Monday, 29 August 2011

Public service renewal: the weekly round-up

Here's the usual round up of good stuff worth reading from last week. Enjoy!

Here at home:

International:

Social media

This post has been a collaborative effort from Lee-Anne Peluk and Nicholas Charney.You can check out Lee-Anne's blog "In the Shuffle" at www.leeannepeluk.wordpress.com





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Friday, 26 August 2011

Serving the Public like Jack Did



Sadly this week saw the passing of Jack Layton, leader of the official opposition and the New Democratic Party of Canada.



I learned of the news Monday morning via a text message from my wife on the commute into work. I immediately pulled the car over and saw the news breaking on Twitter. I managed to keep it together until the middle of the afternoon when I read Jack's letter to Canadians, at which point the flood gates opened.


The news cut closer to the bone than I had anticipated, and like many Canadians, regardless of politics, I had a deep respect for Jack and his lifelong commitment to serving Canadians.


As I sat back and raised a glass to Jack's life I thought what better way to honour his memory than to write about what public servants can learn from a man who dedicated his life to public service.





Inspire others



Often people are without hope, time wears them down, they become accustomed to how things are, forgetting how things could be. Bring them hope, bring them energy, and if nothing else inspire them to see that change is possible.





Build consensus



We let ourselves fall into traps and adversarial models of how things tend to be, but that is the low road, have the courage and determination to build consensus on a daily basis. Some days you may feel like you have barely moved the bar, but your determination will eventually lead you to gains that no one could have ever anticipated.





Don't let them tell you it can't be done



I can't count the amount of times I've been told that it can't be done, it may be the single biggest tragedy of public service. Don't listen to them, take a lesson from Jack, it can almost always be done. Finally when it can't, go down fighting because time will honour you.





Above all remember ...


Love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we’ll change the world. - Jack Layton






Originally published by Nick Charney at cpsrenewal.ca
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Monday, 22 August 2011

Public service renewal: the weekly round-up

August 15 – 19, 2011

Thought of the week: Your ideas are not obvious to other people. That’s why you need to share them.

Watch of the week: a WW2-era Disney cartoon, All Together Now. This historically avant-garde collaboration between the National Film Board of Canada and Walt Disney Studios aimed to get more Canadians to invest in war bonds. (And, truly, there’s just something about seeing the Disney gang march up and down in front of an animated version of the Canadian Parliament buildings. Priceless.)



Crowd sourcing:

Maybe I am behind the times, but this week I discovered a service called Servio, with an 80,000+ strong workforce where you can crowd source your content needs. Its software carves a given task into microscopically small pieces, and then farms it out to their community of workers, who get paid piecemeal to complete each section of the task.

So, what happens when a journalist crowd sources out background research? Is hiring a team of freelance reporters to research, report, and write a story on your behalf an ethical violation?



Social:



It may be trite to say, but laughing is good for you:



This post has been a collaborative effort from Lee-Anne Peluk and Nicholas Charney.You can check out Lee-Anne's blog "In the Shuffle" at www.leeannepeluk.wordpress.com





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Friday, 19 August 2011

This is why we can't have nice things (in government)

Last year I wrote about how enterprises could leverage tablet applications like Flipboard in order to change how senior leaders received and actioned their business intelligence.


After sitting on the idea for a year I established bureaucrati.ca as a foothold to try to help bring the app to market (note I'm pivoting on the role of the site, it will now be an outlet for creative writing).


Trying to get an app built meant hitting the streets and talking to a number of established mobile development companies and start ups, it also meant stumbling

on what I think is one of the core reasons why we can't have nice things in government.





As for the reason? Well it's painfully simple.



Plainly put, companies that make beautiful things don't consider enterprise solutions as a viable market. The CEOs I spoke with all cited four reasons why they have steered their businesses clear of enterprise solutions:


  1. they tend to require a bunch of integration work (work that is often different from organization to organization and rooted in its own technological evolution);
  2. integration work is difficult to scope in advance and thus hard to determine what would constitute an appropriate resource level (and thus the price of the contract);
  3. dealing with enterprises often entails hiring a sales guy to do the grunt work. The people I met with are skilled developers and shrewd business people, they don't want to be out shilling their wares; they want to build applications and services that are so beautiful and useful that they sell themselves.
  4. No one wants to invest any effort into the procurement process. If you aren't a big vendor you simply don't have the resources, expertise or established relationships to successfully navigate the world of procurement.


While many of us on the inside already know that there are procurement challenges (ever try to procure a Mac?) I find the fact that the innovators in the private sector feel as though the procurement process itself is so broken that they can easily afford to purposely ignore the entire public sector. In the midst of the establishment of a new Shared Services Canada, I can only hope that those at the helm take a good hard look at the details around how we procure IT resources, because it may just be one of the reasons why we can't have nice things in government.








Originally published by Nick Charney at cpsrenewal.ca
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Monday, 15 August 2011

Public service renewal: the weekly round-up

August 8 - 12, 2011

It’s Monday, folks. Here’s the weekly.



If you read one thing this week, it should be this post from the Snarky Optimist. It’s a thoughtful, well-written, and eye-opening response (in part) to my previous post: I would’ve eaten glass to get this job. I love a good dialogue, and Chelsea’s post illustrates that the story of contractors in the federal government is a complicated one, with many equally valid perspectives.

This week in cuts:



Social goodies:



Relationships and Cultural change



And let’s end with a laugh, shall we?





This post has been a collaborative effort from
Lee-Anne Peluk and Nicholas Charney
. You can check out Lee-Anne's blog "In the Shuffle" at www.leeannepeluk.wordpress.com