getting under the skin of government 2.0 - issues, insights and implications

19
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential Presentation_I D 1 Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications New Media Group, Victorian Government (Melbourne, March 2010) Martin Stewart-Weeks, Director, Public Sector (Asia- Pacific), Internet Business Solutions Group, [email protected]

Post on 21-Oct-2014

3.180 views

Category:

Technology


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Presented to the New Media Group, Victorian Government (Melbourne, March 2010), by Martin Stewart-Weeks, Director, Public Sector (Asia-Pacific), Internet Business Solutions Group

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 1

Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

New Media Group, Victorian Government (Melbourne, March 2010)

Martin Stewart-Weeks, Director, Public Sector (Asia-Pacific), Internet Business Solutions Group, [email protected]

Page 2: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 2

Page 3: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 3

Five knotty questions…

1.How do you shift culture and manage change rather than focus just on the technologies?

2.What strategies can be employed to shift the mind set of Ministers and their advisers from its present emphasis on controlling and moderating web 2 technologies to an acceptance of its risks along with its advantages?

3.How do we get business units to make the RIGHT technology choice rather than the latest/most convenient/ buzz wordiest choice

4.How do public servants handle the conflict of needing to be both open and controlled when interacting in web 2.0 spaces?

5.Should government build, administer and maintain collaborative/interactive spaces such as forums (with the associated financial burden) or should we be one of many voices on websites with an established audience in order to gather feedback where the people are (depending on who we're targeting)?  

Page 4: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 4

And five more…

6 What data should be kept and what discarded? Web 2.0 tools have the capacity to generate huge volumes of data, much of it irrelevant to statutory decision making or policy development. How do we determine what must be registered on the public record?

7 How is web 2.0 going to change the work of public servants who are used to developing policy and delivering programs with carefully managed stakeholder engagement and formal consultation processes? Are their emerging examples?

8 As web 2.0 / gov 2.0 becomes standard to public service delivery, how do we ensure those not socially or economically 'plugged in' do not get overlooked?

9 Does the trend toward centralisation in IT delivery make sense and does that maximise the benefits in terms of cost, coordination and capacity to make it easier to share data?

10 What IT purchasing framework should we be adopting across departments and agencies to best manage web 2.0? Or will we all be in the cloud in five years and it doesn't matter?

Page 5: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 5

A starting point?

Paul Baran’s Theory of Distributed Networks…the World of “Connectedness”

Page 6: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 6

Page 7: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 7

http://groups.google.com.au/group/gov20canberra

"Government 2.0 is not specifically about social networking or technology based approaches to anything. It represents a fundamental shift in the implementation of government - toward an open, collaborative, cooperative arrangement where there is

(wherever possible) open consultation, open data, shared knowledge, mutual acknowledgment of expertise, mutual respect for shared values and an understanding of how to agree to disagree. Technology and social tools are an important part of this change but are essentially an enabler in this process."

Page 8: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 8

In so many areas, governments and the public servants who support them are being asked to work in ways that are difficult to fit into the methods, structures and culture of a traditional public sector. As the search for solutions for better policy and improved public services demands a capacity for rapid learning and innovation, for large-scale collaboration and shared power and for new patterns of engagement with a more complicated and rapidly evolving mix of interests and people outside of government, the shortcomings of many existing public sector responses, at least in many situations, is becoming less and less easy to ignore.

Page 9: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 9

Web 2.0 isn’t fancy technology The technology is simple

and ubiquitous

Web 2.0 is a culture change Collaborate don’t control

Improvise, share, play, collaborate

Users build value, the technology can let them in

Be modular: use others’ stuff, let them use yours

Page 10: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 10

Page 11: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 11

Mass Localism

An open access process, with a very open first stage

A clear outcome, and a clear timetable

A staged process, with help for the development of ideas and graduated rewardsMass localism reflects a broader trend that is

increasingly apparent across the economy, culture and society, that of finding distributed answers to problems and delivering solutions with citizens. It represents a shift from mass production to distributed production.

