Experience Heritage

Five female leaders share their stories on International Women's Day

This article was originally written by Nadia Jefferson-Brown at York Press and published on 4th March 2021.

FIVE female leaders will be sharing their stories at an event looking at the role of entrepreneurial women in driving the region’s economy.

The free webinar, on International Women's Day, Monday, will showcase the women's experiences and reflections on how times of economic and social change could make entrepreneurship more accessible for the next generation.

Speakers include Professor Kiran Trehan, University of York's Pro-Vice-Chancellor for partnerships and engagement and director of the Centre for Women’s Enterprise, Leadership, Economy & Diversity.

She is a key contributor to debates on leadership, enterprise development and diversity in small firms and business, and has led leadership, enterprise and business support initiatives.

Professor Trehan is also widely published, and in 2019, became the president of the Institute for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (ISBE).

She said: "Whilst women are more skilled than ever with over 56 per cent of university graduates being female, there are still fewer women than men occupying senior roles in business and on boards and the average national pay gap between women and men is 17 per cent.

"It’s sad but true that for many women, they simply don’t have the same opportunities as men and Covid-19 has worsened the situation.

"IWD is a great platform to showcase women and their contribution to our economy. I am looking forward to this event and invite people to join us to hear the unfiltered stories of women who are re-addressing the productivity gap."

Other speakers include Bethany Watrous, who graduated from the University of York in 2019 with a Masters in Archaeology of Buildings.

She founded Experience Heritage, which provides 3D modelling, photogrammetry, augmented and virtual reality, mobile and web development, film and photo editing services.

Ann Gurnell, marketing director of York-based Ideas Group, and Delma Tomlin, director of the National Centre for Early Music, join the line-up along with Lady Jane Gibson, founding chair of Make It York and a director of the York & North Yorkshire LEP.

Featured in Council for British Archaeology video

I was excited to be asked to participate in the Council for British Archaeology’s video discussing different pathways in archaeology. It’s a message I am passionate about because I, myself, knew so little about the diversity of opportunities within archaeology when I was first starting out.

Check out the video here:


Experience Heritage advances to National Finals in startup funding competition

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We’re elated to announce that we are advancing to the National Finals of the Santander University Emerging Entrepreneurs competition! We’ve been selected as one of eight startups out of 81 who competed in the semi-finals on 23 September.

The finals will be held on 29 September and are open to the public to watch by registering here. We will be competing for the prize of £30,000 seed funding as well as a paid intern. There will be a panel of prestigious judges who include Theo Paphitis (TV Dragon), Prue Leith (Chancellor, Queen Margaret University and judge on The Great British Bake Off), Warwick Hill (Business executive and entrepreneur), Julie Devonshire OBE (Director of the Entrepreneurship Institute at King’s College London), Nathan Bostock, Chief Executive, Santander UK, and Susan Allen, CEO, Retail and Business Banking, Santander UK.

We were originally accepted to represent the University of York in the Emerging Entrepreneur competition in April 2020 and have been taking part in their accelerator program throughout the summer via online webinar sessions. It has been a great learning experience and we are so excited to take part in the next chapter of this journey!

“Virtual Volunteers” – the new lifeblood of the heritage sector?

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by Esther Wilson, Social Media and Digital Marketing Volunteer

COVID-19 has had an enormous impact upon all areas of our daily lives. For the heritage sector, this has been no different where lockdowns meant that, overnight, long-standing streams of support dried up. Perhaps the most well-covered aspect of this by the press and social media alike has been the loss of income from admissions-related revenue, plunging even longstanding and nationally-significant Trusts such as the Birmingham and York Museums Trusts’ into rocky financial waters, as well as smaller museum sites such as Bletchley Park. However, another key support channel has been lost; that of volunteers.

Volunteers are the lifeblood of many heritage and museum organisations, from assisting with essential collections practices to working at the coal-face of the visitor experience as passionate members of the guiding team. As lockdown slowly unfurls, sites and stores may begin to re-open but the difficulties in volunteer mobilisation are far from over. Usual organisational practices remain limited by social distancing guidelines. A key volunteer demographic is those seeking enrichment in their post-retirement years; by virtue of age a more ‘clinically at risk’ group when it comes to COVID-19 and perhaps more likely to be cautious in their own external activity.  Many other volunteering positions may be undertaken by students as part of university placements or college enrichment programmes; as a postgraduate student myself, I know that such schemes may now be difficult to arrange in the new age of online higher education learning. 

However, lockdown also provided an opportunity for organisations to adapt their practice, including through innovative uses of digital technology. Is remote assistance set to become a routine part of the ‘new normal’?

