How to Pilot an AI Museum Guide

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a museum AI guide pilot last?
30 to 60 days of live visitor usage is the sweet spot. Shorter pilots don't generate enough data to be statistically meaningful. Longer pilots delay the decision without adding proportional insight. You need about 4-6 weeks of visitor data to see stable adoption patterns and gather meaningful feedback.
What does a museum need to start an AI guide pilot?
Your existing collection data (catalogue entries, wall text, curatorial notes), a decision about which galleries or tours to include, and one internal champion who owns the pilot. You don't need new content creation, hardware procurement, or a large budget. The provider handles the technical setup.
How much does it cost to pilot an AI museum guide?
Most AI guide providers offer pilot-specific pricing -- either a flat fee for the pilot period or usage-based pricing that scales with visitor volume. The cost is typically a fraction of a traditional audio guide deployment because there's no hardware, no recording sessions, and no per-language production costs.
What metrics should a museum track during an AI guide pilot?
At minimum: adoption rate (percentage of visitors who use the guide), completion rate, language distribution, and qualitative visitor feedback. Advanced metrics include engagement per stop, questions asked, drop-off points, and comparison to baseline visitor satisfaction scores.

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