GovLoop - Social Network for Government


Today is a big day for GovLoop. I kind of feel like it is high school graduation. GovLoop has been my passion and my hobby for nearly 1.5 years. Now, I’ve found an exciting way to go full time with GovLoop so I can give this community the focus it deserves. I’ve linked up with an awesome small company called GovDelivery that works with hundreds of government entities at all levels of government in the U.S. and U.K.

By joining GovLoop and GovDelivery, I will be able to continue to lead GovLoop and will have more resources to support and improve the platform so the community can continue to grow.

I started GovLoop on Memorial Day 2008 with a simple idea – wouldn’t it be cool to have a place online where government innovators could connect and share best practices and ideas. And it wouldn’t matter if you are in DC, Alaska, or Paris. Wouldn’t matter if you are a fed or state or local; U.S., U.K., or Asia. Everyday I ran into a problem at my government agency that I knew someone in the government had dealt with and I was wondering why we weren’t connecting.

In just over a year, GovLoop grew from merely an idea to more than 18,000 members across all levels of government. During this growth, GovLoop was just a hobby. I had a 9 to 5 at DHS (with some amazingly supportive bosses) and GovLoop was my 5 to 9 (and weekends). People always asked how I had enough time to do both. The answer is I really didn’t. I spent countless hours in the coffee shop trying to keep pace with the growth which was at times overwhelming. My amazing lady had to deal with me obsessed on the computer nearly every waking moment outside of my job working on GovLoop. It just wasn't sustainable for the long-term and I needed to find a home and resources for GovLoop, a place to give it the care and feeding it needs, to be truly transformative in improving government

Everyday I would get countless questions from members or new opportunities around the world that were fascinating and needed responses. Some were mundane but important, “I can’t get X feature working on GovLoop. How do I do it?” Others were big strategic questions, “I’m from X agency and trying to implement a social network in my department. Do you have time to tell me how you did it?” These questions are important and essential, but my bandwidth was always small and I didn’t always have the time to respond.

And honestly, GovLoop isn’t about me. It’s about the community. And the community has kept GovLoop going. I’ve had an amazing group of GovLoop Community Leaders who’ve been the linchpin – welcoming new members, writing features like Members of the Week and Project of the Week, and letting me know when there are problems on the site. And there are thousands of members contributing every day – from writing a quick blog or commenting on a discussion to reaching out to a colleague with a question. I’ve met hundreds of members in person and honestly it is the best part of the whole process. I have a whole group of new friends through GovLoop – people like Andy Krzmarzick, Adriel Hampton, Steve Lunceford. I’ve also traveled from DC to Canada to Singapore because of GovLoop.

So I’m excited to announce that I’m going full-time on GovLoop as of this week. Social network leaders have told me 20,000 members is a tipping point and as I’ve been nearing that goal, I’ve known that GovLoop needs more resources. I’ve been trying to find a way to give GovLoop the resources it deserves and to ensure that it can continue to grow and continue to connect more people and more information to improve government. People always ask me, “What’s the future of GovLoop?” My answer is, “Everyday I hear 2-3 stories of how GovLoop connected government and helped solve a problem. I would love for that number to be 10-15 examples in one year and 30-40 in two years.” I think this move will allow GovLoop to reach those goals.

GovDelivery is a terrific partner in this arrangement. For those that don’t know, GovDelivery has done some amazing work helping improve government-to-citizen communication with a web-hosted (software as a service) solution for government at all levels. Government entities have used GovDelivery to send more than one billion messages already this year. They’re known for their emailing service, but in the last year, they’ve launched capabilities that allow cross-promotion of content between agencies, put out an impressive text messaging capability, launched widget and blogging capabilities, and won the Fed 100 award for their Social Media work. More importantly, they get me, get GovLoop, and get Gov 2.0. I’m a Midwest guy and have pretty simple honest Midwestern values and I think Scott Burns and the team at GovDelivery (based in Minnesota) does as well. They truly are good people who are passionate about public sector and are at the forefront of the changes around Gov 2.0 (c’mon – we met at Gov 2.0 Camp).

