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Three Questions for Record Keepers

Every family has at least one. No, not the crazy uncle. We’re talking about the record-keepers. You know, the ones that ended up with all the stuff: the family bible, the old photos, the diaries and letters. Some people spend a lifetime gathering records, hoarding photos, and hunting down lost items. Others come upon records by accident or inheritance. If you’re a record keeper, chances are you’ve thought a lot about what to do with your family records. You may not know it, but you’re an archivist.

What’s in Your Closet?

Like professional archivists, your goal is to collect, preserve, and share things—in your case, family records. Among the challenges professional archivists face when building a digital repository is making their collections discoverable, accessible, and searchable to their patrons. Family archives share these same challenges. For record-keepers of family photos, journals, letters, and other precious memorabilia, we should think like an archivist and ask ourselves the following three questions about our family records.

1. Are they discoverable?

Do your relatives and researchers know your family records exist? If not, how would they discover them? If your records are not “born digital” and are still in their original state as paper letters, journals, and other documents, it’s nearly impossible for others to discover your records. If your records are digitized, where are they stored? For example, the storage options below have varying levels of discoverability.

While some may think “I don’t want my records to be discovered,” remember that discoverability does not preclude archive owners from establishing rules of access and usage. For example, record owners may wish to be selective with record sharing, charge for record access, or enable rules and limitations on the use of the record. No matter what rules we have in place, discoverability remains the fundamental first step in creating a family archive. Without it, our records are lost to the world.

2. Are they accessible?

Once records are discovered, can relatives and researchers access them? There are many instances where records may be discoverable, but not accessible. For example:

As a record-keeper and family archivist, an important role is to enable accessibility to family records. If you don’t do it, who will?

3. Are they searchable?

Are your family records currently searchable? How easily are they sorted, searched, and read? What elements of your records are searchable (file names, titles, descriptions, etc.)?  How does your software, cloud storage, or family tree database facilitate searchability? As a companion question, can your records (and all of their associated data) connect with other databases, family trees, and archives? Furthermore, can your record data be downloaded, manipulated, and applied in other ways, like timelines, maps, and books? When choosing where to place your family records, remember that full searchability is key to an archive that is engaging, connectable, and readable.

A Kindex Solution

These are the kinds of questions we think about every day. We help family archivists rescue their records, bring them out of obscurity, and create archives that can be discovered, accessed and shared. With Kindex you can:

In addition, we have some amazing features presently in development that will help your archive to connect and be shared with other people in various formats.

SAY NO MORE. LET’S DO THIS!

Still undecided? Here are some bonus questions:

Where is your Archive?

Undigitized On your computer In cloud In a digital family tree On Kindex
Do I control my archive access, scope, and content? Yes Yes Yes Varies (private vs. wiki-based) Yes
Is my archive discoverable online? No Limited Limited Varies (private vs. wiki-based) Yes
Is my archive accessible from any computer? No Very limited Varies Varies Yes
Can others collaborate on my archive No No or very limited Yes; limited Varies Yes
Can my archive be private? Yes Yes Varies Varies Yes; Choose your privacy level
Is my archive fully searchable? No Limited Limited Limited Yes*
Can I add metadata? Yes Varies Varies Limited Yes
Can I add metadata in batch form? No No No No Yes
Does my archive have integrated transcription & record tagging tools? No Varies; often separate from primary source Rare; Varies by platform Rare; Varies by platform Yes
Can I download all my archive data? No No No No Yes
Is my archive compatible with other databases? No Varies Varies Varies FamilySearch (others forthcoming)

*some metadata searchability in development

Archive Your Life on Kindex

Don’t you think it’s time you started thinking like an archivist? Kindex is free to try, so head over to Kindex.org and get started. Click “Try it Out” to start your free archive up to 50 records. Upgrade to unlimited records (and unlimited collaborators!) for about $12/month.

TRY IT OUT!

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