GovLoop

Defending America with Sticky Notes

The story of defending America with sticky notes, or why government needs a generation of young innovators to spread design thinking, tells the story of a small group of young govies who set out to bring innovative ideas and creative processes to the Pentagon. They failed, they learned, but now, they are succeeding as change agents.

At Tuesday’s Next Generation of Government Training Summit, Joshua Marcuse shared his story of how sticky notes helped him become a change agent in government. Marcuse is the Senior Adviser for Policy Innovation in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. He works on leadership development and learning, organizational change, and policy innovation.

At his keynote session, Marcuse described a typical meeting in any government office- the leader is at the head of the table telling everyone what he thinks. People have prepared dates and project updates for the meeting. Several meetings were conducted before this meeting. You tune out because the subject of the meeting has already been discussed before, and you’re clearly not given permission to talk.

Marcuse says this is not the future of government. Instead, the future is the sticky note. The virtues of the sticky note can help innovate and address status quo and inefficient processes in any government workplace. The sticky note took 12 years to develop and is now one of the most profitable products. In comparison to email, this little piece of paper is extremely powerful.

“You can only fit about 10 words on it, so you have to be succinct,” Marcuse said. “Unlike PowerPoint, they’re meant to be moved around. If I want to reorganize my ideas, I can put them on the board in different ways.”

Marcuse emphasized the flexibility of the sticky notes in enabling the user to combine ideas in nonlinear ways. Sticky notes also have a democratizing effect since they can be written anonymously. “It’s the ideas that matter, not who wrote them,” he said. “Ideas need to compete with other ideas based on merit. These ideas lead to better diversity and better decisions.”

Marcuse described the five qualities of the sticky notes:

 

From July 20th – 21st we’ll be blogging from GovLoop and YGL’s Next Generation of Government Training Summit. Follow along @NextGenGov and read more blog posts here.

 

Photo Credit: Flickr/Sarah Joy

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