With the recent news that several major Open Government efforts including USASpending.gov, Data.gov, and FedSpace may be shut down due to budget cuts and that the Pentagon has disbanded their social media office, many people in the #gov20 community started wondering if their social media, Gov 2.0 and Open Government programs might be next. People rushed to their dashboards to develop PowerPoint slides that illustrated the impact that their social media and open government efforts.
- “We have 5,000 Facebook fans – an increase of 143% over last year!!”
- “Our retweet % has increased by 45% since last month!”
- “Half of our web traffic results from click-throughs on our Twitter posts!”
- “Our Open Government site is one of the Top 5 most popular open government sites!”
- “Our datasets have been downloaded more than 1,000 times this month!”
Here’s the thing – if you’re only using metrics like these, you’re probably next on the chopping block. While they may be impressive to you and to others in the #gov20 community, this approach only marginalizes the impact of open government, making it something that’s a nice-to-have instead of a must-have. Guess which one gets the money when budgets are tight? Social media and open government will only be successful over the long-term if and when it becomes integrated with larger organizational efforts.
The problem is that most open government initiatives have been stood up and led by separate teams – the social media office, the New Media Director, the Open Government Team – rather than by existing functions within the enterprise. This makes open government and/or social media a separate line item in the budget – something that can literally be crossed off on the balance sheet when budgets are tight.
Instead of bragging about having the best blog, open dataset, Facebook page, or Twitter account, try pointing to the impact you’ve had on other people’s ability to do their job. Five thousand Twitter followers don’t mean a whole lot to senior leadership, especially when they don’t even know what Twitter is. However, if the customer service department can point to a 20% increase in customer satisfaction because they’ve integrated Twitter into their processes, simply cutting “social media” becomes less of an option. Instead of pointing to how many times your open datasets have been downloaded, try showing how the number of FOIA requests your organization has received has declined because the data are now freely available.
If you want to ensure the long-term viability of your open government and social media efforts, you have to demonstrate the impact you’ve had on other areas of the organization and how you’ve saved them money and/or improved their performance. Cutting an “Open Government Team” is pretty easy if that’s the only reason for its existence. However, what if:
- the FOIA team stepped up and said that if the the Open Government Team were cut, their budget would have to increase to handle the corresponding increase in FOIA requests;
- the customer service team says that customer satisfaction has increased because they’re using the social media channels established by the Open Government Team;
- the public affairs department can point to a 20% decrease in negative press because they’re using Twitter to engage proactively with the media;
- that recruiting says that the number of recruits has increased by 22% since they started using Facebook;
To insulate your Open Government efforts, stop talking about Open Government and start talking about how your efforts have positively impacted other areas of your organization. Integrate your open government efforts into other parts of your organization instead of building your open government empire. It’s a lot easier to cut something that’s contained within one team than something that’s pervasive throughout the organization.
Excellent post, Steve!
Got any examples of agencies using this approach? We need to hear the success stories!
Andy – I like what some of the DoD Services have done as far as integrating it into the core public affairs, recruiting, and morale missions. I’m also a fan of Intellipedia, A-space, and the other tools available on Intelink and how many organizations within the IC (if not entire agencies yet) have tried to bake collaboration into the world of intelligence analysis. It’s not perfect and faces many of the same hurdles that we all do in connecting this stuff directly to the mission, but you can see the integration happening in pockets. I’m sure there are a bunch more out there that I’m not thinking of right now – would love to hear more stories about this!
Great Information. I will share this with my staff…and colleagues.