Friday, February 19, 2016
What comes after digital transformation for government? | Tweet |
There's a lot of buzz across governments in Australia at the moment about 'digital transformation'.
What this commonly refers to is taking current government services and systems and redeveloping them as digital solutions based on Agile and Lean approaches, principles and methodologies to make them far easier to use and manage.
Users are placed at the centre of the experience and extensive evidence is collected and used to direct development, rather than the whims and beliefs of 'Highly Important People' - the decision-makers and developers themselves, who are rarely the actual end users.
But let's speak frankly - the need for digital transformation means that government has failed.
Transformation of any form becomes necessary when individuals or organisations have not evolved as their environments evolved.
These organisations have been left behind by changes in technology, social culture and thinking, stuck in a past age due to internal factors such as their culture, structural rigidity, leadership beliefs and lack of resources. External factors such as the legislative frameworks they're required to follow, or their local environment (like ancient species who survive in one small precarious niche) can also have held them to a specific form or slowed their speed of adaptation.
No-one today talks about Google having to digitally (or otherwise) transform, or even organisations like Microsoft (who has faced transformation in the past - particularly in their internet pivot fostered by Bill Gates).
These organisations have designed their cultures and systems around evolution, meaning they can constantly reinvent themselves as technology and social expectations change, avoiding the need to make rapid and painful transformations.
So taking digital transformation as a painful and rapid process fostered from failure, what happens once government has digitally transformed?
There's four primary outcomes I see: failure, reversion, stasis and evolution.
Failure is self-explanatory. The digital transformation fails (due to internal resistance or external strictures) and government tosses out the concept as unworkable. This isn't really likely given the enthusiasm and passion of the people working in government to make it happen.
In the reversion case, which I have personally witnessed in government a number of times, the digital transformation occurs to a greater or lessor degree, led by talented and passionate people. Then those people begin to disperse onto other things, leaving behind a group of individuals who prefer to maintain and support rather than innovate and reinvent.
These individuals don't have the passion or charisma to 'maintain the rage' for the transformed approaches and gradually, as external and internal demands mount and political 'realities' creep in, the transformation work stops and slides backwards.
Come back a few years later and the digital transformation spirit is all gone, with many agencies having reverted to 'how they've always done things'. Innovation remains illusive and digital transformation is regarded as a fad that has now passed.
This can particularly occur where organisations are well-insulated from competition or outside pressures (such as competing for staff or resources).
It's the worst case in my view, as not only the fruits of digital transformation are lost, but the process is seen as a failure, leaving governments less inclined to fund future attempts to turn the ship of state onto a new course. Citizens are left frustrated and minimising their engagement with government - unable to express their will electorally, as no elected party can really promise they'd be better at making the necessary changes.
In the third case, stasis, again the digital transformation is successful to a lessor or greater degree. Then, as people move on or burn out, again their places are taken by people with less enthusiasm or experience in the process.
While the gains of the digital transformation mean that these changes stick, permanently shifting how government operates, agencies see their job as done. They've digitally transformed - project finished. With few people left to drive the process, the culture of transformation doesn't stick on the rest of the public service, who continue to maintain their current cultures, which are largely conservative and resistance to ongoing change.
Funds get shifted into other areas, or to maintaining completed transformation work. Innovation and transformation still occurs, but it is pushed out of the limelight by new priorities and gradually recedes back into the corners of organisations (where it started) where it doesn't cause significant disruption or risk.
Over a few years the pace slows to a crawl, government continues to function but loses its capability to evolve at the rate of the market and community. The culture, while maybe more open to innovation, largely remains the same as before the 'digital transformation project' began.
Five or ten years later, suddenly government finds itself well behind in meeting citizen needs and using modern technology and has to consider a new transformation process to get back on track.
In my view this is the most likely case - it's hard to make sustained changes to the culture of large organisations (such as the public service) without a concerted long-term effort and complete alignment of leadership.
It's easier for most people to think of digital transformation as just another project rather than a process and as having a fixed end point when agencies will have digitally transformed, rather than reworking their structures, funding models, legislative frameworks and embedding performance indicators that favour ongoing evolutionary change.
This scenario has been repeated periodically in government over the years with a succession of major change programs.
While government may regard this scenario as a success as 'outcomes of the project were met', it is essentially a failure. While short-term changes occurred, the nature of the agencies themselves fundamentally hasn't, leaving them unable or unwilling to continue evolving in order to avoid the need for any future transformational projects.
