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Local government 2.0 Current practice and opportunities.

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Presentation on theme: "Local government 2.0 Current practice and opportunities."— Presentation transcript:

1 Local government 2.0 Current practice and opportunities

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12 www.localgov.pbwiki.com

13 http://sandbox.dius.gov.uk/digitalgovuk/

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20 Councils and councillors using social media now http://tinyurl.com/nj67j8 - last update 1 March 2009 This map created by Liz Azyan represents councils using social media. Some may be single instances of a twitter feed by a councillor. Others are more well developed.

21 Democratic engagement In the face of low voter turnout, Socitm reported that County Councils saw their web traffic double at recent county council elections thanks to their provision of a sophisticated online election results service coupled with use of social media tools like Twitter, Facebook, RSS feeds and email alerts. (12 June 2009) http://elections.derbyshire.gov.uk/

22 Enhanced communications, greater transparency Northamptonshire County Council CEX used YouTube to brief staff on internal changes, but open to anyone - increasing transparency

23 Virtual worlds for planning Birmingham are building a new library in the city. It is likely that we will build that first in second life (in fact we’ve just begun to do that highlighting the development area on a 3D visualisation on the Birmingham Island is Second Life) so that citizens and interested groups can help shape the physical building by suggesting changes or better ways to organise resources within it. Birmingham is also building a new park in the city centre and the planners think second life, and in particular the way we have used Google Maps within it, is a useful tool to examine the planning options for the park. So you can put the park in situ long before the first sod of turf is laid. (Dave Harte, Birmingham)

24 Engaging youth Wiltshire County council and sparksite.co.uk with youth activities and user generated content

25 Campaign and event promotion through social networking A number of councils have used Facebook successfully for event promotion. Some councils have Facebook fan pages. Could use targeted, paid for advertising using Facebook’s customer insight.

26 Aggregated Web2.0 output Hillingdon’s Use of Friendfeed means it’s easy to see Twitter, Flickr (photo), and YouTube video outputs

27 Community conversation Simply opening comments to council news published online is a way of promoting conversation between citizen and government (Lichfield DC, Stratford DC, Kirklees)

28 Community images Stratford-on-Avon District Council has built a web2.0 powered image library of council images and photos taken by local people and visitors http://www.stratford.gov.uk/flickr/

29 Youth engagement in positive activities Stockport provides automated feeds of places to go and things to do for 13 to 19 year olds which can be received in a number of ways

30 Council service blogs: libraries Manchester libraries blog including a catalogue search function and podcasts http://manchesterlitlist.blogspot.com/

31 Councillor blogging Mike Freer, Leader of Barnet council uses his blog to communicate with local residents. Content from area meetings is shared so the conversation can continue online

32 Regulatory services Councils in Staffordshire are taking “scores on the door” online with user feedback, directions and more www.ratemyplace.org.uk

33 Social networking for positive employment Social start-up to support graduate new-entrants as they face the toughest labour market in over a decade. Similar model for worklessness/NEETs

34 Mapping Localised mapping of council and community services, crime, etc. Local Authority Mapping Collective is a group of gov.uk practitioners starting to share practice and advice

35 Interactive, “crowd sourced” gov websites Utah’s state government site combines, blogs, Twitter feeds and personalised views for citizens on a wiki based CMS www.utah.gov

36 Encouraging Councillor engagement Tweety Hall - a national index of Tweeting councillors (further development required to help citizens contact councillors not on Twitter) www.tweetyhall.com http://cllrtweeps.com/ is another site which indexes councillor Twitter usage

37 Encouraging Councillor engagement Civic Surf is a blog-coaching programme for councillors - similar coaching and mentoring programmes could be developed or enhanced (for officers, too!) http://civicsurf.org.uk/

38 Local Listening Post A number of councils have been developing tools which allow them to follow local conversations on social media. This enables them to identify where there are complaints, great ideas, a well-spring of volunteerism or perhaps a major service gap. An open example is: http://www.pageflakes.com/kirkleescounci l/26314887/

39 Enhanced media and access to archives In January 2008, the Library of Congress began an initiative to publicly share over 3,000 photos in its collection through Flickr in an effort to enrich the collection with public identifications and descriptions. The Library of Congress has also invited other cultural heritage institutions to join in making photo collections more accessible. Nine months after its inception, the initiative's Flickr page has logged over 10 million total views and averages 500,000 views per month. (Source: Flickr) A number of councils are already using Flickr to share local images. www.flickr.com

40 Social marketing via social media Social marketing for behaviour change can benefit from easy to pass on, inexpensive or user produced viral campaign content. NHS Leicester City and teen pregnancy partnership produced a video with over 500k YouTube views

41 Social media and CRM interoperability CRM and IT Managers complain bitterly about the cost of pulling in information from third party social media complaints sites like FixMyStreet.com. We need focused technical research on how to overcome this problem and to raise awareness among IT and CRM managers to ensure that third-party CRM providers are delivering solutions which can handle input from third party sites.

42 Geo-spatial customer insight Andrew Hudson-Smith of UCL has developed a number of geo-spatial tools, including a mood mapper which involves a mash-up of online maps and user feedback. This has been used by the BBC on to map how people are affected by the credit crunch and could easily be developed for local authorities to use supported by social media and traditional communications approaches.

