Archive for the tag 'gov2'

Jaimey Walking Bear

by Alexander Howard  |  @digiphile

“What we have to do is open up the conversation about what it means to be a public servant,” said Carolyn Lawson, Director of eServices for the Office of the CIO, State of California. In kicking off the Gov 2.0 Expo’s first session, “Navigating the Maze, Lawson offered guidance, perspective, case studies and, appropriate to the topic of social media in government, lively give and take between the audience and presenter. Lawson explored the many ways that the state of California has employed e-services and online engagement strategies, along with a simple driver: cost. “Our workforce is furloughed three times a month,” said Lawson. “It’s really painful. Our exploding population really needs services.”

The reality of California’s budget woes come at a time when the expectation for government to be responsive online has never been higher. “Immediate access to data has become a cultural expectation,” said Lawson.
“The expectation is there now that government will be open, honest and will communicate.” Lawson described how both the California Unemployment Office and the Department of Motor Vehicles have used social media and online platforms to deliver better services without additional cost. “You can tweet @CA_EDD and get answers like how long until you get a check, where to go on the website or job fairs,” said Lawson. “I don’t think the creators of Twitter thought it would be a helpdesk for EDD.” That social response is paired by e-government services that enable workers to file for unemployment online. Lawson said that online applications for unemployment went up by about 1.8 million from the previous year. “What would have happened if we’d blocked that?”

California is using other online platforms and technologies to deliver services that have been affected by budget woes. California couldn’t afford to offer driver training in schools, explained Lawson. “Something had to be cut. What the DMV did, since they already had YouTube videos, is to create an entire curriculum.” The California DMV YouTube channel provides the means for every high school to watch training videos like the one below without additional cost:

“We were thinking of this a culturally relevant tool, not as a forum for expression” said Lawson. “These videos have more than nine million views. If we weren’t government, they’d be calling that viral. It’s all about being where people are.” And, on that count, the @CA_DMV has developed an iPhone app, “DMV Now.”

Lawson strongly defended both the importance of the role that social media engagement plays for the California state government and its utility. “Technology is not driving Web 2.0, Twitter or Facebook.,” she said. “People are driving these services. And blocking Web 2.0 isn’t going to solve your problems.” She made the analogy to the conversations about the telephone in the workplace in the early 20th century, or email in the 1990s. “What we do as a government when we cut off the ability to communicate through the Web 2.0 world is to remove our ability to be culturally relevant,” she said. Adopting social software or connection technology usage that emphasize protocol over common sense can be problematic as well. “One of the things that kills government’s ability to use social media is speaking to employees in terms of thou shalt, thou shalt not,” said Lawson. She shared a public available wiki of government social media resource that offers some best practices and frameworks for discussion or practice.

Lawson observed that California itself is still evolving in how it uses social media. “We still have many departments blocking the governor’s Twitter,” she said, alluding to Governor @Schwarzenegger‘s massively popular account. The challenge, as Lawson posed it, is to show how government use of social media combines with open data initiatives. “What are we afraid of? The consequences of transparent. We were really afraid of crowdsourcing ideas to improve California IT with Ideasalce. We got beat up – but we also got ideas. We’re the government: we’re going to get beat up. You can’t take it personally.”

Lawson broadly described a cultural shift going towards open government brought about by the Obama admin, though she recognized that many efforts had gone on before. “This is being pushed through by Obama’s transparency initiatives,” she said. “It used to be revolutionary for public documents to be available in a municipal building to people walking in. No more.”

So how should an organization tackle objections that put social media age into a technology issue, rather than a management challenge? “That’s where I have my ‘activity or accomplish’ conversation,” said Lawson. “Is this that conversation about the telephone in 1920s? Or is it something that we need to do to protect our data and information? You have to get people engaged in the conversation. That took us more than a year. If you can relate behavior to behavior to technology, that’s where you have a win.”

The bottom line is that nobody has this all figured out yet, said Lawson. “You just have to work your way through it.”

Jaimey Walking Bear

Michael Edson on how the Smithsonian uses crowdsourcing and transparency to further its mission

Posted by James Turner | Originally posted to O’Reilly Radar; May 13. 2010

The Smithsonian Institution epitomizes the phrase “an embarrassment of riches.” With 137 million physical objects in its collection, and 28 distinct museums and research centers, you could spend the rest of your life there and not see everything.

