Model emails to potential volunteers/Talk

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Revision as of 12:10, August 10, 2012 by ColinGreenstreet (Talk | contribs)

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I've just posted our Call for Volunteers on a CfP Website: http://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/. It usually takes a while for it to appear online (SL)

10/08/12: 12:42: Sarah, that's a great idea. Which version of the call for volunteers did you go with? The short form or the longer version? I posted one of the versions (can't remember which now) about ten days back to the Cromwell Society in UK, who have circulated it via their email list (Colin)

10/08/2012 12:50 I posted the short one. I selected different categories to reach more people (e.g. interdisciplinary, renaissance, ecocriticism)

10/08/2012 12:54 SL: I think we should use Twitter to tweet short calls for volunteers. Could the facilitators get access to the Twitter account? I could, for example, search for people with "early modern" in their description and follow them. If we got more followers, we could reach a much wider audience and attract more attention (I'm occasionally running @mediaevum, which has 682 followers)

I've just seen that Birkbeck Early Modernists put our Call up on their blog: http://www.emintelligencer.org.uk/2012/08/08/marinelives-call-for-project-volunteers/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=marinelives-call-for-project-volunteers&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

10/08/12 13:05: Good idea Sarah regarding Twitter. I will give the facilitators access to the Twitter account. I'm sending you the access details. The target now is to get more committed project associates by September 3rd, and I would like decent palaeographers. They don't have to be great, but we already have five year thirteens (four Westminster sschool students plus one London Oratory student (TBC) starting palaeography from scratch. That being said we have a number of experienced palaeographers amongst associates who have signed up, including Gordon o'Sullivan and Karen Gunnell, a part time archivist at the National maritime Museum (TBC) (Colin)