Here are key elements of network competency that can help your agency achieve success.
Element 1: Building network value—Why is your agency building networks?
The starting point for any network implementation should always be to have a clear and concrete understanding of why agency time, resources and energy are being spent to enable network behaviors. And the answer should be deeper than mere compliance with the Open Government Directive (OGD). What do we hope to accomplish? What are the expected outputs of network activity?
Network implementation serves two primary purposes in government. First, networks build an information asset. Second, networks of citizens and employees can enable continuous improvement of governmental processes.
The first value objective, building an information asset, is important for several reasons. First, information assets provide real time intelligence on citizen preferences. Second, citizen networks can provide problem recognition and cost avoidance. And third, networks can provide institutional memory that enables education of new stakeholders and government employees. As staff and elected officials change, public issues remain largely the same.
The second value objective, enabling continuous improvement is true for both policy and process. What solution possibilities exist that we may not have otherwise discovered? The Better Buy project, led by Mary Davie and others, is just such a process.
Element 2: Success Factors: Organizational Investment
Effective implementation of Gov 2.0 only occurs with an acute understanding of the organizational investment necessary for desired outcomes. Key success factors include:
Element 3: Network Conditions that Incentivize Citizen Involvement.
Citizen, employee and stakeholder participation in agency-sponsored networks is directly dependent upon behavioral conditions created for each network. Conditions are not mutually exclusive. Examples include:
Think of these conditions as creating a kaleidoscope of network possibilities with many permutations or combinations, each combination resulting in a different outcome. Technology supports and enables conditions to occur. But it is the conditions created that either encourage or discourage citizen and member participation.
Element 4: Building member value–the individual.
The final element is perhaps the most important—creating member value for the individual citizen, employee, and stakeholder. How do citizens derive value from their network interactions, and what would motivate them to contribute value? There are 3 individual drivers:
Thoughtful Use of the Integrated Business Framework™
Thoughtfully leveraging networks is important to agency success. Getting the most out of networks means far more than building data transparency. It rarely will mean building collaborative crowd sourcing for thousands or millions of citizens. It will often mean respecting citizen privacy and minimizing social fear through the use of public comment—providing citizens with a method for independent discrete input.
But being thoughtful will always require understanding the four elements of the Integrated Business Framework for Network Competency™:
Comment
Comment by Joe Boutte on February 23, 2010 at 7:47pm
Comment by Kim Patrick Kobza on February 21, 2010 at 10:14am
Comment by Adriel Hampton on February 21, 2010 at 1:13am
Comment by Keith Moore on February 20, 2010 at 10:32pm
Comment by steve davies on February 20, 2010 at 10:03pm
Comment by Joe Boutte on February 19, 2010 at 5:37pm
Comment by John Moore on February 17, 2010 at 5:19pm
Comment by AJ Malik on February 17, 2010 at 11:24am 
Comment by MIchelle Lyons on February 17, 2010 at 8:59am
Comment by GovLoop on February 17, 2010 at 8:10am © 2012 Created by GovLoop.
GovLoop is the "Knowledge Network for Government" - the premier social network connecting over 50,000 federal, state, and local government innovators.
A great resource to connect with peers, share best practices, and find career-building opportunities.
You need to be a member of GovLoop - Social Network for Government to add comments!
Join GovLoop - Social Network for Government