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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Updated October 24, 2007

IMLS Press Contacts
202-653-4632
Jeannine Mjoseth, jmjoseth@imls.gov
Mamie Bittner, mbittner@imls.gov

Noted Communications Guru Addresses Large Gathering of Library And Museum Leaders At The Institute of Museum and Library Services

Million-plus Workers Serving Nation’s Libraries, Museums, and Cultural Centers Urged to
“Be Smart” About New Technologies or Atrophy.

Robert L. Dilenschneider presenting the inaugural Leadership Lecture

Robert L. Dilenschneider presenting the inaugural Leadership Lecture. Photo by Earl Zubkoff. Click image for a larger view.

WASHINGTON, D.C.--An urgent call to the million-plus workers in museums, libraries, nature sanctuaries, historic homes, and aquariums to protect, preserve, and enhance the nation's threatened culture and heritage was sounded here today.

Presenting the inaugural Leadership Lecture at the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Robert L. Dilenschneider, the nationally-known communications strategist and author, told the assembled library and museum leaders that they must be “especially smart and creative” in employing available new technologies because “the paradigm is rapidly shifting in your world and you must prepare for a great leap forward using technology as a teaching tool.”

Warning that libraries and museums dealing with the new technology and multi-media applications “must accept, adapt, and accelerate their use, or simply atrophy,” Dilenschneider stressed that those technologies can also be an invaluable tool in attracting new patrons and volunteers as well as additional financial support.

Librarians, curators and leaders of cultural institutions should find and implement teaching applications for technologies as varied as You Tube, podcasting, and virtual existence sites such as SecondLife.com, the speaker noted.

“At one time, museums and libraries maintained the ability to control and select what their patrons would have access to,” he said, “but technology and the shifting paradigms of power and influence are changing these notions and challenging these institutions.

“With technology in the library, the patron can access much more than the finite set of resources selected by librarians of the past, and for museums the Internet has increased the public’s expectation to be able to see and use the whole collection – not just what the curator chose to put on view.”

Libraries and museums are no different from any other industry in America, Dilenschneider argued. “To stay relevant and useful you must remain true to their mission and reinvent yourself at the same time. You must use new technologies wisely and identify the problems of concern to your communities and to our nation that you are uniquely positioned to solve.”

Today, he said, libraries and museums can play a more critical role than ever in:

• Closing the gap between information haves and have-nots
• Preserving cultural, scientific and historic heritage
• Improving people’s ability to find and use information
• Heightening understanding of other customs and cultures,
• Participating in education reform, and
• Encouraging immigrants to succeed in the U.S.

Dilenschneider cited the late management consultant Peter Drucker, who advised librarians and museum professionals “to run with the opportunity, to learn and constantly refresh the knowledge base” in order to help Americans develop the habit of life-long learning.

“The young people who will shape the new American century are just now receiving their ideas and inspiration – and librarians and curators have an obligation to help them reach higher and go farther,” he concluded.

# # #

The Leadership Lecture will be delivered at 7 p.m., at the William G. McGowan Theater, National Archives Building, on Constitution Avenue at 7th Street N.W., in Washington, DC.

For a transcript of Dilenschneider’s remarks, contact Leo Murray at The Dilenschneider Group, lmurray@dgi-nyc.com or call 212-922-0900.

About the Institute of Museum and Library Services
The Institute of Museum and Library Services is the primary source of federal support for the nation’s 122,000 libraries and 17,500 museums. The Institute's mission is to create strong libraries and museums that connect people to information and ideas. The Institute works at the national level and in coordination with state and local organizations to sustain heritage, culture, and knowledge; enhance learning and innovation; and support professional development. To learn more about the Institute, please visit www.imls.gov.


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