fewer uploads overall at a much slower pace so we can keep up.
If you’ve made it this far…fun news is coming at the end of the week, so hope to see you then!
FAQ





RSS 
Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum
December 4th, 2008 at 2:19 pm
Thank you for the very thoughtful look at your work on the commons!
I’ve been one of those users eating up your time (both for better and for worse!… well, I hope for better?). I also have been browsing and commenting on the Library of Congress Bain collection quite a bit.
I wonder if the way to overcome the scale and complexity of your new community is to switch from a collaborator to a coordinator? It’s necessary to be entirely a collaborator when you are in a “small town”, and you need to do it to establish the community that leads to a “metropolis”. You’re doing leadership work quite a bit already just by acknowledging (and thus rewarding) people for their contributions to your collection. Perhaps you can turn some of the questions back on people, or ask people to find/provide evidence that backs up their conclusions about the photos? They may find more reward than you doing the work yourself.
LC has so much activity in the Bain collection that it can be very stingy with its posts. Only rock-solid information on dates of photographs or corrections to caption information tend to get a response. Esoteric connections to other photographs or general information are left for the community to comment on. LC is entirely impersonal and institutional, though. That’s my expectation - LC has very nice people, but I’m there for the architecture and archives. I don’t think you can go that far - it’s the illusion of a personal connection that’s put Brooklyn Museum high on my list on a hopeful upcoming trip to New York.
When I started looking at the Brooklyn photos in November I was surprised at the sparse comments on the wonderful 1893 World’s Fair photos. Now there is healthy activity.
So, what’s the next step in the dance? Do you have to pair with everyone on the dance floor, or can you lead the band and still enjoy an occassional waltz or tango?
Writing this long of a post when you’re already time-strapped can be quite a chore. Thanks for taking time out to provide insight!
@roketpad
December 4th, 2008 at 2:27 pm
Hey Rob,
Definitely for the better - the interaction we’ve been having with you and many others is what we’ve hoped for by putting these materials out there. And, I have to say, hearing you mention the personal connection and that we are high on your list couldn’t make me happier - I’ve been feeling like we have not been connecting enough (could you tell?) and it’s very welcome to hear that we are still making strides in this area.
This is an interesting point about asking our own questions. Not only would it save us some time, but it might really be engaging for our community to know we are there…instead of waiting on us to research. I’m going to try that on the next one we get and will report back
December 4th, 2008 at 2:53 pm
Thanks!
In another post you pointed out that you have two audiences in Flickr - those who care about the museum and those who care about the collections. Another interesting idea might be to try and convert some folks - make them “primarily” collections or museum ppl.
Some random thoughts…
Could the old Brooklyn slides be somehow tied into the DJ nights?? Ask one of the young artist hangers-on to do something visually creative with the Flickr comments and tags that can be projected on the ceiling during the party?
Could the energy of the museum be injected into the somewhat stale and static Flickr Commons images? Or if I am a stale and static person, what is the Commons reflection in the day-to-day of the museum? If I visit on the wrong day will there be nothing to see?
BTW, I couldn’t stop thinking about this photo on election night… maybe that was the first time so many people had gathered in one place in Chicago since 1893? http://www.flickr.com/photos/brooklyn_museum/2785069966/
BTW BTW I just realized my first comment on Brooklyn Museum photos was “three months ago” not “November” :-O
December 4th, 2008 at 3:04 pm
I’m kind of having a d’oh moment right now. One thing we know for sure around here is doing something onsite in combo with online always, always grows community in this really organic way. I’m not sure why we’ve not been thinking about some kind of project like what you are talking about to get people energized around these materials. It brought to mind all the artistic mash-ups people are doing with them - could that energy be brought into the building and vice versa. We’ve got meetings scheduled to review The Commons in early January, so I’ll definitely be bringing this comment thread to the table for discussion. It could be a great way to bridge the gap. Ditto on that photo - the crowd in that shot is so amazing.