RACO Panel 5 Leveraging The Lessons of Quick Victories and Defeats into Lasting Success

3 days ago
2

Wednesday, May 25, 2011, The National Archives in Washington, DC. The annual Records Administration Conference 2011 (RACO 2011), the annual one-day conference on Federal records management issues was hosted by NARA. Attendees included Federal records officers, records management professionals, information managers, and information technology professionals. Panel sessions included "NARA Transformation and Agency Services: What Does it Mean for You," "How Can Records Managers Keep Up with Social Media," "Balancing Open Access to Information with Today's Security Requirements," "2011 Archivist Achievement Awards Presentations," and "Quick Wins: Things You Can Do Today to Improve Your Program and Reach Customers."

Additional information about the conference, panelists, and presentations are available at the RACO 2011 website: http://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/training/raco/2011/.

The National Archives Records Management Program hosts events, such as the 2011 Records Administration Conference, to communicate with our stakeholders about Federal Records Management policies and guidance. For more information, please visit our blog, Records Express, at http://blogs.archives.gov/records-express/

Fair Use Disclaimer:

All content that uses public funds by any US government agency, state, or local government is available for worldwide use and reuse under the terms of the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license. Included within these resources may be copyrighted material(s), the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Any copyrighted content used is for educational, research, reporting, commentary, entertainment, informational, and criticism purposes.

In our efforts to provide the Rumble community with quality content that is “fair use” this content is covered under Section 107 of the Copyright Act ( https://www.copyright.gov/fair-use/ ).

If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes that go beyond “fair use,” you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

If you believe that any copyrighted materials appear in this content and you disagree with our assessment that it constitutes “fair use,” please get in touch with us.

Loading comments...