Radical Collaboration | Tools for Partnering with Community Members
This guest post was written by my incredible colleagues, Stacey Marie
Garcia and Emily Hope Dobkin, with minimal input from me. It started as a
handout for a session Stacey and I are doing at the California Association of
Museums, and then I realised it was so darn useful that it was worth sharing
with all of you. Can't wait to hear what you think.
Nina Simon, Executive Director, Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History
Nina Simon, Executive Director, Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History
The majority of our public programmes at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History [MAH] are
created and produced through community collaborations. Each month we work with
50-100 individuals to co-produce our community programmes. It’s not
unusual for us to meet with an environmental activist, a balloon artist, a
farmer, and the Mayor of Santa Cruz all in one day. Every time we
collaborate, we learn new ways to improve our process, organisation and
communication.
We never received a “how-to-guide” for collaborating with community
members here at the MAH, but over time, we have acquired some basic tools that
have shaped our approach. We realise collaboration differs greatly for
each individual and organisation. We offer these tools in the spirit of sharing
and look forward to learning about the techniques you use in your own
community.
Start with and continuously identify
your communities.
▪
Who are they?
▪
What are their needs?
▪
What are their assets?
▪
Who is represented in your museum? Who isn’t?
One way we do this is through C3 (Creative Community Committee) meetings. C3 is a group
of diverse community members that meets to creatively brainstorm new forms of
collaboration with community members. C3 topics have ranged from exhibition
development, community needs, outreach programmes, our Loyalty Lab project, and family
programmes.
Reach out to and continuously seek
diverse collaborators - not just the usual suspects.
Look for partners who have:
▪
An understanding of and desire to help meet your
community’s needs.
▪
Incredible assets, skills and resources to offer to
your community but are in need of more awareness, promotion, visibility and
representation.
▪
A genuine enthusiasm for sharing their skills,
building knowledge and developing relationships in the community even if they
haven’t done it before. For example, a few months ago we had a couple approach
us to propose a Pop-Up Tea Ceremony. Their enthusiasm and commitment
charmed us and aligned with our social bridging goals. We invited them to set
up the day after we met them and they’ve been Friday regulars ever since.
▪
Experience working with a wide variety of age
groups or teaching in general.
▪
Good communication skills and are kind and
friendly.
▪
Large and small (or no) followings. When planning
programs or events, we involve a combination of these groups to share and
bridge audiences, bringing big, diverse crowds to new artists and ideas.
Openly invite collaboration by
establishing and maintaining transparency about your partnerships with the
public and fellow staff members.
▪
On your website: share your programing goals, solicit
collaborations in general and for specific events, provide easily accessible staff contact information,
clearly state how your collaborations function, give thanks and acknowledgement
to your collaborators through your website and on a Facebook page.
▪
At your museum: have your
front desk staff aware of upcoming events and collaboration possibilities,
always have business cards available for visitors interested in collaborating
so they can easily contact staff members. Be available to talk with
people at your events and hand out your contact information to anyone who has
an idea they’d like to talk with you about or is interested in helping. Follow
up with them later.
▪
Don’t pass judgment or make
assumptions. Always be open to discussing collaborative possibilities with anyone and
everyone and then decide if it’s a good fit.
▪
Mine your colleagues; ask for ideas
and suggestions from staff members for resources. You never know who might have
connections to some place or another. For our Art That Moves event, our
Membership and Development Director suggested the incredibly popular Tarp Surfing activity.
Always meet your collaborators in
person. We can’t overstate how important this is to getting everyone moving in
the same direction.
▪
Clearly explain how your organisation collaborates
with others before you meet.
▪
Meet them at your museum so they begin to become
more familiar and comfortable with the space and understand how they will fit
into the event or programme.
▪
Ask them about their goals for this collaboration
and share your goals.
▪
Find a way, together, to achieve both.
▪
Brainstorm together your wildest ideas and then
scale back. For our 3rd Friday series, we like to have an initial
meeting with all of our collaborators and together go over the community
programme goals tied to the theme of the event. Incredible projects can arise
when you have a poet, a librarian, a printmaker, a bookbinder and a teacher all
throwing out ideas together. (Radical Craft Night and Poetry & Book Arts)
▪
Allow time to pass for further individual
reflection, for them to share their ideas with other members of their organisation
and for you to give it further thought.
