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  • 1.  Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-10-2017 09:06 AM
    I'm curious about where to find the fiscal year budget for certain museums. The Cincinnati Museum Center is undergoing a massive renovation, and we are currently trying to figure out our "peer" museum's budgets so that we can compare expenses on exhibits, etc. Our budget is currently around 10 million dollars. I've been doing some research in trying to find other Midwest regional museums' budgets in their 2015/2016 annual reports but it is hardly ever included. They provide their total revenue/expenditures, but the specific budget plan is no where to be found, or maybe I'm just reading wrong. Please let me know if you can give any advice or input! I appreciate it. 

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    Anna Redington
    Intern
    Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal
    Cincinnati OH
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  • 2.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-13-2017 07:17 AM
    Anna, I know of no resource that provides this. AAM used to do a wonderful benchmarking report, but it stopped during the Great Recession and hasn't been revived. You've got a couple of options: call the relevant museums and ask them if they are willing to provide recent/current budgets OR refer to their IRS 990s (which can be found at Guidestar, among other places) to see a general idea of major expense and revenue categories. Good luck -- 

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    Laura MacDonald
    President
    Benefactor Group, LLC
    Columbus OH
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    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 3.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-13-2017 07:27 AM
    Yes, if you are looking for the level of detail found in a budget then you are going to have to contact specific museums. That level of detail is not required to be disclosed (which is why you can't find it). I bet plenty of places would be willing to share at least some information if you reach out. 

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    Amanda Kepner
    Manager for Learning and Experience Operations
    Columbus Museum of Art
    Columbus OH
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    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 4.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-13-2017 08:10 AM
    Try looking up their 990 forms on Guidestar or Charity Navigator or other such sites.

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    Deborah Smith
    Consultant Belfast Maine
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    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 5.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-13-2017 11:28 AM
    Fascinating question: How much do museums spend to design and install exhibits? This information could generate better understanding of the importance of museums in our society. If museums do break out this number in their plans, it would be wonderful to get a sense of the budget figures. Any ideas of how to learn how much people are spending?




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  • 6.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-13-2017 11:33 AM
    Depending on the kind of relationships you might have with comparable organizations, you might be able to just ask them what they spend! Lots of nonprofits, in my experience, are very cooperative with their colleagues. They may even have a less detailed budget they'd be willing to share with you, the kind of thing that they'd have to turn over to grant makers or funders. As someone said, you can look in Guidestar but that doesn't usually have a budget or a breakdown for certain types of expenses.  


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    Angie Albright
    Director
    Clinton House Museum
    Fayetteville AR
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    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 7.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-14-2017 09:11 AM
    Hi Anna,

    While the data doesn't include a "fiscal year budget", the Museum Universe Data File that is maintained by the Institute for Museum and Library Studies may provide a reasonable starting point. Basically, the IMLS pulls data from all of the various 990s filed by about 35,000 not-for-profit museums in the US and organizes it into a dataset that can be sorted by geography, discipline, and a bunch of other dimensions. The data includes revenue and income measures as reported on the 990s.

    While revenue and income alone won't necessarily translate directly to annual budget, it can be a good starting point for identifying a peer group. With the thousands of museums filtered by revenue/income you can get to a more manageable number from which you might be able to select a random sample and visit their web sites where they might have more information (e.g. many museums will have annual reports with more than just "raw numbers" on their sites and may include discussion of their operating budgets).

    One caveat to be aware of, though: The IMLS dataset is far from perfect. The biggest issue we've run into with it is that they include a lot of data from non-profit universities that ALSO manage museums. Which means that when you see revenue/income numbers in the billions of dollars annually, it's fair to assume those outliers are because the non-profit university is reporting ALL of their revenue on their 990, and not just their museum revenue.

    In case it's helpful, here's the link to the IMLS Museum Universe Data File: Museum Universe Data File.

    Hope it helps!