Essentially in this scenario government is simply chasing its tail, institutionalising its failure to evolve as a series of costly transformational projects that can be more disruptive and damaging in the long-term.
The last scenario, my preferred one, involves evolution.
In this case government not only is successful in meeting the objectives of its digital transformation, but also removes the need for any future transformational projects by reinventing its own structures, cultures and frameworks to bake evolution into the genes of agencies.
Agencies no longer follow a 'wait until it breaks' approach to services, systems and policies, but institutionalise evolution, constantly observing the market and citizens, embedding evidence-based testing and iteration into every policy, program, service and IT approach, and constantly evolve themselves to remain up-to-date with community needs and expectations.
This scenario is a true transformation - not only of government services, but of government culture at every level. It renders future transformation unnecessary and removes the constant attempts agencies make at rearranging deck chairs or spending huge sums on failed projects that characterises today's public service.
If you're going to invest in transforming government then invest in transforming government, not just playing around the edges as a project that is repeated again and again over time.
Government needs to move the needle permanently, not simply rev the engine a few times - transform into an evolutionary organisation that is closely attuned to community needs, rather than a sloth capable of short bursts of speed to catch up with the tail-end of the crowd.
I salute the work of everyone currently involved in transforming government - digital or otherwise - to be more agile, lean and evolutionary.
As you work consider what you want your legacy to be - a moment in the sun or a lasting transformation.
No one person can do this alone.
However if we all share the same long-term vision of what comes after digital transformation for government - a new evolutionary state where agencies and the public service can self-manage their ongoing adaptations and growth to meet community needs, without periodic injections of a 'transformation project' - we might just be able to shift the needle a little further in the right direction and avoid repeating the past in an endless cycle.
Tags:
community,
digital,
gov2au,
transformation
Monday, February 15, 2016
How can we benchmark and judge whether government decision-making is improving, or getting worse? | Tweet |
I've had an interesting day today, with a number of meetings with different businesses to discuss various projects and activities they're undertaking that are affected to a significant extent by government decisions.
In three of those meetings business people, from vastly different businesses, told me about recent decisions by government agencies that had made their work more expensive and difficult - in all cases without any consultation as to the business impacts and from a public sector perspective that appeared to lack any understanding of commercial requirements.
From my perspective, as someone who often champions the public sector as hard working, diligent and committed to good public outcomes, it was disappointing to hear a similar story echoed by three different businesses in different economic sectors, dealing with different agencies in different circumstances, but with one common theme.
A lack of consultation.
In all three cases the businesses were financially out-of-pocket due to poorly considered government decisions adding unnecessary red tape, stress and repetition over systems that had been working relatively well.
In all three cases the imposition of new requirements was made at a public service level by senior bureaucrats without commercial experience who did not seek to consult with potentially affected businesses to assay the impact of the changes they implemented.
I've spoken previously about how in my former role leading Delib Australia we found that, compared to Canada, the US and the UK, red tape in Australia added about 40% to the operating costs of our business - this is excluding business costs such as wages, products, systems and marketing.
I've previously spoken with business people who have found that Australian governments impose poorly considered, even contradictory, requirements on their operations, making their work unnecessarily complex.
However to have three businesses in one day, all 20-year veterans in their industries, detail to me exactly why the decisions by agencies in their sectors were flawed, how they hurt the end consumers of products and services, how they added cost and complexity to businesses and how they actually hurt the government's own ability to access the best talent and services, was a new low for me.
I believe that a key metric in government over time should be that the decisions made at both political and public service levels should lead to improved outcomes for citizens, less overhead via red tape on businesses and more cost-effective sourcing of services for governments.
This of course must take into account the competing values and needs and maintain a safety net underneath individuals to ensure they are able to bounce back as productive members of society after unpredictable calamities or inappropriate conduct by others.
To measure this metric governments need to benchmark what people think of the decisions that affect them now and then be both regularly consulted as to whether actual and proposed changes will improve outcomes rather than stifling innovation, employment and growth.
This starts and ends with consultation - finding out what people think now about a particular regulatory or legislative regime, inviting their views into any discussion as to changes and asking them after a change is implemented to verify that it has had the intended impact.
From my conversations today the impression I had was that government was simply a black box, spitting out red tape and changing its rules and approaches whenever someone internal felt the need. No consultation was being undertaken with the companies or end consumers (citizens) affected, and these decisions were based on blind assumptions made by career public servants - assumptions that could have been rapidly tested and verified or dismissed.