So the question is always...what does that really mean for GovLoop. Honestly, it will take a little time to figure it all out but here are some initial areas of focus for me:

* I’ll continue as President, Founder, and all-around Community Leader of GovLoop
* I’ll continue to be speaking and evangelizing about the power of Gov 2.0, community, social networks, and social media in government
* I will be more responsive (Craig Newmark-style) in responding to the questions and concerns of the community
* Planning to launch more features and resources
* Planning to launch more GovLoop Meetups in local areas
* Assembling an advisory board made up of key members of the community so we have as much guidance and input as possible on how to improve
* Promoting giving back as part of the GovLoop mission and the mission of the community to build on the great work already done by the GovLoop Kiva group that has given thousands of dollars to micro-loans
* Ensuring a foundation for GovLoop. It will be around for a long-time and you don’t have to worry about it going away
* Working on ways to leverage GovDelivery’s reach and technology to promote and improve GovLoop


I’m third-generation public servant and public service is in my blood. My father and step-mother worked at IRS. My step-sister works for EPA and step-brother at VA. My sister, mother, and girlfriend are teachers and my grandfather worked for the Postal Service. I believe the public sector is tackling the most important issues facing the world from environment to health care to security and we need to ensure that we keep the great talent we already have and recruit the best and the brightest.

I’m committed to public service and it’s at the heart of the mission of GovLoop – to connect government to improve government. As GovLoop grows, I promise to stay committed to that mission and work hard to continue to connect and share that wisdom to ensure that we have a truly great government.

As always, feel free to reach out to me if you have any questions or concerns (or send thanks to my patient girlfriend). I’m always happy to help out as well if you are working on a Gov 2.0 initiative in an agency and want to pick my brain or get thoughts based on my experience with GovLoop.

I'll be hosting an online chat at GovLoop tomorrow from 10-11am EST. I'd love to hear your feedback, ideas for the future of GovLoop, and any questions or concerns. I'll be there to listen, learn, and share.

Steve Ressler
@govloop
founder@govloop.com

Views: 7

Tags: 2, communications, jobs, tech

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Comment by William H. Devereaux, III on October 1, 2009 at 10:04am
I need to take on your fervancy. I haven't been able to connect thru my City of Los Angeles network, until today. But I definitely want to learn all I can while my city battles the economic problems we have and the furlough days they are pushing us into. How's everyone else dealing with furlough days in the Government at all the varius levels (Federal, State, County, City)?
Comment by linda perry on October 1, 2009 at 9:20am
Potomactechwitre reported that the community had been sold for money. JUst another loser trying to get rich from semi-private conversations.
Comment by Richard Truex on September 30, 2009 at 11:49am
Congratulations Steve....this is a great resource!
Comment by Jeffrey Levy on September 29, 2009 at 11:57pm
Congrats, Steve. Looks like no one has any reservations, which I take as a testament to your credibility with this community! I look forward to seeing you continue to grow GovLoop as a place govies and those interested in gov't can work together to solve problems!
Comment by Maxine Teller on September 29, 2009 at 6:21pm
Beautiful candor, transparency, passion, commitment. I am so excited to see two wonderful Gov 2.0+ orgs (& leaders) coming together to dive even deeper into practicing the community and better government that you preach. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Big congrats. xoxo
Comment by Tom Crowley on September 29, 2009 at 12:56pm
Congratulations on your success and "retirement" Steve. I did the same about 14 months ago with TSP Talk, so I know just how you feel. It's a little scary, but very exciting.

I still have our first exchange from back in Jan 08, when govloop was still an idea, and you wanted to pick my brain. You've come a long way.

Congrats and good luck!
Tom Crowley
TSP Talk
Comment by MedTech_CC on September 29, 2009 at 10:15am
Steve,

Great news. Let us fellow networkers know how we can help/support your efforts going forward. Here is a much smaller, medical niche effort that may be of some value going forward, MedTech-IQ, http://medtechiq.ning.com/. Continue trailblazing!
Comment by Jeffrey E. Turner on September 29, 2009 at 9:05am
Congratulations! Our team's experience with GovDelivery has been excellent. I'm sure they'll be a strong partner for you as well.
Comment by Sarah Ressler Wright on September 28, 2009 at 10:46pm
Steve,
I'm proud of you not only as your "public-servant-school-teacher sister" (thanks for the shout-out), but because you are embodying 21st century American awesomeness and have a great writing voice that I'm trying to develop in my seniors (we'll talk comma usage later)! I'm currently searching for the proper CEO t-shirt-made with environmentally friendly bamboo of course- that you can wear to 'work.'
Love you bro-Sarah
Comment by Austin Wheelock on September 28, 2009 at 10:29pm
Steve - Woot! Very happy to hear the great news! Time to expand and grow, eh?
Austin

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