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HSBC: Preserving 150 years of corporate brand identity

HSBC has partnered with Preservica to protect and future-proof digital assets of unique strategic and brand importance.

UK  ()

HSBC is one of the largest financial services organisations in the world. Founded in 1865 in Hong Kong to finance trade between Europe and Asia, the bank now serves around 38 million customers in 67 countries around the world.

HSBC Archives contains the social, economic and political history of the communities and countries where HSBC has done business within its archives - including letters, photographs, cartoons, films, advertising and interviews with staff; all invaluable assets to HSBC.

Head of safeguarding HSBC's extensive financial, cultural and brand history is Tina Staples, Global Head of Archives. Managing a team that comprises 20 staff in London, Hong Kong, Paris and New York, Staples has steadily grown the reputation of the archive in recent years. Staples comments: "An integral part of our team's mission is to oversee the preservation of a rapidly growing volume of important digitised and born-digital assets. Both our physical and digital assets are put to constant use in support of business initiatives, client events and employee engagement and education programmes."

Far from being forgotten relics, the archives bring significant value and credibility to the HSBC brand. In 2015, when the bank celebrated its 150th anniversary, it drew on the resources of the archive for inspiration to produce a series of new videos for the HSBC Now YouTube channel as well as a limited run anniversary bank note. The marketing department also organised large-scale customer and employee events to reconnect its brand values to the story of its continuing business success. The positive role of the archives during the anniversary has led to growing demand and opportunities for the physical and digital assets.

Challenge

According to Staples, the vast HSBC collection, though well established, prior to implementation of the Preservica system lacked an adequate cataloguing system or digital preservation capability. She added: "With huge amounts of physical and digital materials already in storage, as well as large volumes of born digital content being produced on a day to day basis, we needed a system that could not only preserve digital content over the long-term, but also synchronise with a cataloguing and management system to provide a single cohesive view of the archive."

A raft of compliance requirements also had to be considered and catered to, as well as high level principles around collecting, embargos and access, which had to be approved by the bank's chief legal officer. Risk, Legal and Compliance, IT and Records Management departments all needed to be in alignment before the project could go ahead.

Active digital preservation

HSBC's digital assets currently stored in Preservica's active digital preservation platform number more than 102,000 individual items. These include core decision-making and corporate born digital materials from the working life of the bank, such as executive committee minutes, strategy presentations, research documents and internal communications as well as unique digital brand assets. The number of digital assets stored by HSBC is rising all the time. In the past six months the archives team have added a further 15,000 items and this rapid growth will continue as new sources for digital collecting are identified.

Digital copies of images, audio visual assets and oral history records have also been ingested and preserved. Among the audio-visual assets are the ‘Hong Kong Bank Video Brief' tapes dating back to the 1980s. These forerunners to HSBC's current TV platform offer a tantalising glimpse of life at the bank in decades past, as well as an important record of news events as documented and broadcast to staff at that time.

Though implemented with a view to eventually extending access across the bank and beyond, archivists are currently the primary users of the software. The team are charged with not only preserving digital records, but also appraising and processing them, and delivering content and information to meet the constant stream of requests from users.

Staples comments: "With a single digital deposit these days potentially including tens of thousands of records of fairly unstructured content, archive structure and metadata needs to be established to make it accessible and useful to future users."

The team therefore plan to extend the use of Preservica to allow the archive to more easily receive, manage, digitally preserve and disseminate a wider range of records from across the corporation. "Long term," adds Staples, "the focus for the archives team at HSBC is to improve accessibility for all users, with greater access to selected content currently under discussion as a future possibility."

This includes increasing the number of access points for ingest to the archives, and putting automated processes in place that will allow non-archivists to access, add to and engage with the digital materials as a resource.

"The HSBC Archives play a vital role in protecting physical and digital assets of unique corporate, historic, strategic brand importance," Staples concludes. "We are helping to protect, shape and add value to the HSBC brand today and for generations to come."

Learn more about how Preservica is being used to protect marketing and brand assets https://preservica.com/corporate-enterprise-digital-preservation/brand-and-marketing-assets

Preservica
Editorial Contact:
Fran Cator
+44 (0)1522 883640
fran@realwire.com