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Meet the gov guru who reinvented websites #engagement – Plus your weekend reads

Martha Dorris has been a driving force behind the use of technology to help citizens more easily and quickly obtain government services and information, whether the contact comes through a website, email, telephone call or social media.

At GSA, she created the agency’s two federal Web platforms — USA.gov and its Spanish-language counterpart, GobiernoUSA.gov. In fiscal 2012 alone, 50 million visitors clicked on those two websites. An impressive feat!

Dorris is the deputy associate administrator for citizen services at the General Services Administration (GSA). She has been nominated for the Service to America Medals from the Partnership for Public Service.

Dorris told Chris Dorobek on the DorobekINSIDER program that USA.gov is so important because the public deserves to have an experience interacting with government that is easy, accurate and timely.

“The Digital Government Strategy says data should be available anytime, anywhere on any device. I think it is important that the public is able to interact with government in anyway they want,” said Dorris.

Why engagement?

“When the public comes to government it is usually at a time in their lives when things are not that great. They’re paying taxes, preparing for a disaster, trying to get benefits. At those moments they are already in a fragile state, so we as the government need to make accessing those services as easy as possible,” said Dorris.

Office of barrier breakers

“Part of our office is set up to breakdown barriers so other agencies can improve their service delivery. We are always trying to keep up on what is changing in the technology and tools world. Understanding your customer helps to drive the technology you will need at your agency,” said Dorris.

Agile development

“The pace of technological development will never slow down. So the key is to try things in small ways and then capture the benefits, that way you can scale the programs that work,” said Dorris.

Know the audience

“If you are dealing the Social Security Administration, you are dealing with an entire different generation than someone applying for federal student aide. You have to push your engagements differently,” said Dorris. “You need to look at who your audience is, what they are trying to accomplish and what they are expecting from government.”

How USA.gov works

Biggest hurdles to citizen engagement?

“It is my job to create a culture that cultivates innovation. Part of that is never being satisfied. I always want to be better, faster, more efficient. My whole team thinks like that,” said Dorris.

You can find all our Sammies interviews here.

Weekend Reads:

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