Mass Localism: A Way to Hep Small Communities Solve Big Social Challenges, Laura Bunt and Michael Harris, NESTA (UK), February 2010

Page 12: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 12

The committee is thus not able to dive into any detail on how the changing role of information in society, on open data, on the power of self-organization, or the rising power and influence of social media could and should re-shape the public service.David Eaves

Page 13: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 13

However, since the vision of the public service remains broadly unchanged, my sense is the reforms, while sometimes large, are ultimately tweaks designed to ensure the continuation of the current model - not prompting a rethink (or the laying of groundwork) for a 21st century public service which will ultimately have to look different to stay relevant.David Eaves

Page 14: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 14

The main problem with the public service is that its members aren't even allowed to use collaborative technologies to interact among themselves so how can they possible be ask to collaborate externally? …a digital citizenry isn't interested in talking to an analogue government. David Eaves

Page 15: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 15

A networked public service is one that will need new norms as it will function very differently. David Eaves

Page 16: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 16

Five knotty questions…

1.How do you shift culture and manage change rather than focus just on the technologies?

2.What strategies can be employed to shift the mind set of Ministers and their advisers from its present emphasis on controlling and moderating web 2 technologies to an acceptance of its risks along with its advantages?

3.How do we get business units to make the RIGHT technology choice rather than the latest/most convenient/ buzz wordiest choice

4.How do public servants handle the conflict of needing to be both open and controlled when interacting in web 2.0 spaces?

5.Should government build, administer and maintain collaborative/interactive spaces such as forums (with the associated financial burden) or should we be one of many voices on websites with an established audience in order to gather feedback where the people are (depending on who we're targeting)?  

Page 17: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 17

And five more…

6 What data should be kept and what discarded? Web 2.0 tools have the capacity to generate huge volumes of data, much of it irrelevant to statutory decision making or policy development. How do we determine what must be registered on the public record?

7 How is web 2.0 going to change the work of public servants who are used to developing policy and delivering programs with carefully managed stakeholder engagement and formal consultation processes? Are their emerging examples?

8 As web 2.0 / gov 2.0 becomes standard to public service delivery, how do we ensure those not socially or economically 'plugged in' do not get overlooked?

9 Does the trend toward centralisation in IT delivery make sense and does that maximise the benefits in terms of cost, coordination and capacity to make it easier to share data?

10 What IT purchasing framework should we be adopting across departments and agencies to best manage web 2.0? Or will we all be in the cloud in five years and it doesn't matter?

Page 18: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 18

Page 19: Getting Under the Skin of Government 2.0 - Issues, Insights and Implications

© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 19

Some advice from the inside… Official  - use of social media to post official departmental comments - for example, my response to

various IT news website articles, and  the subsequent comments by readers (see  http://www.itnews.com.au/News/166172,feds-eye-windows-7-security-in-d... or http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/hardware/soa/Government-issues-400m-desk...) is done in my official capacity - I identify myself and my role  clearly and use my work email address. To do so, a public servant would probably be the responsible officer for an activity and his/her  agency would have guidelines that allow such comments or rely for  guidance on those from the APSC. The content is factual, not opinion,  and responses are likely to be limited to providing explanations or  addressing errors of fact, misquotes, etc. A relatively small number  of APS members will probably make official statements, but quite possibly more than do now. 

Professional - a public servant posting in their personal capacity on  a matter in which they have some expertise, possibly relating to their  job. They might be identifiable as an APS member but would be more likely to use their personal email address/profile than their work  address. You could compare this usage of social media with speeches at  professional conferences, papers in professional journals, etc. Such  online comments would most likely not to be made in work time, although some agencies allow reasonable personal use or incidental use of the internet which could be utilised for a few minutes during  working hours or maybe longer during lunch, etc. These comments might  reflect general experience gained at work or perhaps refer to de- identified incidents or matters already in the public domain, etc. If  some comment is controversial, reasonable people will realise that it isn't an official statement. More APS members will make professional comment than do official comment but the number will still be limited  - more because of personal preference than any imposed limits.

Personal - comments on a subject not related to work - a football  team, a hobby or just Facebook chat. The most used profile for such comments is again likely to be linked to a personal not a work email address. Many APS members will participate online in their personal capacity - and are probably doing so now. 

In all cases, as pointed out earlier in the thread, public servants remain bound by the APS Code of Conduct, values, etc. However, it's useful to remember that it was ever thus. The channel is changing -  not the required behaviour. Over 200,000 federal government employees  have access to email now and yet they generally don't utilise it inappropriately - just like they don't write inappropriate letters to the editor, as a rule, or leak information, in all but a few cases. In my experience, most don't find these constraints restrictive - and  those that do, generally leave. Because those that remain well understand the requirements, they are careful not to cross the boundaries and are likely to continue, and can be trusted, to behave responsibly. 

John Sheridan, General manager, AGIMO (From Govt 2 Australia Google Group)