The Case for Data Literacy
With or without data backgrounds, all employees can possess a basis of assessing the appropriateness of data methodologies, outputs and contexts in their line of work. When they do, they create a data-driven organization.
With or without data backgrounds, all employees can possess a basis of assessing the appropriateness of data methodologies, outputs and contexts in their line of work. When they do, they create a data-driven organization.
The city of Dubuque, Iowa, used GIS technology to expand equitable broadband access.
Nearly 70% of the U.S. population experiences imposter syndrome, and that energy can either fuel or cripple you.
Here’s what the Colorado Digital Service learned from using human-centered design to guide COVID-19 response efforts.
Here are four ways agencies at any level can improve the quality of the data used in making their decisions.
Here’s how an Orange County court built its first data warehouse and became a blueprint for the state of California.
Government users and service providers share the feeling that if we can figure out how to make something simple once, we can do it again, for all types of services. Self-service is a good first step.
Problem-solving often looks at what we could do more. Instead, what if we focused on what we could do less with subtractive insight?
Every few years, after a long and often tedious process, government agencies create new and much-heralded strategic plans — but, too often, new approaches stall because stakeholders don’t buy in. Here are three ways to change that.
Here are five suggestions for developing emotional, informational, tangible and belonging social support work environments.