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Abstract
New York Public Radio (NYPR) is a nonprofit media organisation that owns numerous public radio stations and a live performance space in the New York area. Since 1924, WNYC has grown and evolved in response to changing radio technology and consumer behaviours, most recently introducing podcasts to its numerous audio experiences. In 2019, NYPR embarked on a metadata and taxonomy alignment project to support the end-to-end alignment of metadata tags across content types, brands and business functions. The project began by surveying relevant business units and performing audits of content and data across those teams to identify the most salient issues to be addressed and to prioritise actions through the rest of the project. This paper describes how user personas and ‘content journey maps’ were drawn up to identify the driving needs of the primary business units and the current state of content as it moved through its life cycle, including the players involved in the content’s life cycle, the systems it touches, the metadata applied and whether the content is archived. As this paper will show, the information from these exercises drove the creation of a multi-tiered taxonomy with top nodes classifying information around people, content, assets, entities and distribution.
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Author's Biography
Mindy Carner helps organisations around the globe gain a competitive advantage from well-managed data and digital content. Having been immersed in the practices of human-centred and user experience design in the library context, she relies on these and other emergent processes to conceptualise bespoke digital asset management programmes and configurations that users will actually use. She has a bachelor’s degree in classical languages and literature and a master’s degree in library and information science.
John Passmore is the Director of Streaming and On-Demand Audio Architecture at New York Public Radio. He has two decades of experience as a studio and touring musician and been a film archivist and time-based media conservator for museums, archives and cultural institutions worldwide. He has a master’s degree in moving image archiving and preservation and has previously worked on developing the PBCore metadata standard for audiovisual content.