43 Secure cross- agency information sharing and relationship building

44 Community interactive maps Interactive map with transport and community information based partly on user generated information (this is an independent project)

45 SMS community conversation " to strengthen local democracy by building an effective, inclusive tool kit for proactive engagement between councillors and citizens on a street by street level, creating an intuitively navigable portrait of every street in a ward from a combination of: citizens' accounts (recorded using everyday mobile technology (SMS) to counter digital exclusion, both economic and cultural); filtered local and national government data feeds; commentary from officers and partner agencies (for example the police) that have a "duty to co-operate" in Local Strategic Partnerships ; and making these portraits available in support of councillors as neighbourhood champions, and, when necessary, as evidence to support ‘councillor call for action’ (CCfA) in collaboration with citizens to address local issues and improve services. " (Idea developed in conversation between and Ingrid Koehler, IDeA and Andrew Wilson of www.blinkmedia.org which has developed www.thumbprintcity.com which is ready to take street level SMS feedback in Manchester and London and used it to develop art and community engagement projects) Photo credit Ken Banks, kiwanja.net

46 They work for you (for local government) They Work For You is a MySociety project which allows citizens to find, monitor and message their MP LGA, IDeA and Leadership Centre sponsored the development of Tweety Hall, but this service could be developed further to identify the social media activity of councillors and provide a contact point for serving councillors. It could provide an aggregator of councillor blogs, rolling Tweet stream and more.

47 Economic development campaigns Minneapolis Saint Paul (a US equivalent to a city- region) economic development campaign supported by local businesses and the area’s city councils. Incorporates local voices through aggregators http://www.mspmoretolife.com/

48 Social media offline: video Rotherham’s Home Truths and Barnet’s work with ThinkPublic used Social media approaches to gain valuable customer insight through the use of video and diaries kept by service users. These videos were used to demonstrate what it was like to be a “customer” of the council in a powerful and concise way. Friend or foe was a video project developed by Genesis (a social housing provider) which used victims of “befriending fraud” to develop a video to help others avoid the same trap. The output was a 26 minute DVD for those without broadband access at home and is also downloadable. (Source: Social by Social) Photo credit: Erik Hersman on Flickr

49 Strategic Support Potential ideas for strategic support for the sector Developing skills for the sector Capturing and sharing good and emerging practice Encouraging and scaling up innovation

50 Guidance Clear, concise and accessible guidance which outlines the potential benefits of social media for local government and how to use it for a number of different audiences For example:  Social media for councillors  Social media for council communications teams  Using social media for customer insight and performance improvement  Social media to support local democracy and community engagement.  Social media for social marketing (e.g. behavioural change, important for partnership outcomes). Tailoring existing guidance, developing new guidance in the gaps

51 Social marketing and communications toolkit Allied closely to any guidance or training, this would be a hands-on kit of free to use tools which would support councils in adding social media to their existing approaches to consultation or social marketing (important for behaviour change and delivering better outcomes). ( Social by Social a publication targeted at voluntary organisations. See http://www.socialbysocial.com)

52 Free the data

53 Facilitated community blogging Strong communities of bloggers have been built through deliberate facilitation. In the US, a number of newspapers and television stations have created local blog aggregators and hired a professional to sift through and highlight content of interest to local people. And this also provides them with tips on potential stories of wider interest. A similar approach could be used for local communities in the UK. A similar approach could be used for the community of blogging councillors or officers to highlight interesting practice in improvement or community engagement.

54 Social media marketplace Using existing social media tools to develop an online toolkit and product marketplace for local government. This would create a space for free, packaged and bespoke products to be showcased to local government audiences – and provide a space for feedback on their use. (Facility to do this may be being built through IDeA/ Capital Ambition Efficiency Hub) Photo credit: Faeryboots on Flickr

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56 Online campaigns: Raise the profile, encourage participation Develop and support national online campaigns to help councils make use of simple social media tools www.mashthestate.org.uk

57 Road shows Several practitioners have suggested road shows which reach all parts of the country - particularly the North and Southwest. This would involve practitioners who are currently making inroads using social media from a variety of services. Ensuring that policy people are talking to policy people, etc. as well as cross- fertilising ideas. The roadshows should have quite a hands-on feel and might include design charrettes. The presenters share their experience on-line as they go, including picking up existing good practice examples. Photo credit: thisisbossi on Flickr

58 BarCamps

59 Innovation contests New ideas could emerge through contests or events like SICamp (the social innovation camp) or the Show Us a Better Way contest. Local government holds or generates lots of potential data that developers can use to build pro- social products (e.g. HopHive or BeLocal), but doesn’t always make the data available. We could offer money or other incentives for councils (or partnerships) and developers to work together to provide information solutions (e.g. mashups) for local people. Some of these tools and approaches could be developed in a “hacker-day” event (or couple of events), bringing some of the best minds together. When technical people come together to work in teams to solve a problem or series of problems.

60 STOP BLOCKING Too many councils put barriers in the way of local government officers and councillors who wish to use social media sites to engage with local residents and other practitioners. We’ll never be able to take advantage of these tools and techniques if we can’t access them at work. Develop a model code of conduct (some already exist for the Civil Service and BBC) Promote the code and the open access message through awareness raising and a low-cost national campaign STOP BLOCKING Photo credit: glass window on Flickr

61 Research It’s early days for a lot of social media - we need a comprehensive review of the benefits, including a literature review of successes in the UK and elsewhere. Convince the doubters and ensure we’re going in the right direction Study, study, study by Pnoeric on Flickr

62 Acknowledgements Steve Dale: steve.dale@collabor8now.comsteve.dale@collabor8now.com David Wilcox: david@socialreporter.comdavid@socialreporter.com Ingrid Koehler: ingrid.koehler@idea.gov.ukingrid.koehler@idea.gov.uk Dave Briggs: dave.briggs@learningpool.comdave.briggs@learningpool.com


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