INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION FORCULTURAL PROPERTY PROTECTION
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Reposted from Tim Richardson
If Only I Had One More Day…
Those are words my wife and I say often when something meaningful is about to happen. It might be when all six of our kids are coming home for Christmas, the day before we leave for vacation, or the afternoon before we’re hosting multiple guests for dinner. I can’t remember a time in recent memory when one of us didn’t say it in situations like these -and probably many others as well. No matter how much we plan, we can’t seem to get everything done before big events. The same feeling shows up during special vacations, while spending time with close friends we haven’t seen in years, or when a perfect weather day appears just before the forecast takes a turn.
Just one more day…
This feeling shows up in my business life too. I wish I had one more day – before a big speech. I wish I had one more day – before leaving for my annual five-day National Speakers Association convention. I wish I had one more day – before a major proposal is due for a client. Recently, I’ve known several friends who lost loved ones. While they didn’t say it out loud, I’m certain they felt the weight of the “one more day” mantra. Of course, all the wishing in the world won’t make another day appear. We know when the kids are coming home; it’s on the calendar. Our summer vacation in July doesn’t sneak up on us. My speeches are scheduled well in advance, and the conference dates are already locked in for 2026. So what if – when we schedule the big day – we take a page from Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and begin with the end in mind? What is the desired outcome? What needs to happen to ensure the event, speech, conference, or vacation goes smoothly? What preparations can be made far in advance to reduce stress – or eliminate it entirely? What’s the backup plan if something unexpected happens right before the event? And what if we applied that same intentionality to how we live? What if we consistently communicated love and gratitude to our friends and family? What if we apologized quickly when our words hurt someone? What if we lived each day with a sense of wonder – choosing gratitude, kindness, and presence with everyone around us?
Because maybe the real lesson isn’t wishing for one more day. Maybe it’s learning to live this day as if it matters – so we don’t feel the need to ask for another one.
To ponder: What would change if you lived today like it was already scheduled to matter?
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Reposted from CISA/DHS
The IT SCC is hosting a small and medium-sized business webinar on Wednesday, February 11th at 1:00 p.m. EST and opening this event to all sectors. This event will be a panel discussion targeted towards framework and compliance education for SMBs regarding CPGs, CMMC, CSF, and other government requirements as well as how to prioritize by time, requirements, resources, and risks of not implementing.
IT SCC Webinar: Cybersecurity Considerations for Small and Medium-Sized Businesses
Details
Date/Time: Wednesday, February 11th 1:00p.m. EST
Managing a business is more than managing an information technology department, but the threat of a cyberattack is both real and increasing. This webinar is intended for business leaders who recognize the risks posed by cybercriminals targeting small and medium enterprises, often exploiting outdated defenses or limited resources. The repercussions of a security breach can be severe, including operational disruptions, financial losses, and reputational damage.
But the positive news is that effective cybersecurity measures are attainable!
Join us for this IT SCC webinar, where cybersecurity experts from across the IT Sector will demystify complexities and offer a strategic approach to enhancing your organization’s security posture. Attendees will gain knowledge to transition from vulnerability to vigilance by improving their understanding of security frameworks and emerging threat trends. The session will feature a panel discussion with distinguished industry and government leaders.
Participants are encouraged to engage through questions. Please utilize the Q&A section to submit inquiries as they arise or select the "raise hand" feature to be unmuted and ask your question directly.
From longtime IFCPP Advisor and past instructor, Erroll Southers…
I’m delighted to announce a new book, my memoirs, Inside the Castle Walls. As a youngster speaking with my father after being profiled by the police, he advised, “You can’t change the castle from outside the moat.” What followed was a life of public service and a conviction to lead change from inside the castle walls. I poured my heart into sharing this story because of the wonderful people and exciting adventures I enjoyed at every stage of my career, albeit some of them classified and dangerous, and I can’t wait for you to experience them.
Arnold Schwarzenegger opens the book with a powerful and personal foreword, and the early praise has been humbling. Legendary attorney Connie Rice called it, “A riveting ride behind the hunts for terrorists, spies and criminals, with a man holding extraordinary devotion to duty, Constitutional loyalty and unmovable moral conviction.”
