Group_5_US-China Trade War to understand the trade
From Open Government to Online Engagement: Lessons Learned
1. From Open Government
to Online Engagement:
Lessons Learned
Andrew Krzmarzick
GovLoop
Director of Community Engagement
2. Our Time Together
1. Overview of GovLoop
2. Evolution of Open Government
3. Social Media Trends
4. Online Engagement: Lessons Learned
3. • 14 years raising money and awareness
for non-profits, educational
institutions and social businesses
• Generated over $100 million through
proposals, fundraising and marketing
• Design and deliver presentations on
social media, generational diversity,
telework, and social learning
• Built first-of-its-kind, government-
wide mentors program in the U.S.
• Manage a team of 15 full-time and Andrew Krzmarzick
part-time employees to deploy a
LinkedIn.com/in/andrewkrzmarzick
comprehensive digital engagement
strategy @krazykriz
4. Online community of
government colleagues
helping each other
to do their jobs better.
Mission: “Connect government to improve government”
5. Evolution
Passionate
Federal
Full-‐Time
Employee
Committed
Volunteers
Team
=
4
JUN
2008:
JAN
2009:
JUN
2009:
SEP
2009:
JUL
2010:
GovLoop
Community
10,000
20,000
Next
Gen
Gov
Launched
Leaders
Members
Members
Event
in
DC
SEP
2010:
MAR
2011:
SEP
2011:
Jul
2012:
SEP
2012:
40,000
Mentors
50,000
Next
Gen
=
60,000
Members
Program
Members
600+
Members
20+
Corporate
Partners
Sub-‐Communities,
Podcast,
Guides
Team
=
14
6. Member Overview
Top 10 Agencies on GovLoop Federal Government
1. Dept. of Defense
2. Dept. of Health & Human Services 12.48% State Government
3. Dept. of Agriculture
4. Dept. of Veterans Affairs 9.18%
5. Dept. of Homeland Security Local Government
6. General Services Admin. 14.83% 50.37 %
7. Dept. of Commerce Industry/Gov’t
8. Environmental Protection Agency Contractors
9. Dept. of Transportation 13.14 %
Other (i.e. non-profit,
10. Dept. of Labor academia &
Total # of Agencies: 37 International Gov’t)
Average Age:
7. “Knowledge Network”
Vehicles: Value:
• Blogs • Share and find best practices
• Forums
• Get questions answered quickly
• Groups
• Solve problems faster
• Events
• Learn from peers and experts
• Guides
• Podcasts
• Webinars
18. Historic Change?
"Liberty cannot be
preserved without
a general
knowledge among
the people, who
have a right and
a desire to know.”
19. President Obama: Day 2
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/TransparencyandOpenGovernment
20. January
21,
2009
“Nondisclosure should never be
based on an effort to protect the
interest of Government officials at
the expense of those they are
supposed to serve.”
“All agencies should adopt a
presumption in favor of
disclosure….”
Presume openness;
disclose affirmatively;
and modernize.
http://www.justice.gov/ag/foia-memo-march2009.pdf
29. 300+
to
date
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-11.pdf
30. September
2011
• disclosed more information
under the Freedom of
Information Act.
• devised ambitious Open Government
Plans to increase opportunities for
public engagement
• made voluminous information newly
available on government websites.
• shined more light on federal
spending.
• taken steps to provide more
disclosure of sensitive government
information.
• used technology in many innovative
ways that make information useful to
citizens in their everyday lives.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-11.pdf
31. Freedom of Information
• Agencies made full disclosures—i.e., un-
redacted disclosure of all requested information—
for nearly 56% of all FOIA requests where
responsive records were processed.
• constitutes more than a 6% increase over the
previous year from October 2008 through
September 2009.
• marks the first increase in full FOIA disclosures in the past
ten years.
• Taking partial and full disclosures together, agencies made
disclosures in 93-94%% of all processed FOIA requests over
the last fiscal year.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-11.pdf
32. Freedom of Information
• Over the past fiscal year, the ninety-seven
agencies subject to the FOIA together invoked
FOIA exemptions less than in the previous year.
In fact, the invocation of FOIA exemptions
dropped by nearly 54,000 over the past
year, more than a 10% reduction.