    All the best,
    Chris

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    Christopher Modzelewski
    Immerseum Inc.
    http://www.immerseum.io
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    AAM Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, Baltimore, May 16-19, 2024, click to learn more


  • 8.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-14-2017 10:11 AM
    One of the assignments I give my Seton Hall University students is to collect (in hard copy!) a list of valued museum operating documents.  These include such things as a 990, annual report, trustee conflict of interest form, code of ethics, etc.  An annual budget is also on the list but I note that these are very hard to get and if a student is unsuccessful, no problem.  Rarely can they get this information.  Government  museums will have them on file, be they federal, state, county, city or otherwise owned by an agency of some sort.  Someday, in additiion to the sort of financial information contained in a 990, perhaps annual budgets will be posted in a prominent public manner.

    Steve 

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    Steven Miller
    Executive Director
    Boscobel House and Gardens
    Garrison NY
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  • 9.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-14-2017 10:55 AM
    Edited by Charlotte Otto 02-14-2017 10:59 AM
    Anna, the Association of Art Museum Directors is a great resource for the data you're seeking. They put out an annual Art Museum by the Numbers report, as well as an extensive salary and statistical survey (for purchase) that gathers detailed data from over 200 museums. Kirkland Museum is going through a similar transition as yours, and the data from AAMD's 2015 survey was invaluable as a point of reference for building/projecting a new budget. You might also try using Charity Navigator for some high-level data (the search tool is very handy--by region, budget size, etc.) though it's broader in scope. Good luck!

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    Charlotte Otto
    Visitor Services Manager
    Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art
    Denver CO
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  • 10.  RE: Museum Budgets

    Posted 02-15-2017 01:24 PM
    This is a complicated question with a complicated answer. Key starting questions are: Does the museum have an in-house exhibitions program, or does it outsource aspects of the program? Many museums keep some curatorial/development, project management capacity in-house and job out design and production. Others have all of the aspects of exhibit creation on the payroll. Museums account for these expenses in a variety of ways, but generally speaking, if your exhibit program is busy with a lot of new exhibitions originated by your museum each year, the cost will go down if your staff handles most of the work because you won't be paying a profit margin on the work of contractors. If your program has a slow level of change, it's probably more economical to outsource some or most of the work. At a bare minimum, an active exhibit program needs someone who can manage projects and be a discerning client, and someone who can maintain exhibits at a high level of working order on the gallery floor.  

    One classical method for budgeting original exhibits is to do a square footage calculation. The amount of expense to make a new exhibition generally rises by exhibit complexity. Flat artwork or photography, say, is usually the cheapest per square foot; costs rise with the addition of 3D objects (costs of artifact conservation, prep and mounting, vitrines, etc.), mechanical interactives (costs of prototyping, production and repair), custom scenic environments or standardized exhibit furniture components, multimedia (wide ranging depending on whether the media is straight video, interactive, show technology, mobile app), etc., etc. The addition of each one of these exhibit techniques can add $100 to $500 per square foot, depending on how much of your project management/development/design/build capacity is carried on your operating budget and the relative ambition of the pieces. If you want to the exhibit to be innovative, expect to pay a premium and front load more costs in the design/development.

    Another factor to consider is whether the backbone of the program is incoming traveling exhibitions. Rental and shipping fees for a traveling exhibit are generally less costly than originating a new exhibit, but once your program is reliant on incoming rental exhibits, the temporary nature of them (12-24 weeks is typical) makes keeping the pace on continual change costly. 

    There are a host of general corollaries: exhibits with a broader set of interpretive techniques will be more interesting to a broader set of public audiences, but also more expensive and, if there are failures of effective technique, all the costly whistles and bells won't redeem the effort. If you think about the process as a series of three levers: quality, cost and time, each one of those factors is chained to the other two. Quality is always an outcome of the skill of the people doing the work, not only the expertise of each, but their ability to work together as a team. If you want to increase the quality of an exhibit, you will generally need to increase the amount of time and expense involved. The old saw is "You can have it fast, cheap, or good. Pick two."  This seems obvious, but I have have encountered many clients over the course of my 30+ year career who insist on all three.

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    Daniel Spock
    Director, MN History Center Museum
    Minnesota Historical Society
    Saint Paul MN
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