No matter what government does or doesn't do, agencies won't easily, quickly and largely painlessly get the setting right without extensive consultation with the right groups throughout our society.
There's wisdom out there in the community. If governments and public servants don't tap into it and damage the fabric of a community, employment opportunities or add unnecessary cost onto their own procurement processes, there's no-one to blame but them.
Sure agencies can argue it is expensive and time-consuming to consult, but it is far costlier to the overall nation to avoid consultation and make unnecessary and costly mistakes.
The three businesses I spoke to all laughed off the absurdity and stupidity of the agency decisions that had affected them. They didn't expect government to be able to do better and saw it simply a lumbering dinosaur whose feet they had to avoid.
Governments can do much better than this. Pubic services can do much better than this. All it takes is a shift in the culture of internal expertise to recognise that consulting can provide perspectives and a deeper understanding of situations than any career public policy professional ever can.
In three of those meetings business people, from vastly different businesses, told me about recent decisions by government agencies that had made their work more expensive and difficult - in all cases without any consultation as to the business impacts and from a public sector perspective that appeared to lack any understanding of commercial requirements.
From my perspective, as someone who often champions the public sector as hard working, diligent and committed to good public outcomes, it was disappointing to hear a similar story echoed by three different businesses in different economic sectors, dealing with different agencies in different circumstances, but with one common theme.
A lack of consultation.
In all three cases the businesses were financially out-of-pocket due to poorly considered government decisions adding unnecessary red tape, stress and repetition over systems that had been working relatively well.
In all three cases the imposition of new requirements was made at a public service level by senior bureaucrats without commercial experience who did not seek to consult with potentially affected businesses to assay the impact of the changes they implemented.
I've spoken previously about how in my former role leading Delib Australia we found that, compared to Canada, the US and the UK, red tape in Australia added about 40% to the operating costs of our business - this is excluding business costs such as wages, products, systems and marketing.
I've previously spoken with business people who have found that Australian governments impose poorly considered, even contradictory, requirements on their operations, making their work unnecessarily complex.
However to have three businesses in one day, all 20-year veterans in their industries, detail to me exactly why the decisions by agencies in their sectors were flawed, how they hurt the end consumers of products and services, how they added cost and complexity to businesses and how they actually hurt the government's own ability to access the best talent and services, was a new low for me.
I believe that a key metric in government over time should be that the decisions made at both political and public service levels should lead to improved outcomes for citizens, less overhead via red tape on businesses and more cost-effective sourcing of services for governments.
This of course must take into account the competing values and needs and maintain a safety net underneath individuals to ensure they are able to bounce back as productive members of society after unpredictable calamities or inappropriate conduct by others.
To measure this metric governments need to benchmark what people think of the decisions that affect them now and then be both regularly consulted as to whether actual and proposed changes will improve outcomes rather than stifling innovation, employment and growth.
This starts and ends with consultation - finding out what people think now about a particular regulatory or legislative regime, inviting their views into any discussion as to changes and asking them after a change is implemented to verify that it has had the intended impact.
From my conversations today the impression I had was that government was simply a black box, spitting out red tape and changing its rules and approaches whenever someone internal felt the need. No consultation was being undertaken with the companies or end consumers (citizens) affected, and these decisions were based on blind assumptions made by career public servants - assumptions that could have been rapidly tested and verified or dismissed.
No matter what government does or doesn't do, agencies won't easily, quickly and largely painlessly get the setting right without extensive consultation with the right groups throughout our society.
There's wisdom out there in the community. If governments and public servants don't tap into it and damage the fabric of a community, employment opportunities or add unnecessary cost onto their own procurement processes, there's no-one to blame but them.
Sure agencies can argue it is expensive and time-consuming to consult, but it is far costlier to the overall nation to avoid consultation and make unnecessary and costly mistakes.
The three businesses I spoke to all laughed off the absurdity and stupidity of the agency decisions that had affected them. They didn't expect government to be able to do better and saw it simply a lumbering dinosaur whose feet they had to avoid.
Governments can do much better than this. Pubic services can do much better than this. All it takes is a shift in the culture of internal expertise to recognise that consulting can provide perspectives and a deeper understanding of situations than any career public policy professional ever can.