Michael Edson, who serves as director of web and new media strategy for the Smithsonian, got his start cleaning cases in one of the art museums. He now oversees the Institution’s online presence, which he talks about in the following interview. He’ll expand on many of these same topics at the upcoming Gov 2.0 Expo.

Read the full article

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

by Alex Howard@digiphile | Originally posted on O’Reilly Radar; May 12, 2010

Would you “like” a government agency on Facebook? Would you “like” a service delivered by a .gov website? How would you feel if a government official “liked” you back? How would you like to be Craig Newmarkidentified online?

There are no easy answers to these questions, as anyone who attended the FTC privacy workshops or recent “privacy camps” in the District of Columbia or San Francisco knows. Craig Newmark, the founder of craigslist.org, attended the privacy camp in San Francisco and shared a few thoughts about issues of trust, identity, social networking and government.

Online privacy is now even more top-of-mind for tens of millions of users, as Facebook’s social plug-ins roll out across the Internet, along with its instant personalization pilot. Thirty-three government agencies are on Facebook, with more than 400 pages between them. Those government agencies may not have added “like” buttons yet — but they’re interacting with citizens on Facebook, Citizen Tube, Google Moderator, Twitter and beyond.

Read full article

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

Cross posted from Mashable; Original post by Alexander Howard, May 10, 2010

Alexander B. Howard is the Government 2.0 Washington Correspondent for O’Reilly Media, where he reports on how technology, open government and online civics. He’ll be reporting live from the upcoming Gov2.0 Expo in Washington, D.C., on May 25-27.

What is government 2.0? Tim O’Reilly describes it as government working as a platform. Others might describe it as applying the technologies that make up Web 2.0 to the practice of government, including blogs, wikis, social networking and crowdsourcing. The simplest way of describing government 2.0 may be any technology that helps citizens or agencies solve problems, either for individuals or the community, and enables government to operate more efficiently or effectively.

Read the entire article at mashable.com

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

Cross posted from O’Reilly Radar •  Original post by Alex Howard | @digiphile

Cammie Croft, former deputy director of new media at the White House, is taking on a new challenge as the director of new media at the Department of Energy.

In her new role, Croft will be upgrading elements of the IT infrastructure at an immense federal agency to enable her and her team to implement the digital tools for online engagement that she applied during the presidential campaign and the new administration’s first year in office. The Department of Energy has IT infrastructure challenges that exist within many government bodies at all levels, from an outdated content management system (CMS) to difficulties supporting blogs or commenting.

cammie-croft-thumb-486x364Croft explained it took 10 months for the White House new media staff to progress to the IT infrastructure they wanted for WhiteHouse.gov. While the new media team did relaunch WhiteHouse.gov on January 21st with a new blog, it was hosted on a different CMS. Eventually, WhiteHouse.gov was relaunched on the open source Drupal platform — but it took many months to get there. “We’d like to open up comments on WhiteHouse.gov,” said Croft, “but we’re wrestling with how to make it a constructive online community. We like to say: ‘How do we avoid getting to the place that YouTube comments are?’”

Read the full interview on O’Reilly Radar.

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

Presentation slides from Gov 2.0 Expo co-chair Laurel Ruma’s presentation today – “Gov 2.0, Open Data, and the Innovation Economy” – at the Gov 2.0a Conference in Oklahoma City, OK.

Jaimey Walking Bear

So we’re shamelessly borrowing from our friends on the Web 2.0 Expo event team and rolling out their fabulous “Tweet This” Twitter game, debuted for Web 2.0 Expo NY last year. Join in the fun for this Gov 2.0 Expo version of the contest and you could earn a full conference pass to Gov 2.0 Expo in May!

Here’s How You Can Score a Free Pass:

“Use discount code [FAKE] for 25% off a Gov 2.0 Expo conference pass—discount ends May 2! #g2e”

Tweet this sentence to enough of your friends, and you could earn a deeply discounted or free full-price Gov 2.0 Expo conference pass. Every time someone buys a conference pass using your personalized discount code (which we will send you—read on), you get an additional 10% off the cost of a full-price pass. That’s on top of the 25% discount we will give you right off the bat for participating.