• agencies overall processed more requests than they received
this past fiscal year…also increased the number of FOIA requests they
processed as compared with last fiscal year
• reduced their backlogs of pending FOIA requests over the
past fiscal year. The ninety-seven agencies across the government
that are subject to FOIA collectively reduced their backlogs by 10.1%.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/memoranda_2010/m10-11.pdf
42. Open Innovation: Leading Practices
• Allows vets to access and download • compares different plans
information from My HealtheVet into
simple text file or PDF • shows information that has
• Gives control without special software never been made public
• Enables sharing with health care
providers, caregivers, or people you trust.
44. 8 Lessons from Open Gov in the U.S.
1. Nail down policy first.
2. Remove legal hurdles.
3. Give clear directions and deadlines.
4. Assign agency champions.
5. Provide tools and resources.
6. Hold agencies accountable, report on progress.
7. Use peer pressure via comparison.
8. Highlight leading practices.
46. Open Government: Global Impact
• Launched on September 20, 2011, with 8
founding governments (Brazil, Indonesia,
Mexico, Norway, Philippines, South Africa, UK, US)
• aims to secure concrete commitments from
governments to promote transparency,
empower citizens, fight corruption, and
harness new technologies to strengthen
governance.
• overseen by a steering committee of
governments and civil society organizations.
Participating countries must:
• embrace a high-level Open Government Declaration;
• deliver a country action plan developed with public
consultation; and
• commit to independent reporting on their progress.
http://www.opengovpartnership.org/
54. 5 Mega Trends
with Social Media
and Government*
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
55. 1. The cry for transparency
“This is a terrible time to be a control freak”
– Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State
• broad recognition that government information belongs to the people
• technology is enabling a new wave of sharing
• Best practice: U.S. Government Printing Office site
o volumes of documents now available at visitor finger tips
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
56. 2. Citizen engagement
“The opportunity of social media and government is not
economic or technological. It’s emotional.”
— Aneesh Chopra, Former CTO of the U.S. Government
• Challenge.gov rewards citizens with cash prizes for solving
government problems
• Crowd-sourced budgeting processes
• NASA has a range of programs encouraging active participation in
agency project – customize your own NASA project page
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
57. 3. Humanizing government
“Social media is not a second website,
it’s a community.”
— Tristram Perry, U.S. State Department
• people are people, brands are building an emotional connection
• citizens are expecting government to do the same
• City of Reno poked fun with YouTube videos, crooked Christmas tree.
• U.S. Embassy, Jakarta = more Facebook fans than all embassies combined:
o Spark discussion and give people a reason to belong.
o Customize your information for your audience.
o Develop unique, engaging content.
o Post regularly.
o Set goals and reassess them periodically.
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
59. 5. Real-time response (and mobile)
• in private sector, there are many case studies about companies using social
media as an effective tool to solve problems in real-time
• these practices are being adopted by state and city (and federal)
governments.
• with a tweet or text (or an app) — potholes, broken street lights and other
issues are being reported and fixed.
• 311-Twitter service in San Franciso, for example, has answered over 7 million
calls and thousands of more requests online.
Why wouldn’t citizens expect national
governments to do the same?
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
60. Leading Practice: Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
61. Leading Practice: Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
62. Leading Practice: Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
63. Leading Practice: Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
64. Anatomy of a Fantastic Facebook Page
1. Human voice
2. Effective use of photos
3. Relevant, local information
4. Diverse information
5. Blend of fun and serious
6. Frequent posting
7. Open forum
*Source: http://www.businessesgrow.com/2011/04/04/five-mega-trends-how-social-media-is-transforming-government/ç
66. 1. Engagement is Not Easy
• It’s REALLY hard, but…
• There’s a methodology and rigor
Integration with traditional
communication =
key to driving real results
68. If Twitter was a country
Population: 140 million
It would be bigger than Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan
69. If Facebook was a country
Population: 1 billion active users
It would be the world’s 3rd largest country
Bigger than North and South America combined
70. If Email Was a Country
It Covers Continents
It would be an empire: 2.9 Billion users
71. Anatomy of a “Social” Newsletter
1 6
4
7
2 5
8
3
9