Digitization of heritage collections as indicator of innovation

ABSTRACT Heritage institutions house cultural and research content, which is the key source to stimulate soft innovation. Despite the potential, heritage collections are mostly inaccessible via digital mediums. We analyse the macro, meso and micro conditions of heritage organizations across Europe to identify the key determinants that foster soft innovation as reflected by the share of collection digitization and online publication. We find that organizations respond positively to an environment of high consumer digital literacy and sustainable resource allocation that enables slack, skilled staff and long-term strategic planning. Innovation is thus, in fact, enhanced by digital literacy from both producers and consumers.

[1]  Lorna M. Hughes,et al.  E-Infrastructure in the Humanities , 2013 .

[3]  Paul F. Marty,et al.  Museum Informatics: People, Information, and Technology in Museums , 2007 .

[4]  Measuring the Information Society Report , 2015 .

[5]  Martin M. Rosner,et al.  Economic Determinants of Organizational Innovation , 1968 .

[6]  Xavier Castañer,et al.  The Determinants of Artistic Innovation: Bringing in the Role of Organizations , 2002 .

[7]  K. Borowiecki,et al.  Fiscal and economic aspects of book consumption in the European Union , 2015 .

[8]  K. Dopfer The origins of meso economics , 2012 .

[9]  D. Throsby,et al.  Digital complements or substitutes? A quasi-field experiment from the Royal National Theatre , 2014 .

[10]  P. Stoneman,et al.  Soft Innovation: Economics, Product Aesthetics, and the Creative Industries , 2010 .

[11]  N. Lee,et al.  Innovation in Creative Cities: Evidence from British Small Firms , 2014 .

[12]  P. David,et al.  Economic Fundamentals of the Knowledge Society , 2003 .

[13]  Franco Malerba,et al.  Schumpeterian Patterns of Innovation , 1995 .

[14]  Mette Skov,et al.  Museum Web search behavior of special interest visitors , 2014 .

[15]  Fariborz Damanpour,et al.  The Adoption of Technological, Administrative, and Ancillary Innovations: Impact of Organizational Factors , 1987 .

[16]  Kurt Dopfer,et al.  The origins of meso economics , 2006, Journal of Evolutionary Economics.

[17]  J. Pierce Programmatic Risk-Taking by American Opera Companies , 2000 .

[18]  M. Feldman The New Economics Of Innovation, Spillovers And Agglomeration: Areview Of Empirical Studies , 1999 .

[19]  Anita Wölfl Spillover Effects - An Incentive to Cooperate in R&D? , 1998 .

[20]  Michael Fritsch,et al.  Product Innovation, Process Innovation, and Size , 2001 .

[21]  David Throsby,et al.  New technologies in cultural institutions: theory, evidence and policy implications , 2012 .

[22]  Deb Verhoeven,et al.  New cinema history and the computational turn , 2012 .

[23]  J. Schumpeter The Creative Response in Economic History , 1947, The Journal of Economic History.

[24]  M. Lessnoff Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy , 1979 .

[25]  P. Marty Museum websites and museum visitors: digital museum resources and their use , 2008 .

[26]  K. Borowiecki,et al.  Change in access after digitization: Ethnographic collections in Wikipedia , 2015 .

[27]  Mark D. Smucker,et al.  Information representation , 2011, Interactive Information Seeking, Behaviour and Retrieval.

[28]  Matthew Zook Grounded capital: venture financing and the geography of the Internet industry, 1994–2000 , 2002 .

[29]  Karol Jan Borowiecki,et al.  Geographic Clustering and Productivity: An Instrumental Variable Approach for Classical Composers , 2011 .

[30]  Gataua David Irungu Determinants of Information and Communication Technology Adoption by Small and Medium Enterprises in Thika Municiplality: A case of Selected SMES , 2013 .

[31]  T. Navarrete Hernandez,et al.  A history of digitization: Dutch museums , 2014 .

[32]  M. Radford,et al.  “If it is too inconvenient I'm not going after it:” Convenience as a critical factor in information-seeking behaviors , 2011 .

[33]  D. Audretsch,et al.  Entrepreneurship and Innovation , 2005 .

[34]  Xavier Castañer,et al.  Cultural Innovation by Cultural Organizations , 2014 .

[35]  F. Benhamou,et al.  Fair use and fair competition for digitized cultural goods: the case of eBooks , 2015 .

[36]  P. Marty My lost museum: User expectations and motivations for creating personal digital collections on museum websites , 2011 .

[37]  Tefko Saracevic,et al.  Digital Library Evaluation: Toward Evolution of Concepts , 2000, Libr. Trends.

[38]  Elizabeth Yakel,et al.  Seeking information, seeking connections, seeking meaning: genealogists and family historians , 2004, Inf. Res..

[39]  Paul DiMaggio,et al.  Why do some theatres innovate more than others? An empirical analysis☆ , 1985 .

[40]  Z. Ács,et al.  Innovation and Small Firms , 1990 .

[41]  Jaap Kamps,et al.  A Search Log-Based Approach to Evaluation , 2010, ECDL.

[42]  Mette Skov,et al.  Exploring information seeking behaviour in a digital museum context , 2008, IIiX.

[43]  Kimberly Barata,et al.  Archives in the digital age , 2004 .

[44]  Paul A. David,et al.  The explicit economics of knowledge codification and tacitness , 2000 .

[45]  Z. Ács,et al.  The knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship , 2005 .

[46]  Alfred Kleinknecht,et al.  The Non-Trivial Choice between Innovation Indicators , 2002 .

[47]  William J. Baumol,et al.  Entrepreneurship in Economic Theory , 1968 .

[48]  C. Camarero,et al.  How cultural organizations’ size and funding influence innovation and performance: the case of museums , 2011 .