Abstract
There are plenty of good reasons for building a website for your collection,
including learning a new skill, protecting fragile resources from constant
handling in the archives, adding interactive functionality that is only possible
on the web, and opening access to users who cannot visit in person.
But often there are better ways to share your collection. Websites are expensive
and a lot of work. Committing to building a website is like committing to build
and maintain a library for the foreseeable future.
If you're reading this, you must already be enthusiastic and have a great idea.
This flowchart is not meant to dampen that enthusiasm. Instead, it is written to
make sure you ask yourself some of the tough questions too, to make sure your
project is viable before you make a big commitment.
Does your historical collection need a database-driven website?
Starting in earnest in the late 1990s, we began to see an increasing number of
online digital archives containing digital versions of historical primary
sources. The “digital surrogates” as we call them, may have
been in the form of digital photographs of the original, or perhaps
transcriptions of the text stored in a searchable database. These websites make
primary sources accessible to anyone, no matter where in the world, and the
digital format allows new types of research – linking, network analysis, corpus
linguistics – like never before. Many contain huge collections that run into the
hundreds of millions of words. They are archives in their own right. We have
come to love the beautiful and user-friendly search interfaces that point us to
relevant sources. We admire (even envy) those colleagues who win the big grants
to put these sites together. We have seen all the positives, but in the process
have forgotten to ask a fundamental question: are these websites necessary?
Not, are these digital records necessary? I believe they are; or at least, that
they provide tremendous benefits that justify their creation and their cost.
Instead, I argue that we must question whether or not a website is always the
best (most economical, sustainable, good use of funds) way to store and
distribute these records. Sometimes the answer is yes. Often, depositing your
digital records in an existing repository, or releasing them in a
standards-compliant format for download, provides all of the same research
benefits as would a website, but without the hassle and expense. Every time a
website is built, less energy and money is available to digitise more materials.
That’s not good for taxpayers, and it’s not good for researchers. Instead, I
argue we should be critical of the need for a website, and should spend more
time making data available, and less time making it look pretty.
Of course, there are plenty of good reasons for building a website for your
collection, including learning a new skill, protecting fragile resources from
constant handling in the archives, adding interactive functionality that is only
possible on the web, and opening access to users who cannot visit in person. But
often there are better ways to share your material. Websites are expensive and a
lot of work. Committing to building a website is like committing to build and
maintain a library for the foreseeable future. If you are reading this, you must
already be enthusiastic and have a great idea. This flowchart is not meant to
dampen that enthusiasm. Instead, it was created to make sure you ask yourself
some of the tough questions too, to make sure your project is viable and
necessary before you make a big commitment to transform your collection into a
database-driven website.
Before taking on a major web-based project, I urge would-be website builders to
pass three tests: morality, audience, and competency. These tests are outlined
in greater detail in the flowchart that accompanies this editorial. The morality
test asks the reader to consider the cost of the project and the value for money
of a web-based solution. The audience test is a series of questions designed to
tease out which users the website seeks to attract (journalists, family
historians, students, academic historians, the general public), and by extension
of that, if a website is the best way to reach that audience. Finally, the
competency test ensures that you or your team have the technical experience to
build an effective, sustainable website that can compete for the attention of
users for many years to come.
Large database-driven websites containing historical materials are a great asset
to our society and to academia. All I suggest is that we make sure that the ones
we build are worthy of the time and money they take to produce.