Financial Accounting Page is HereTalk about Government 2.0 CampOn Facebook:
On Twitter:
On LinkedIn: Join Government 2.0 Camp on LinkedIn On GovLoop: Join Government 2.0 Club on GovLoop On Ustream: Firewall & bandwidth permitting, there is a plan to stream at least one session from every time slot via Ustream on the http://www.ustream.tv/channel/istrategylabs or new account channel? Tag for flickr, delicious, ma.gnolia, technorati etc: #gov20camp
Task List
Schedule/StructureADD YOU PROPOSED SESSION HERE (NOT BELOW)We're thinking about structure of this unconference as three-tiered. In proposing sessions, presentations and panels, please think about which tier would be most appropriate for your topic. Start adding ideas that you're workin on to each category below.
Day 1 101-intro to Government 2.0: general sessions for those who are new to social media tools and government 2.0 concepts and want to get a good overview, education and understanding Social media users' expectations of the government - survey results How do users of social media want to interact with with government, and what kind of information do they expect to receive from the government? We conducted a survey to find out. Here are the results. Presented by Jed Sundwall - @jedsundwall
The Intelligence Community and Web 2.0 John Hale @johnhale, Office of the Director of National Intelligence In 2005, the Intelligence Community began fielding a loosely coupled suite of web 2.0 services. That suite is known as the Intelink suite of tools. It includes: Intellipedia - the governments premier wiki, iVideo - our version of YouTube, Gallery – our version of Flickr, Inteldocs – our file sharing website, Blogs – a WordPressMU powered blog system, tag|Connect – our version of del.icio.us, a Jabber based instant messenger system, and a web based email system. You will receive an overview of these services, and discover the efforts involved and challenges we faced in the development and deployment of this suite.
202-intermediate: tracked sessions around the general categories of Government 2.0, e.g. technology, communications, policy, marketing, education Panel discussion on effective public servant usage of social media Forget about enterprise level social media initiatives, what about the thousands of public servants who can use social media to perform research, collaborate with colleagues, and engage constituents. Leilani Martinez from GobiernoUSA.gov, Sheila Campbell from the Federal Web Managers Council, and EPA's Jeffrey Levy will discuss the ways public servants can use social media to do their jobs more effectively.
Best practices discussion on using social media for customer outreach & internal marketing within government organizations Take advantage of the informal social media leaders within your government organization. Identify them, bring them together as a team and give them to tools they need to help reach stakeholder audiences. Information includes using Intelink tools, hosting a small-scale unconference, virtual town halls, and standards for monitoring and responding to blogs.Participants will also share their own best practices. *Andrea Baker and Chris Hemrick
Educating the Workforce on Enterprise 2.0 (Proposed agenda) Providing effective and engaging learning opportunities is no small task. This session will provide tips and techniques gleaned from the week-long social software course launched by Sean Dennehy and Don Burke at CIA in 2006. Topics will include curriculum best practices, effective classroom techniques, and integrating (and planning for) formal (structured, planned) and informal (unstructured, on-demand) learning opportunities. (suggestion and session volunteers: Adam Roades & Steven Mandzik & Amy Senger)
Panel discussion on social media ROI (return on investment) (Fri., Mar. 27) Some of the leading experts in social media ROI will discuss how you can overcome organizational barriers to implementing social media by "selling the boss" on the value these tools bring. This session will cover the use of metrics as well as other proven SM best practices you can push to leadership to make business processes more efficient and effective. The majority of the time will be spent discussing questions from participants.
Tentatively scheduled for the panel are: Geoff Livingston, John Bell, John Hale, Debbie Weil and Christopher Dorobek. The panel covers social media from business, government and media points of view. *Moderated by Chris Hemrick
Open Source social media tools Putting public data and public presence into "the cloud" or onto commercial sites has various hazards for government use: reliability, auditability, backups, presumed endorsement, dependence on external company's policies and stability. This talk will discuss Open Source alternatives to existing Web 2.0 sites that can be installed on government servers and monitored and managed by government staff. WordPress, Laconica, Elgg, Pligg. Discussion led by Evan Prodromou, lead developer of Laconica, signatory to the Franklin Street Statement and member of the autonomo.us group.
Linking Web 2.0 to Mission Objectives Web 2.0 is being embraced at the nodes of government. Blogs, wikis, Facebook pages and YouTube channels are springing up, serving mostly tactical needs. How do you persuade government agencies to embrace Web 2.0 as a way of doing busienss, to make it central to how they communicate with citizens and internally? Adapted from a presentation given by NavigationArts to the senior leadership of a cabinet-level agency, this discussion will explore what social media is not, and how to persuade decision makers to invest in Web 2.0. (Suggestion and session participants: Jon Aust and Albert Thibault, NavigationArts)
303-advanced: discussions around very specific topics; these sessions will, necessarily be small and more outcome-oriented These topics might be identified during the event and this time spot/session would evolve from that. Would lead a session leader for each specific topic.
Proposed discussion: Don Burke (topic TBD) Proposed discussion: Expanding Citizens' Communication Opportunities with the Executive and Legislative Branches of Government Proposed discussion: One gov't web site vs. obliterating gov't sites in favor of individual pages with metadata Proposed discussion: Putting out only gov't data and not investing in in-house presentations vs. gov't responsibility to help interpret the data Session: Challenges and Opportunities for Using Web 2.0 and Social Media in Local Government - Bill Schrier & Sabra Schneider of Seattle/King County - see and edit the working session description here - others are welcome to propose outcomes and presentations for this session. Proposed discussion: TrustClouds and real time situational awareness with Web 2.0 (pete.odell@swanisland.net, 202-460-2907 www.swanisland.net)
Friday afternoon U.S. premiere of Us Now, a newly-released documentary film out of the U.K. about the power of mass collaboration, government and the internet. (Maxine Teller working on this)
UPDATE
Maxine has now agreed with Dominic Campbell (FutureGov) that Ivo Gormley, Director of Us Now, will come over for a screening of Us Now. Suggested format:
- 4-6pm in main venue - 55mins film - 45mins panel following the film - Dominic to compere, Ivo, one of the Camp organisers such as Mark on the panel - Links to other panelist (politician and/or academic) plus sponsorship (around $500) sought in exchange for brand association with screening and/or seat on the panel
Day 2 Problem 1: Institutional Change in the National Security Community
Problem 2: Procurement and the Budgetary Cycle
Problem 3: Citizen Engagement with Policy
http://briandrake.wordpress.com/2009/03/04/a-challenge-to-the-government-20-barcamp-movement/
From Face to Face to Social Media: Politicians get real again? (Sat. Mar 28) Melissa Tullio @meznor, corporate communications practitioner from Toronto, Canada Can social media bring us back to the basics by providing direct communication between politicians and people? How can avatars and mediated online forums supplement genuine face to face communication between leaders and citizens? Are we heading towards more engaged and engaging government through social media tools, or are we kidding ourselves? Discussions surrounding reality and virtual reality are inevitable in this presentation. Open minds and theoretical thinkers encouraged to attend! [This probably coincides with Problem 3: Citizen Engagement with Policy listed above.]
Suggested reading If you are curious about understanding more about topics and buzzwords that surrounds Government 2.0, here is some suggest reading (feel free to add): There is also an excellent thread on the topic over at http://www.govloop.com/forum/topics/what-are-the-must-reads-on.
Online
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