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The Evolution of Document Imaging
Program Code:
219
Date:
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Time:
10:30 AM to 12:00 PM
EST
SPEAKER
(S):
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Kristin Harold manages prospect identification, prospect data entry, central donor files and information resources. Previously, she was a Senior Research Analyst for prospect identification at MIT, and began her prospect research career as a Research Analyst at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Rob Scott, Executive Director of Development Services,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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A former front-line fundraiser, Rob Scott found his calling in advancement services 18 years ago. For the last five years, Scott has worked at MIT, where he has led and managed systems and processes comprising the information infrastructure for resource development and institutional fundraising efforts. As a member of the senior development staff, he helps develop, communicate and evaluate institutional fundraising goals and priorities. Previously, he served as director of programming and systems, where he was responsible for fundraising database systems. Scott is a SunGard HE Product Advisory Group at-large member, serves on APRA’s Curriculum Committee and in 2006 was co-chair of the APRA international conference Prospect Identification track. He has been a facilitator, a panelist and a presenter at research conferences, user groups and meetings across the country. Scott also founded and moderates prospect-dmm, an electronic discussion list on prospect data mining and modeling. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Cornell University.
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Description
Institutions are — from the standpoints of space, disaster recovery and accessibility — increasingly interested in document imaging. Such projects are time and resource intensive, and do not always serve prospect research as their primary clients. Last summer, MIT took a somewhat different approach to imaging more than a million pages of central development files. This session will present a case study of a novel approach that provides a different perspective to anyone interested in the preservation of institutional memory.