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DorobekINSIDER: Does the insurgent approach to government innovation work?

Hey there. I’m Christopher Dorobek — the DorobekINSIDER — and welcome GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER… where we focus on six words: Helping government do its job better.

On GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER:

But up front:

Does the insurgent approach to government innovation work?

Change in government can be complex and difficult. We all get that. Frankly, change in large organizations is difficult — and government organizations tend to be large.

I was thrilled to participate in a session that I have billed as a Government Innovators Support Group. It was a remarkable group of people doing remarkable things. The session was ‘off the record,’ so I’m not even going to share their jobs at the risk of disrupting this kind of group getting together and sharing their thoughts and experiences. The evening seemed absolutely invaluable to me.

There was a general theme of the salon dinner: The challenge of being a government innovator. Interestingly, many of these government innovators described themselves as “insurgents” — innovation insurgents, if you will.

The evening spurred me to thinking: What is the best way to bring about change?

There was a certain frustration among these government innovators — many of them younger… certainly within the first half of their career. The government is slow to change, even in areas where there are known problems… there is a somewhat inexplicable aversion to any risk whatsoever — especially in an environment where it is difficult (at best) to get rid of under-performers…

There was a frustration with phrases like ‘that’s not the way we do business in government’ and a seeming over reliance on doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

How do you bring about innovation? During the dinner conversation, there seemed to be consensus that disrupting technologies were helping drive change.

Even in the most innovative, agile organizations, change is difficult, and it is particularly difficult in government. Technology helps… and reduced budgets can force changes that just wouldn’t happen otherwise.

I’m not sure an insurgent approach works in large, bureaucratic organizations.

In fact, I pressed some of these innovators to have an appreciation of what has come before. Many government organizations are the best in the world at what they do. The Centers for Disease Control is a model for many countries… the U.S. military is an amazingly lethal force…

The argument of government innovators is that many organizations have been amazing and remarkable, but times are changing exceedingly quickly and the truly remarkable organizations for the 21st Century are the ones that will be agile and evolve to these rapidly changing times. (See link below about the U.S. Postal Service to see what can happen if organizations don’t/are not allowed to change and innovate.)

So the challenge is to demonstrate that we don’t have to keep doing the same thing over and over again — we can do things in a different way… and to ‘build a better mousetrap.’

These days there are remarkable people helping each other to innovate — these kinds of gatherings are terribly valuable, it seems.

Related from the Harvard Business Review: To Innovate in a Big Company, Don’t Think “Us Against Them”

“This seems like pie-in-the-sky wishful thinking. Have you actually seen this done?”  I often hear this question when I visit companies and speak about how to make an innovative idea less terrifying to high level executives. The skepticism is warranted. There are plenty of pundits arguing that big companies need to innovate, and pointing out that it is difficult to do so. Far less often do we hear how it really comes together, especially inside a large organization.  But it does happen.”

The DorobekINSIDER #MustRead list:

DorobekINSIDER water cooler fodder

Before we finish up… a few items from the DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder… yes, we’re trying to help you make your water-cooler time better too…

http://www.slideshare.net/OECD-GOV/oecd-recommendation-on-digital-government-strategies


Three Steps to Becoming a Strategic CIO [The Wall Street Journal] Step One: Engage. You don’t need to be a chief strategy officer “to recognize the value of engaging the rest of the organization,” Guest Contributor Peter High writes. CIOs aiming to play a more strategic role in the organization must meet early and often with the heads of other business units.

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