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Where does government social media stand in 2014? – Plus the 7 DorobekINSIDER Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

You can find all of our programs online: DorobekINSIDER.com and GovLoop Insights at http://insights.govloop.com.

But up front: Where does government social media stand in 2014? Seeking your insights

We have been talking about “social media” — or Gov 2.0 — whatever your term of choice… We’ve been talking (and doing) this stuff for awhile now. And in so many ways, we’ve come a long way. But how has the world changed? And how is social media helping government accomplish it’s mission?

I will be moderating a panel on January 22 at the AFCEA Bethesda breakfast with an great group of feds who have been out there working on these challenges for awhile now:

During a pre-call this week, we discussed our top level question — how have things changed? What are agencies doing now to use these tools? Do they still matter? If so, how? And while these tools have been focused on outbound communication, how are agencies leveraging these tools focusing on their mission?

And, given that the audience will be many government contractors, I’m always curious about what this will mean to how they do their work. (I noted in FCW that GSA’s OASIS contract has created its own social network — called Interact and found at https://interact.gsa.gov )

Some of the other questions:

Some pre-reading that I’m doing:

What else should we discuss?

The SEVEN stories that impact your life

  1. Federal News Radio: Post conference scandals, agencies struggle to find balance: “Senate lawmakers are concerned with how to ensure agencies don’t slide back into old habits of lavish spending on conferences.”
    1. Read testimony or see the hearing from the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee
  2. Politico: Jim Moran, who has been a force on government issues, to announce retirement. “Virginia Democratic Rep. Jim Moran will retire after 23 years in the House, according to multiple Democratic sources.”
  3. WSJ: GAO Report: DOE Misclassified Supercomputer Investments. “The Department of Energy said the $368 million it spent on supercomputers isn’t really an IT investment and removed them from the Federal IT Dashboard, a website designed to improve transparency of government IT investments.”
  4. DefenseOne: Cyber Command Budget More Than Doubles: “The House approved a fiscal 2014 spending package that includes $447 million for U.S. Cyber Command — more than double last year’s budget.”
  5. Federal Times: GSA launches social network for GWACs: “Tired of Facebook and Twitter? Ready for a new player on the social media scene? The General Services Administration is creating a social network centered on two of its governmentwide acquisition contracts.”
  6. Federal Times: White House to Detail Security Reforms. “On Friday, President Barack Obama is expected to detail plans for reforming the National Security Agency. The announcement comes nearly a month after a review panel recommended overhauling NSA’s data collection program and enforcing better defenses against insider attacks.”
  7. Federal News Radio: The House has dealt a victory to the Office of Personnel Management’s watchdog. It has passed a bill letting the inspector general access more money for investigations and audits, particularly of the services that OPM provides to other agencies.”

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

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