Tags:
communication,
community,
consultation,
gov2au
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Open government doesn't just happen - contribute now to Australia's Open Government Partnership National Action Plan | Tweet |
Open government means different things to different people, and in Australia, where our government is already quite open, it's sometimes not considered such a priority.
However alongside our open data, public consultations, freedom of information laws and transparent voting systems, there's still many areas where the Australian government could lift its openness and improve public confidence and involvement in our democracy.
Right now Australia is engaged in developing its first ever National Action Plan for open government, part of the process to become a full member of the Open Government Partnership and a step that aims to strengthen our democracy in the eyes of Australians and the world.
There's benefits in the process for everyone in Australia.
For the community there's the potential to improve the inclusiveness and transparency of decision-making - leading to better outcomes for individuals and groups, supporting both Australia's 'fair go' culture and our lifestyle choices, ranging from health and education to workplace safety and career decisions.
For businesses greater government openness can provide a more level playing field for government contracts and access to important population data that can influence commercial decisions. There's opportunities for enterprises to use open data to extend their services and products, or even to build new businesses.
For government agencies there's also benefits. Being able to see what other agencies are doing, researching and the data they hold with less bureaucratic friction helps accelerate and improve policy development and support more nuanced responses to complex challenges. There can be greater capability to identify and address illegal or corrupt behaviour and to work with non-government organisations to design solutions that address both political needs and community needs.
However despite these and other benefits, open government doesn't just happen by itself, it takes concerted thought and effort by individuals and groups, and a willingness on the part of government to move the needle forward on transparency.
Right now Australians have an opportunity to move this needle.
The National Action Plan being led from the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet offers a significant opportunity to suggest and discuss the priority actions that could be undertaken in Australia, by the government alone or with the participation of civil society and the community, to further enhance our government openness and transparency.
Feel free to approach this opportunity with optimism or skepticism - there's good reasons for both perspectives depending on your past experience with government in Australia.
However, don't discount or overlook this opportunity.
People who claim to support more open government in Australia but fail to engage are only demonstrating that they don't back their own views with action. It's easy to trash talk government, it's harder to actually formulate sound and achievable options that can lead to action and change.
So if you've ever complained about government's lack of transparency during a consultancy or decision-making process, found it difficult or impossible to source useful or important information from an agency or feel that any part of Australian government has acted in a self-serving or corrupt manner on a particular topic - contribute to this process positively.
There's a range of ways to contribute, but the window to submit action priorities is closing soon, at the end of February 2016.
To learn more visit ogpau.govspace.gov.au
To contribute your priorities, visit: ogpau.wikispaces.com
And to join like-minded folk from the community to discuss the process and priorities, visit: opengovernment.org.au
Or, if you prefer not to get involve and simply sit back and complain about how the government isn't open enough, read below:
However alongside our open data, public consultations, freedom of information laws and transparent voting systems, there's still many areas where the Australian government could lift its openness and improve public confidence and involvement in our democracy.
Right now Australia is engaged in developing its first ever National Action Plan for open government, part of the process to become a full member of the Open Government Partnership and a step that aims to strengthen our democracy in the eyes of Australians and the world.
There's benefits in the process for everyone in Australia.
For the community there's the potential to improve the inclusiveness and transparency of decision-making - leading to better outcomes for individuals and groups, supporting both Australia's 'fair go' culture and our lifestyle choices, ranging from health and education to workplace safety and career decisions.
For businesses greater government openness can provide a more level playing field for government contracts and access to important population data that can influence commercial decisions. There's opportunities for enterprises to use open data to extend their services and products, or even to build new businesses.
For government agencies there's also benefits. Being able to see what other agencies are doing, researching and the data they hold with less bureaucratic friction helps accelerate and improve policy development and support more nuanced responses to complex challenges. There can be greater capability to identify and address illegal or corrupt behaviour and to work with non-government organisations to design solutions that address both political needs and community needs.
However despite these and other benefits, open government doesn't just happen by itself, it takes concerted thought and effort by individuals and groups, and a willingness on the part of government to move the needle forward on transparency.
Right now Australians have an opportunity to move this needle.
The National Action Plan being led from the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet offers a significant opportunity to suggest and discuss the priority actions that could be undertaken in Australia, by the government alone or with the participation of civil society and the community, to further enhance our government openness and transparency.
Feel free to approach this opportunity with optimism or skepticism - there's good reasons for both perspectives depending on your past experience with government in Australia.
However, don't discount or overlook this opportunity.
