5 Reasons Why Agile Approaches work in Museums, Arts & Heritage
Here are five reasons why...
Being Agile is a way of thinking and working that helps museum professionals navigate complexity, adapt to change and work more sustainably. For those working in museums, galleries and heritage, agile can help us balance the demands of managing collections, curation, collaboration, funding, navigating change and ensure sustainability and well-being.
Here are five reasons why...
1. Supporting smart and creative curation
Agile is an approach where we can test ideas, gather feedback and refine our work as we go for maximising impact. It provides structure without stifling creativity. It creates space for learning and exploration, helping us stay audience focused while keeping the heart of our collections and stories alive. Whether you're developing a new exhibition, immersed in interpretation or preserving heritage, agile supports us to deliver meaningful experiences, one step at a time.
2. Navigating funding challenges
Funding in arts and heritage has become more project focused. Complex goals, short time-frames, big ambitions, collaborations to coordinate, challenges to overcome. Agile supports us to plan flexibly and do the best we can with what we've got! It helps us prioritise what matters most and make sure we are ticking those boxes. It helps us make the best use of the time and budget. Delivering solutions early and often, make progress quickly and respond to funders’ feedback, building confidence and trust along the way.
3. Nurturing creative collaborations
Agile thrives on teamwork. It creates space for open communication, shared goals and collective ownership. In heritage spaces where staff, volunteers, freelancers and partners work together, agile offers a common language and rhythm. Daily check-ins, visual boards and regular reviews can help everyone stay aligned and feel part of the journey, whether they’re front of house, behind the scenes or consulting remotely.
4. Responding to change with confidence
The best made plans go to waste... From audience expectations to cost of living challenges constant change is all around us and to deliver targets we often need to adapt our initial plans, quickly! Agile helps us respond to change, spot risks early, and opportunities! It gives us tools to sense what’s shifting and adapt our plans without losing direction. Instead of sticking rigidly to long-term plans, we can stay clear on our goals but flexible in how we reach them. That makes us more resilient and ready to explore new opportunities as they emerge.
5. Working at a sustainable pace
Many in the sector are facing burnout. Agile encourages us to work at a sustainable pace, not sprint endlessly from one deadline to the next. It supports well-being by building in time for reflection, celebration and rest. It helps us spot when we’re overstretched and take steps to re-balance. By focusing on steady, meaningful progress rather than perfection or pressure, agile helps us care for ourselves as well as our work.
Agile methods and ways of thinking are approaches already naturally present in our arts and heritage sector in many ways, often informally or instinctively. By adopting a more intentional agile approach, we can bring clarity, creativity and calm to our work. Whether you’re a collections manager, a volunteer or a senior curator, a leader, project manager or an educator, agile offers tools and mindsets to help you thrive in a changing world.
Join Belinda in our upcoming webinar Tuesday June 9, 2026 to find out more about ‘being agile ‘ and how it can help you, you’ll gain insights and ideas and practical tools you can take away and immediately use.
Webinar time: 9 pm European, 8 pm UK, 4 pm Atlantic, 3 pm Eastern North America, 2 pm Central, 1 pm Mountain, Noon Pacific, 11 am Alaska, 9 am Hawaii, 7 am New Zealand
To register for the webinar email webinar@MuseumStudy.com with the subject: Adaptable Agile Museums. Please include your name, institution, and title.










