using the internet to make government a bit less boring
DESCRIPTION
Present to Kingston Upon Thames council in May 2010.TRANSCRIPT
Using the internet to make government a bit less boring
Dave Briggs
Community Evangelist
There’s a revolution going on
A frightening pace of change
Private / publicOnline / offlineConsumption
This stuff changes lives
From the benefits officeto Downing Street
in 5 years
(and a blog)
Change, and how to cope with it
Hitler hypnotising gays
Hitler’s hypnotising gaze
Treat your children with suspicion and contempt
The fact that things might go wrong is no reason
not to do them
(that’s 1,743,281)
It’s not hard to see that this affects all
levels of government
Focus has been on comms and PR
But it’s really not all about Twitter!
How can an organisation talk to people on the outside, when people inside aren’t talking to
each other?
BlogsSocial networks
Collaborative authoringPodcasting
Status updateselearning
The interesting thing about social software is not the software.
It’s the implications of using it.
OpenessTransparencyCollaborationCooperation
Managing:
ChangeKnowledge
TalentRiskIdeas
In other words, becoming a learning organisation
Now is the time for change
Drivers: efficiency & improvementEnablers: innovation & collaboration
Domains: culture & technology
All this has to embedded in
ProcessStructureSystemsStrategy
JFDIJFDI
Being boringBeing boring
Sustainability
Act
ivity
Learning Pool is here to help!
We understand technology
We understand local government
Thanks for listening