▪
Confirm final details with them over the phone,
email or go to their location this time.
Collaboration is based upon
communication. Get ready to talk.
▪
Be prepared to spend an enormous
amount of time communicating with each individual through email, over the phone
and in person.
▪
Make time for them. When you give collaborators more
of your time, they will feel more confident about their role in the event,
their project/workshop/demonstration will inevitably be stronger and your
visitors will be happier.
▪
When you produce a large event with many
individuals, make sure they are all connected through email. This establishes
communication across the entire group, collective teamwork, the opportunity to
share resources and the possibility of future relationships and connections to
develop amongst your collaborators. Recently, we hosted a PechaKucha night at the MAH, which
featured a wide range of community members presenting on eight different
topics. These eight people didn't know each other at all before the event. In a
pre-event email exchange, one presenter offered up a useful link to help practice
giving this kind of talk. That email sparked several messages of appreciation
and excitement, creating a sense of comradery.
Even if you can’t financially
compensate your collaborators, show your collaborators how much you value them.
Many times, we cannot pay our collaborators. For some MAH events, we
collaborate with 120 individuals across the spectrum from amateurs to
professionals, all of whom have very different expectations about compensation.
How do we pay a group of ukulele players, a teenage rock band and a
world-renowned musician fairly and on a very limited budget?
Here are some other ways we compensate our collaborators:
▪
Give them as much press as possible. Suggest them
to press for a feature in the local paper.
▪
Acknowledge them on your website and always link to
their website.
▪
Pay for all their materials.
▪
Offer food and drinks for them at the event.
▪
Give them a guest pass.
▪
Thank them and credit them for their work and
volunteered time.
▪
Refer them if someone asks you for a
recommendation.
▪
Help them learn from the experience. We recently
had a group of students creating balloon art during our Winterpalooza Family Festival. New to the
art form and the museum, we gave them a gift certificate to reflect over
milkshakes at a local burger joint after the event.
▪
Encourage them to promote themselves/their organisation
and offer ways for visitors to learn more about their events at your
event. It’s a reciprocal appreciation: we are able to showcase and share
the amazing talent in our community, and they’re able to share their work with
a larger audience, make new connections in the community and learn from their
experiences interacting with the public.
Your partners are doing a lot of
work. Make it as easy for them as possible.
▪
Share your resources and connections that can help
make their activity/collaboration stronger. A friendly sheet metal company in
Santa Cruz provided scrap metal for our Experience Metal festival last summer;
we thanked them by donating back the giant robot visitors partly made from the
scrap.
▪
Buy, gather, and prep all the materials you
can. This might mean cutting thousands of papers various sizes, wheeling
hundreds of library books through downtown, dumpster diving for cardboard boxes
and driving up to the mountains to move a 200lb letterpress to the MAH.
▪
Set up their tables and materials for them before
they arrive.
▪
Have volunteers ready to assist them with set up
and break down, as well as coverage during breaks.
▪
Clearly communicate with them throughout the
process, show them exactly where they will be and where everyone else will be,
let them know the schedule, where to check in, how and where to find help and
assistance and what is expected of them before, during and after the event.
Get collaborators' feedback and give
them credit for their contributions.
▪
Survey your collaborators extensively to find out:
ways to improve for next time, what they appreciated, how or if they benefited
from the collaboration, and what changes they’d like to see made. Here's a sample
collaborator survey from our recent Poetry and Book Arts event.
▪
Read the surveys and make active and immediate
changes based upon their feedback.
▪
Document the event: Share photographs of the event
on social media outlets and always have fully downloadable photographs
available for their use.
▪
Keep in contact with them. These people are now one
of your best and most reliable resources and you can be theirs as well. Stay up
to date with them about future collaborations or other potential collaborators
they may know. Be helpful to them and they will be helpful to you.
How do you
collaborate with your community?
What tools
and methods have you found beneficial?
Authors |
Stacey Marie Garcia, Director of Community Programs at the Santa Cruz
Museum of Art & History
Emily Hope Dobkin, Programs Associate at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art
& History
This story was originally published on Nina Simon's Museum 2.0 blog and is republished
here with the kind permission of the authors and Nina Simon.
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