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Episode 64: Online Source Citations, GOOGLE Tip, Stephen Danko, Maureen Taylor

Episode 64: Online Source Citations, GOOGLE Tip, Stephen Danko, Maureen Taylor

FromThe Genealogy Gems Podcast with Lisa Louise Cooke - Your Family History Show


Episode 64: Online Source Citations, GOOGLE Tip, Stephen Danko, Maureen Taylor

FromThe Genealogy Gems Podcast with Lisa Louise Cooke - Your Family History Show

ratings:
Length:
43 minutes
Released:
Apr 26, 2009
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

April 26, 2009 Get a free copy of my e-book 5 Fabulous Google Strategies for the Family Historian as a thankyou for signing up for the free e-newsletter.  NEWS:  Lisa discusses 9 newspaper databases being launched by Genealogy Bank  MAILBOX FOLLOWUP:  Russ Worthington's answers to a listener's question on familial relationships in Family Tree Maker. How To Re-Order Spouses How to Enter Intra-Familial Marriages   Listen to Family History: Genealogy Made Easy GEM: Online Downloadable Source Citations It's A Gem of An Idea!  Mark Tucker who writes the ThinkGenealogy blog posted a provocative video on April 20, 2009.  The blog post is entitled Better Way To Cite Online Sources.    The heart of his proposal is this:  In order to encourage quality genealogy research among their customers, shouldn't the websites that sell access to genealogical records online also provide a source citation for those records that the user can download and include in their research?  As it stands today, when we download let's say a page from a census record or a page from a newspaper, there's often times nothing on the digitized image itself to indicate which database it came from, or even a location or date.  Mark emailed me to say âever since our interviews in St. George, I have not stopped thinking of ways to get the message out for simplifying citing sources using Evidence Explained.  And he sent me a link to a message board post from Elizabeth Shown Mills. Randy Seaver's comments on the subject at the  geneamusings blog  This last week I had a chance to sit down and interview genealogy blogger and lecturer Stephen Danko for the Family History: Genealogy Made Easy podcast and I took the opportunity to ask him for his input.  We really need to hear from at this point are the genealogy subscription records websites themselves.  It's their product that we are talking about.  And in the end, these digitized genealogy records we are talking about citing sources for are indeed "products."   And for companies like Ancestry and World Vital Records / familylink.com this is about business.  I contacted both Ancestry and World Vital Records to do brief interviews with their reps about this proposed idea, and how they see it potentially fitting in to their future business plan, and also to hear what they think of this grass roots effort amongst their valued customers - In these tough economic times it must be great to see the interest that their customers have in their product and their willingness to stay engaged with them and provide input as to what elements could be added to their products to add increased value and draw for their customers. I've done many interviews with folks from Ancestry with the help of their very efficient and responsive publicist, as well as interviews with folks at familylink.  Most recently I had a great time interviewing the COO of familylink Steve Nickle who gave us a terrific sneak peek at their newest venture called Genseek.  And you can listen to that interview in Genealogy Gems Podcast Episode 61.   In this episode I will play for you the responses from both Ancestry and familylink / World Vital Records to my inquiry about whether record sites providing source citations for the records they provide to their customers.  Yep, you heard it correctly.  For the first time in two years of this podcast not only did they not provide a telephone interview, they didn't respond to my inquiry at all.   That's never happened before.  The silence is deafening! As a genealogy media producer I'm pretty disappointed in both Ancestry and World Vital Records responses because any time they send out a press release or want to talk about a new venture they are launching I have welcomed the information and provided it here on the show and on my blog, as so many of us who podcast and blog do â and that kind of passing the word on has got to help their bottomline.  This is the first time that I haven't had a reply within 24 hours of an interview in
Released:
Apr 26, 2009
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Genealogy Gems Podcast shows you, the family historian, how to make the most out of your family history research time by providing quick and easy to use research techniques. In addition, you will learn creative ways to share your family tree and the legacy of your ancestors. Lisa Louise Cooke guides you through the exhilarating process of discovering your family tree. She scours the family history landscape to find and bring you the best websites, best practices, and best resources available. And Lisa’s interviews with the experts in the field of genealogy make the Genealogy Gems Podcast your own personal genealogy conference. Guests include genealogists such as Dick Eastman, DearMYRTLE, Curt Witcher, Arlene Eakle, and the folks from Ancestry.com, as well as celebrities such as Tukufu Zuberi of The History Detectives, Kathy Lennon of the Lennon Sisters, Tim Russell of Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion, the band Venice, and Darby Hinton of the Daniel Boone TV series from the 1960s. Your family history is world history.