- a history of archives, including the roles of historical societies and local history collections in libraries;
- new sections on community archives, diversity, and inclusion;
- conducting a survey and starting an archival program;
- selection, appraisal, acquisition, accessioning, and deaccessioning;
- important points of copyright, privacy, and ethics;
- arrangement of archival collections, with a discussion of new theories;
- description, including DACS, EAD, and tools such as ArchivesSpace;
- access, reference, and outreach, with a look at how recent innovations in finding aids can help researchers;
- preservation, including guidance on how to handle rare books, maps, architectural records, and artifacts;
- digital records, addressing new and popular methods of storage and preservation of email, social media, image files, webpages, Word documents, spreadsheets, databases, and media files;
- disaster planning, security, and theft prevention;
- metrics, assessment, establishing employee procedures and policies, working with interns and volunteers, and other managerial duties;
- public relations and marketing, from social media and the Web to advocacy; and
- professional guidelines and codes, such as the newly developed SAA Statement of Core Values of Archivists.