I would be grateful if you bought the book (audiobook available soon), attend a live book event, post about the book on your social media and/or amplify this announcement.
Preorder at: https://insidethecastlewalls.com/ Book available: March 2026 Thank you for being part of my journey. Your support means the world!
Reposted from NSCC
Consensus Building for Preservation Buy-in By Helen Alten
Consensus building (also called collaborative problem solving or collaboration) is essentially mediation of a conflict that involves many parties. Usually, the conflict also involves multiple, complex issues. In museums, the conflict is not usually as obvious or contentious. Consensus building still works to help bring everyone in line for a solution that all can support. Consensus building is usually carried out by a mediator or a facilitator. As with a mediator of two-party disputes, the mediator of a consensus building effort moves through a series of steps. These include 1) participant identification and recruitment; 2) design of the process to be used (often involving the participants in this phase); 3) problem definition and analysis; 4) identification and evaluation of alternative solutions; 5) decision-making; 6) finalization and approval of the settlement; and 7) implementation.
Benefits
Several benefits result from properly employing consensus-building processes to address preservation problems. Probably the most important benefit of collaboration is that it increases the quality of solutions developed by your museum. No one person has all the answers. Team solutions are based on a comprehensive analysis of the problem. Each person has a different perspective and therefore many more angles are considered than if a few experts or a select few people developed the solution on their own. This variety of perspectives leads to innovative solutions. In addition, the capacity of the group to respond to the problem is increased as stakeholders apply a range of resources to solving it. Bringing in all interested stakeholders also minimizes the chance of impasse or deadlock. Consensus building guarantees that all parties' interests will be protected. This is possible because participants make final decisions themselves. Each person has a chance to make sure their interests are represented in the agreement and are a part of signing off on the agreement. As a result, stakeholders have ownership of the outcome of consensus-building processes. Other benefits of consensus building include the fact that people most familiar with the problem at hand will be able to participate in solving it. This is often better than having a representative, who is removed from the problem, work on solving it. The ability to participate in the problem-solving process enhances acceptance of the solution and willingness to implement it. The participatory process may also help strengthen the relationships between stakeholders that used to be adversaries. Consensus building can save money. Lastly, the stakeholder group can develop mechanisms for dealing with related problems in the future.
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Collection Protection - Are you Prepared?
Does your museum have an Emergency Operation (Disaster) Plan? This course will get you started making a plan for your museum.
Disaster planning is overwhelming. Where do you start? Talk to Amanda about how to get going. Use the checklist to determine your level of preparedness. What do you already have in place? Are you somewhat prepared? What can you do next? Help clarify your current state of readiness and develop future steps to improve it.
Join Amanda Benson for MS002 Collection Protection - Are you Prepared?
Date: March 9, 2026 - to learn more and begin writing your Emergency Operation Plan.
Thank you very much for attending last week’s webinar, which addressed active assailant security. Below are several resources/tools passed along from Dan, which should cover the very astute questions asked during the Q&A portion of the webinar. As mentioned, we will be providing another iteration of Dan’s presentation in late February. We hope you all will attend!
Overarching Active Assailant Security Topics & Resources: Active Shooter Preparedness: Conflict Prevention: Hostile Vehicle Mitigation (aka Vehicle Ramming Mitigation):
Security Planning: Additional Active Assailant / Conflict Prevention / Security Planning Resources Employee Vigilance Through the “Power of Hello”: Security Planning Workbook: Security Self-Assessment Tool (not just for Houses of Worship): Emergency Action Planning Template (and instructional guide): Venue Guide for Security Enhancements: Mass Gathering Security Planning Tool:
Training
Active Shooter Preparedness Webinars: Conflict Prevention Webinar Series – Schedule & Registration Info: Independent study course on FEMA’s Emergency Management Institute – “Active Shooter: What You Can Do”
Stay Connected POC: Dan Avondoglio, Daniel.Avondoglio@cisa.dhs.gov
Reposted from ASIS
The 17th Edition of the New York Official Cybersecurity Summit is the must-attend event for CISOs and senior leaders looking to strengthen resilience, reduce risk, and align security with business goals. Join top executives, innovators, and experts for a full day of actionable insights, cutting-edge solutions, and high-impact networking. Experience interactive panels, exclusive solution showcases, and strategic discussions that go beyond theory to deliver real-world results, all complemented by a catered breakfast, networking lunch, and closing cocktail reception.
