CAP, MAP, and STEPs are all assessment programs designed to help improve the professional work of small museums in the United States. Each program has a different goal, process, and outcome. CAP is the most specific, in that it focuses specifically on collections care and preventive conservation. Of the three assessment types, it is also the most dependent upon outside consultants.
MAP (Museum Assessment Program) is administered by the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) to help museums strengthen operations, plan for the future, and meet professional standards. MAP participants undergo a one-year self-assessment followed by a peer review in one of four categories: organizational, collections stewardship, education and interpretation, or community and audience engagement assessments.
STEPs (Standards and Excellence Program for History Museums), administered by the American Association for State and Local History (AASLH), is a self-paced self-study program that allows museums to assess their policies and practices and benchmark themselves against national museum standards.
To learn more about MAP and STEPs, please visit their respective webpages.