Foremost, it is important to note some difficulties with my line of enquiry. It has already been mentioned that many volunteers are those who have reached retirement; not only a more ‘clinically vulnerable’ demographic but one which generally has a lower digital skill set – this could be a key challenge to their ability to support heritage organisations in new ways. Many working adults who are now working from home may also find the prospect of spending more time in-front of a screen an unattractive prospect. Indeed, mere access to technology itself is a privilege not shared by all members of society due to financial barriers, unlike the ability to spend one’s free time in a like manner. My own position is one of privilege; as a postgraduate student, I have access to technology which enables me to complete my postgraduate studies, and both in the face of redundancy and alongside employment, has also allowed me to exchange my in-person assistance to support from the comfort of my sofa. 

Virtual volunteering within the heritage sector is actually not a new concept. For many years, large organisations from the Smithsonian across the pond to our own Imperial War Museum and National Archives have facilitated online volunteering opportunities such as transcription or research contributions, enabling volunteers worldwide to contribute to internationally-significant heritage work on their own terms. However, some organisations have more recently been able to adapt this practice and take it further. 

One approach which has really stood out to me is that of the Museum of East Anglian Life (MEAL). As a regular, local heritage volunteer and staff member for a number of years, I knew that lockdown was beginning to hit heritage hard. So, following MEAL’s advertisement on the well-known Leicester Museum Jobs Desk, I was excited at the prospect of being able to assist in the management of their collections from my home several hours away. Combined with a great deal of time spent photographing documentation cards by the on-site team, MEAL’s use of online collections management platform ‘eHive’ has enabled a large team of remote volunteers to digitise documentation cards as well as correct the Museum’s enormous local history database where necessary. Since only June, over 3,000 records have been digitised and made available for public access – a 300% increase and a real success story in opening up collections beyond the walls of the physical store or archive, as well as doing so in a digital format which should survive the test of time. Not all heritage currently use or have the ability to use such accessible platforms as ‘eHive’, particularly after the financial burdens placed on many heritage organisations over lockdown. However, it certainly appears a positive example which suggests that it may be possible for some elements of the labour-intensive collections management processes to be further opened-up to a remote public-at-large, providing museum sites with continued support and forging meaningful connections and experiences for both new and now-distanced volunteer teams. This work could even be further enhanced by the use of new technologies and practices such as photogrammetry, where teams could be trained and directed in collections digitisation with ease using new-found favourite platforms Zoom or Microsoft Teams. 

The use of such communication channels can also enable more unique volunteering opportunities to flourish which may not have otherwise been considered or even possible. I have been privileged to work with Experience Heritage in such a voluntary capacity and the opportunity to give an exciting, digital heritage start-up company an extra helping-hand has been invaluable. The countless enormous difficulties which the novel Coronavirus has placed upon our society and heritage sector has undoubtedly reverberated out to Experience Heritage as a company; with tighter budgets for heritage reinterpretation and many organisations facing serious financial difficulties, it could be easy to see this period in only a negative light. However, recent circumstances have also emphasised the need for us to be more adaptable in our approaches to work and life. What would have previously been a less-accessible, office-based position set around particular office-hours has become an entirely flexible opportunity, where I’m more able to assist on an increased, entirely remote basis, keeping in close contact with the company through G-Suite and Zoom whilst completing tasks at times which work best for all of us around existing commitments. We have been able to grow our network and skills as a company so that we can be best placed to support the heritage sector as it begins to tentatively emerge on the other side, honing skills in 3D-modelling, augmented reality and virtual reality, so that we can provide even better experiences for visitors when recovering heritage organisations are ready for them. The social-distancing demands brought by COVID-19 have only emphasised to us all how critical a sound grasp of even basic digital technology is, whilst also suggesting that more versatile, out-of-the-box thinking about how to effectively wield the benefits of technology can bring about unexpected success.

‘Virtual volunteering’ may be an opportunity which many otherwise-volunteers and heritage organisations are unable to access in the manners in which some have been able. However, recent months have highlighted how digital solutions may make a real positive difference in effectively enabling the ‘new normal’ way of operation for many museum and heritage sites across the country and their networks, providing volunteers both old and new with a way to once again do what they do best; support and share the heritage we all know and love. 

Meet the director of Experience Heritage, Bethany Watrous

Meet the director of Experience Heritage, Bethany Watrous

Director Bethany Watrous talks about her background in digital archaeology and heritage, and gives a behind-the-scenes insight into what the company does.

Speaking at ITAI2019 in Cardiff

Speaking at ITAI2019 in Cardiff

I was invited to speak at the Immersive Technologies in Academia and Industry (ITAI) workshop at Cardiff University on 12 September and discussed the implications of using immersive digital technology as a research method.