People who claim to support more open government in Australia but fail to engage are only demonstrating that they don't back their own views with action. It's easy to trash talk government, it's harder to actually formulate sound and achievable options that can lead to action and change.
So if you've ever complained about government's lack of transparency during a consultancy or decision-making process, found it difficult or impossible to source useful or important information from an agency or feel that any part of Australian government has acted in a self-serving or corrupt manner on a particular topic - contribute to this process positively.
There's a range of ways to contribute, but the window to submit action priorities is closing soon, at the end of February 2016.
To learn more visit ogpau.govspace.gov.au
To contribute your priorities, visit: ogpau.wikispaces.com
And to join like-minded folk from the community to discuss the process and priorities, visit: opengovernment.org.au
Or, if you prefer not to get involve and simply sit back and complain about how the government isn't open enough, read below:
Tags:
community,
engagement,
gov2au
Monday, February 08, 2016
Guest post: Ready, willing and able... from John Sheridan | Tweet |
Below is a guest post from John Sheridan of DB Insights, republished with permission from his LinkedIn blog.
John is, in my view, one of the most insightful and thoughtful people in the Australian digital space and I heartily commend reading John's other posts.
John is, in my view, one of the most insightful and thoughtful people in the Australian digital space and I heartily commend reading John's other posts.
Ready, willing and able...
Most of you won’t remember the song “Ready, willing and able”, sung by Doris Day in the early 1950s. And that’s probably a good thing too.
But those three little words, sum up the main barriers to technology adoption that governments, corporates and vendors of all kinds have to deal with in engaging with customers for their products and services.
And those three little words raise some very big issues.
There is a digital revolution happening. But are we all ready, willing and able to engage?
First, are we able? There is a lot wrapped up in this four-letter word…able.
Do we have the capability? Do we have the infrastructure? Do we have the networks? Do we have the leadership? Do we have the education? Do we have the guidance? Do we have the support? Do we have the authority?
The simple answer to most of these questions is no. Not yet.
We still don’t even have the affordable, fast, secure, broadband platform that we need to operate productively in this new environment, no matter what Mister Turnbull might say. You can’t play the game well, if you don’t have a broad, flat, accessible, well-maintained field to play on.
The issue of fast affordable, broadband has been raised again and again, and still not enough is happening. Not in Australia anyway. Just compare our broadband speeds and costs with those of our major competitors.
And our young Australians are far less prepared for the digital revolution than comparable countries, according to a report released at the World Economic Forum.
The report by Infosys, found Australia ranked last out of nine countries for young people being confident in their job skills and feeling optimistic about their future employment prospects.
The report found young Australians were among the most aware of the need to continuously learn new skills, but only 16 % had a strong interest in developing skills in data science and analytics, 18 % had a strong interest in building mobile apps and only 19 % had a strong interest in learning how to code.
These results were the lowest of the countries surveyed - Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States – all our major competitors.
Just 3.8 % of Australian young workers wanted to work for a start-up, the lowest of any country. Not much entrepreneurial spirit in our young.
These results were the lowest of the countries surveyed - Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States – all our major competitors.
Just 3.8 % of Australian young workers wanted to work for a start-up, the lowest of any country. Not much entrepreneurial spirit in our young.
And why is that? Because our education system does not reward curiosity. It rewards curriculum.
And more than half of "the Australians” surveyed believed their education had not prepared them for work.
The report found young people in education or entering the workforce in 2016 faced, "the most turbulent, rapidly evolving labour market seen by any generation".
"The global economy is approaching a Fourth Industrial Revolution, driven by increasing automation of the labour market - enabled by rapid innovations in robotics, artificial intelligence and smart technologies," the report said.
"The global economy is approaching a Fourth Industrial Revolution, driven by increasing automation of the labour market - enabled by rapid innovations in robotics, artificial intelligence and smart technologies," the report said.
So our kids have been failed by the education system and by the lack of insightful careers guidance, support and leadership on this issue. Not good.
We are losing our ability to compete. And we can’t blame that on high wages.
Blame sits fair and square with education and “the curriculum”, skills and careers guidance (the lack of it), the undermining of VET (the TAFE system) and general lack of support and leadership, which is just another way of describing abdication by government in the face of this “wicked” issue.
We are educating our children for the 1950’s, not the 21st century.
We are publicly setting “feel good, sounds good”, objectives – “innovation nation” – but not providing the mechanisms or the proper investment to achieve them.
So we certainly are not able.