Admission to the Cybersecurity Summit is reserved exclusively for active cybersecurity, IT, and information security practitioners responsible for safeguarding their enterprises against cyber threats and managing cybersecurity solutions. All registrations are subject to review.
Register Today!
Free Registration Use Code: CSS26-ASISNY
The Most Underrated Driver of Organizational Success
What if the fastest way to increase productivity, reduce costs, and show your people you care isn’t another strategy - but more sleep? Read this blog post to find why we should sleep more and how to help others sleep too. What if I told you there’s one simple factor that can lower costs in your organization, increase employee efficiency and productivity, and demonstrates – in the most meaningful way – that you genuinely care about your team? Most leaders would point to technology investments, new software, strategic restructuring, learning and development, or KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) they track obsessively every week. But there’s something far more fundamental that we consistently ignore:
Sleep.
Yes – sleep. We tell our teams we value them as people. We care about what they do outside of work. We want them to be healthier, more skilled, more creative but we rarely give a thought to the one thing that literally makes all of that possible: the rest they get at night. That has to change.
If you’re a regular reader of my writing, you know that last week I shared my “Word of the Year” for 2026: simplicity – One morning recently I woke with a flood of thoughts about everything I had to do that day, it hit me – I have been wrestling with sleep challenges for as long as I can remember. And this year, I’m committed to solving them – not by piling on more hacks – but by eliminating the non-essential tasks that steal my rest. Today, our culture celebrates busy as if it’s a badge of honor even when it steals our sleep. Yet sleep is chronically lacking in today’s workforce. According to a global sleep survey reported in Forbes Magazine of more than 30,000 people nearly 30% struggle to stay asleep several nights a week and more than 70% of employed adults have called in sick because of poor sleep. After a bad night’s rest, about one-third of employees report difficulty concentrating the following day.
In economic terms, the toll of insufficient sleep on businesses and economies is staggering. The Sleep Research Society estimates that sleep deprivation costs U.S. companies as much as $1,200–$3,100 per employee per year in reduced performance and productivity, while overall sleep-related lost productivity tops $136 billion annually. Think about that: a 1,000-person company could be losing millions every year before you factor in turnover, healthcare costs, safety risks, burnout, and employee disengagement. When employees are sleep-deprived, companies don’t just lose energy and focus – they lose their competitive edge.
Until recently, I had never heard a business owner explicitly talk about sleep as a strategic business issue. Instead, we celebrate hustle culture like early mornings, late nights, and grinding through fatigue as if it’s obligatory. We treat sleep like a luxury when, in fact, it’s a hard business metric. But science and economics now make it clear: sleep is not a personal perk – it’s a business imperative. We can no longer classify sleep as a personal matter that ends at the bedroom door. As leaders, we must recognize that what happens outside work, including what happens at night directly impacts organizational performance, culture, and profitability. Sleep isn’t optional. It’s foundational. Consider the following:
1. Redefine “High Performance” in Your Culture
Stop praising long hours, late-night emails, and “grinding through fatigue”. Publicly reinforce that rested employees perform better. Encourage leaders to model healthy boundaries (logging off, protecting sleep).
2. Establish Clear After-Hours Communication Norms
Set clear expectations for email, Slack, and text messages after hours. Use delayed send features for non-urgent messages. Clarify what truly constitutes an “emergency”.
3. Educate Leaders on Sleep as a Business Metric
Train leaders on the cognitive, emotional, and economic cost of sleep deprivation. Include sleep in conversations about safety, productivity, and burnout. Introduce sleep literacy through workshops, lunch-and-learns, or leadership retreats.
The data is clear. The cost of inaction is immense. Sleep isn’t just a personal health issue – it’s a business issue that affects your bottom line, your culture, and your future.