(Note: The discount code above—[FAKE]—does not work. It’s just an example. You’ll replace [FAKE] with the dedicated code we provide you. Read on…)

Here’s how to play:

  • Sign up for the contest at the bottom of this post (scroll down, please!). All we need is your name and an email address to send you a personalized code. Space fills up fast and is limited to the first 100 people who apply.
  • Tweet the discount code we give you to your followers so they can sign up using it.
  • Kick back and let us do the rest of the work. We’ll contact you the week of May 2nd to tell you how many people signed up using your code… and also to tell you how much money will be shaved off your conference pass.

If you already have a conference pass, you’re still more than welcome to participate. Although the credits you accrue will not work toward the pass you already purchased (retroactively that is), you will be able to earn another deeply discounted or fully paid-for pass for a friend or colleague. You can also use your credits toward Web 2.0 Expo New York 2010. One last thing—although we think Twitter is the easiest way for you to spread this deal, there is no restriction as to where you can post your code! Feel free to email your friends or post it on your Facebook account, blog site, etc..

We are limiting this contest to the first 100 people who apply – so hurry! The discount code you are given will only work through May 2, so the sooner you start spreading the word the better.
Post any questions in the blog comments section or message us @gov2events on Twitter.

Good luck!

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

Hot off the presses, we just published the program schedule grid for Gov 2.0 Expo, so you can start planning your Gov 2.0 Experience now.

The five topic tracks that we’ve divided the Gov 2.0 Expo program into are:

  • Open Data and Web Services
  • Agile Government
  • Social Networks and Collaboration
  • Cloud Computing
  • Emerging Topics

There’s still more to come and more program to added to the schedule. Keep checking back to www.gov2expo.com and to this blog for the latest updates!

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

At the heart of the Gov 2.0 Events program is a commitment to elevating the people who are driving efficiency and collaboration, including the nonprofits working to better our communities and world.

UBM TechWeb and O’Reilly Media are happy to announce that we’ll be hosting a Nonprofit Pavilion at Gov 2.0 Expo, just as we do at our Web 2.0 Expo events each year.

If your nonprofit organization uses Web 2.0 technologies to improve efficiency, collaboration, and transparency in government, we invite you to apply for a spot in the Gov 2.0 Expo Nonprofit Pavilion.

Ten non-profits will be chosen to participate in the Gov 2.0 Nonprofit Pavilion (located on the Expo floor). Each organization will be supplied with a booth space, on-site branding, an Internet connection, and inclusion in the events guide, completely free of charge.

To apply, fill out the form below. The deadline is April 1.

Organizations must be a registered 501c3 to participate. Space is limited to 10 nonprofit organizations. An internal Gov 2.0 Expo committee will select the participants and announcements will be made the week of April 5.

Thanks!

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb

Jaimey Walking Bear

Hello and thanks for reading this first post of our new Gov 2.0 Events blog. In the coming weeks, you’ll be able to find insights from our program chairs, event team, and the Gov 2.0 community right here.

We recently opened registration for Gov 2.0 Expo, happening May 25-27, 2010 at the Convention Center in downtown Washington, D.C.

You can save 20% on registration today if you use code BLOG

Gov 2.0 Expo will give government employees and contractors access to the practical tools, in-depth training, and industry contacts critical to answering the new mandate for transparency, efficiency, and cost containment.

The program is already looking fantastic and includes these featured speakers:

  • Marie Davie (General Services Administration)
  • Tim Berners-Lee (World Wide Web Consortium)
  • Sonal Shah (U.S. Office of Social Innovation and Public Participation)
  • Alec Ross (U.S. State Department
  • Linda Cureton (NASA)
  • Price Floyd (Department of Defense)
  • Bill Eggers (Deloitte)
  • Anil Dash (Expert Labs)
  • Jay Parkinson (The Future Well)

Topics and themes at Gov 2.0 Expo we’ll be delving into include:

  • Cloud Computing
  • Open Data
  • Cybersecurity
  • Data Management
  • Collaboration Systems
  • IT Services & Interoperability

Be sure to check out the full, current list of featured speakers, sessions, and workshops.

Cheers!

Jaimey Walking Bear is on the Marketing team for Gov 2.0 Expo. He can be reached @gov2events or @jaimeywb