But are we even ready and willing?
Attitude can be an even bigger barrier than capability, infrastructure, networks, leadership, education, guidance, support and authority.
Accenture says that just 2% of patients at top hospitals are using health apps provided to them.
Of course, simply having an app is not enough. Simply building an app is not enough. There are lots of apps. Are people ready and willing to use them?
Apps are fine if they are useful, reliable, relevant, trustworthy and safe from hackers and interference.
Accenture highlights the growing resistance to adoption in the consumer electronic industry with heightened data security concerns, falling demand for smartphones and tablet PCs and stagnant growth in the Internet of Things market.
A survey of 28,000 consumers found that nearly half ranked security and privacy risks among the top three barriers to buying Internet of Things devices and services – including smart watches, wearable fitness monitors and smart home thermostats.
Over half knew that these products can be hacked and result in stolen data or device malfunctions. A third chose to postpone buying, a third chose to be more cautious when using and 16% quit using their devices or terminated their service until they can get safer guarantees.
Add to that the ubiquitous information overload we all suffer every day, and it is hardly surprising that caution and reticence thrives. Attitude.
So are we ready and willing? Not yet.
There is plenty of encouragement from government and vendors but plenty of resistance from customers who are not ready or willing to play the new game.
Internet of things adoption is slow in the public domain.
The military have been pioneers with wearable computing, drones and network centric warfare. But the military is the epitome of command and control. You do what you are told.
In the public domain, adoption has slowed because of understandable fears about privacy, reliability, safety and security.
Who wants their house to be embedded with sensors and control systems that are hackable?
Nobody wants to return home to a house with the front door wide open, music blaring loudly and the fridge dancing in the living room with the entertainment system, vacuum cleaner, air conditioner, solar panels and water heater, all knee deep in water.
Cheap, mass-produced, insecure sensors in manufactured smart devices make this scenario a virtual certainty…though maybe not the dancing.
We will have to pay a bit more for reliable safety and security and a lot of electronics manufacturers jumped too soon, used cheap, unreliable, insecure “chips” and have muddied the water accordingly.
So consumers have a good reason to be unwilling. And if I am unwilling, then I am not ready. And if I am not ready, I will postpone.
There is no command and control in the public or consumer domain. I will move when I and ready and willing.
The opinions of an individual consumer gained through personal experience, flow into their professional and working life as well.
If I am not willing or ready at home, then this will influence my attitude at work.
There are many ways people can slow things down through not actively participating and they do. “I’m just not sure,” or “I am not convinced this is the best time,” or “the technology is still immature,” or “we should wait until the end of financial year before we make a decision”, is all it takes.
And those soft comments are not easily challengeable.
It is this attitude expressed by nervous individuals that remains one of the biggest barriers to technology adoption and use. A little self-education could go a long way to addressing this uncertainty, but most of these people have little or no time or inclination to do this.
So even if I am able (NBN and education issues ignored for now), I am still not willing or ready to move.
And there is yet another clash of interests now developing, generated by the “spook” agencies who want vendors to build “back doors” into devices, platforms and systems so they can identify potential terrorism threats, which then undermines the broader economic and social benefits that would come from the widespread use of trusted, secure, safe and private platforms and technologies spawned by the digital revolution.
Strong encryption is a key element that underpins trust, security, safety and privacy. Without it, adoption and use of many new technologies will slow and in some cases stop completely. Encryption and anonymity provide the security and privacy necessary to build trust.
And building trust takes time and isn’t helped by government actively promoting technology on the one hand whilst actually undermining the security and privacy of technology and individuals on the other hand.
These things do not go unnoticed and people are more than able to join the dots.
And vote with their feet. By standing still.
Add to that, widely publicised news reports of “white hat” hackers taking control of a vehicle on the road through the onboard network linking the 30ish different onboard computers…
Or breaking into a government or corporate network, or opening the locked doors to a smart home and it is no wonder people pause to think.
And then consider the greater threat of “black hat” hackers getting into the nuclear weapons defence (attack) network, or shutting down the cooling system in a nuclear power station, or shutting down water or waste water systems, messing with traffic lights, the electricity network or all of the above.
Or automating bomb threats to schools.
The risks grow larger not smaller over time, as state and non-state terrorists, criminals and alienated sociopaths become more knowledgeable, connected and effective.
And if governments can’t protect their own assets with all the resources they have at their command, then what about me?