Don’t wait until fatigue erodes your organization’s performance. Make sleep a leadership priority today.
Reposted from NIVF
National Independent Venue Foundation
Empowering more inclusive and sustainable independent live entertainment communities What's New in the Training Hub
The NIVF Training Hub continues to grow into a single point of access for on-demand trainings, materials, and templates created for the independent live entertainment community.
Recent upgrades include:
Streamlined navigation so you can quickly find sessions by topic, from safety and security to marketing, workforce development, and equity-focused trainings
Clear tagging for accessibility content so your team can easily return to this February session and related resources any time.
A refreshed library structure that makes it easier to share specific sessions and materials across your staff for onboarding and ongoing training.
These updates are designed to save you time, support staff turnover, and keep critical knowledge in-house—even as your team evolves. Train Your Staff with the Improved Training Hub + February’s Live Session
In this session, you will gain a greater understanding of accessibility and the business case around it.
Nearly 28% of U.S. adults have a disability. If your venue or festival isn’t actively engaging this community, you’re leaving a significant audience untapped. Businesses that prioritize disability inclusion see up to 30% higher net revenue.
We hope you leave feeling empowered to better serve your communities by being welcoming to a more diverse customer base and will be armed with specific strategies to help your venues and festivals grow by serving the disability community.
FOUNDATIONS IN EVENT & EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT -- PRE-CONFERENCE INTENSIVE AND CERTIFICATION PROGRAM Weekend pre-conference intensive for cultural venue professionals preparing for climate and disaster impacts
Museums, libraries, archives, historic sites, live collection institutions, performing arts organizations, and other cultural venues operate sophisticated systems for managing people, resources, and facilities—capabilities that become critical community assets during disasters. This year, the International Foundation for Cultural Property Protection (IFCPP) and Majestic Collaborations are co-presenting a tactical bootcamp to earn the ReadyWhen Foundations Certificate in Event and Emergency Operations, which translates in-demand cultural properties expertise— such as a crowd management, logistics under pressure, accessible design, resource coordination, and safety planning—into frameworks that institutions can use to enhance both daily operations and disaster preparedness. The classroom component of the certification will be taught in a full-day pre-conference on Sunday, April 19. Learn practical strategies for assessing your facility's resilience capacity, coordinating with emergency management partners, and positioning your organization as a community resource during a crisis. This process may even unlock new funding streams through disaster planning and emergency readiness grants. Whether you're improving safety protocols for public programs, documenting institutional capacity for funders, or exploring positioning your venue as a community resilience hub, this training builds transferable skills in logistics, accessible design, stakeholder coordination, and adaptive planning. Come a day early to take part in an Immersive Intensive at French Quarter Festival on Saturday April 18! This afternoon guided tour of the festival infrastructure offers an insider’s look into how large-scale event systems function in real-time. Experience operations firsthand, hear from leading professionals and learn through interactive activities. This session fulfills the practicum requirement of the ReadyWhen Foundations Certificate in Event and Emergency Operations. Pre-Conference registration is now open! Find free resources and more details about this approach to readiness at readywhen.org. Who should attend: Cultural property/venue staff, city officials and municipal workers, security professionals, event producers and venues, historic property managers, operations and facilities staff preparing for disruption.
This offering is part of a broader learning program in New Orleans, April 2026 - where 20 years post-Katrina, we're exploring what it means to protect cultural infrastructure in an era of accelerating disasters. Registration available now at: IFCPP - IFCPP 2026 Annual Conference, Seminar, Exhibits at the National World War II Museum
Reposted from AMM
Call for Proposals
We Hold These Truths | AMM 2026 Conference Virtual July 22 + In-Person July 26-29 Chicago, IL ammconference.org
The Association of Midwest Museums (AMM) will be welcoming 400+ museum professionals to Chicago in 2026 for their annual conference. Midwest museum leaders and staff are invited to submit ideas for sessions, posters, and workshops, and apply to serve as facilitators of idea generation sessions through the AMM Call for Proposals. Presenting has perks, including discounted registration! Proposals/applications are due January 23.
Learn more about this year’s conference theme at ammconference.org
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