The problem is largely one of perception. But perception in many cases is an individual’s reality.
And the reality is constantly being tested…day by day.
In a digital and social media age like today, any bad news spreads fast, and upsets and confuses the marketplace far more widely than ever before. Any mistake quickly becomes universal.
So there are some real and some perceptual barriers and hurdles to manage and overcome in this digital revolution.
Revolutions are never easy. And we are dealing with human beings not bricks.
Managing human beings is more like gardening than architecture or engineering.
The technology part of the revolution is all about engineering and architecture, but the human part is about trust, reassurance, education, explanation, sharing, collaboration and support.
So we can’t afford to be “cheap” with chips and sensors and security.
We can’t afford to be lax with governance.
We can’t afford to be cheap with the NBN.
We can’t afford to champion and support an education system designed for the industrial revolution not the digital revolution.
We can’t afford to promote digital technology and STEM, without investing heavily in our research agencies, especially the CSIRO and our universities.
And the cyber security growth centre for Australia can’t come soon enough.
We can’t afford to let our kids flounder out the door into a work environment requiring initiative, curiosity, flexibility and entrepreneurship, when we have trained them to shut up, sit down and do what they are told.
We can’t afford to waste the experience and insights of our older citizens by barring them from productive work, through the blatant barriers and blockages of a “youth” biased HR and employment system…notwithstanding the efforts of the toothless age and disability discrimination commissioner.
We can’t afford short termism. Period.
We can’t afford not to keep up with our major competitors. Or we will wake up one day to find the mine and the farm just weren’t enough.
We have to see that these issues are all connected. They all join up.
These issues are the treacherous reefs and shoals that we have to navigate successfully if we are going to sail over the new horizon of opportunity, and benefit from the connected, collaborative and integrated digital technologies.
Ready, willing and able?
We could be, but that requires more than a small change in attitude and action. It is something that only government can manage effectively and that means at least one minister (and hopefully all of them) has to do something.
Somebody and everybody has to act, regardless of election cycle, regardless of political persuasion, regardless of red, green, yellow or blue ties, federal, state or local geography…this is a non-partisan issue that needs addressing.
The song “Ready, willing and able”, sung by Doris Day was written in the early 1950s.
And our educational and job creation system is still reflective of that time.
We live in a time of multiple PR releases, statements, TV and radio interviews, social media conversations and talk.
But actions speak so much louder than words.
So as the song says, it’s time for government to “lay its cards on the table and tell us what it plans to do.” But then do it.
Friday, January 22, 2016
How much will Australians pay for the openness and transparency we expect from our governments? | Tweet |
In business if no-one will pay for a product it ceases being made, or never gets off the drawing board.
Government doesn't quite work the same - many government functions and services are designed as 'public goods' - things we all need, but that many 'customers' cannot or would not pay for.
This includes services such as national defense, law and order, welfare, health care and education.
Democracy is also a service and comes at a cost - as does openness and transparency in government.
It costs money to hold elections, to release documents and data, to provide independent watchdogs that address citizen complaints, monitor agency activities and investigate corruption.
In fact measures that reduce democracy or government transparency sometime receive public support from citizens. Often this is because the consequences are not fully considered or, in a few cases, some of these individuals actually benefit from less democracy or transparency.
Many dictatorships get their start from democratic states where citizens are unwilling to invest in their own freedom and democracy. Governments on this track may gradually reduce what is visible using an economic cost argument, and foster a 'political class' that values cost-effectiveness over public good.
We've seen some of this over the last few years in Australia, with the situation of the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner being a prime example. The (much reduced) Office is now being sustained on a 3-monthly basis grudgingly by the Attorney-General, who lacks the parliament's approval to close it down.
However it's not simply governments who aim to provide transparency into governments. There's a range of non-government organisations working in this space as well, from Transparency International to the Sunlight Foundation and Open Australia.
All of these organisations rely on funds to operate - transparency isn't free - and in Europe and North America there's well-established donors and systems for funding these groups to effectively carry out their roles.
Australia lacks these donors and systems and, it appears, even our governments are not interested in funding these independent organisations.
One such organisation is OpenAus. Founded and run by Rosie Williams out of Sydney, the service has taken a range of government data on budgets and charities and uncovered key insights that have never before been visible to the Australian public.
Rosie's work has been featured in numerous media outlets and attracted positive attention from some of the highest officers in the Australia Public Service.
However there's little in the way of funding available for this type of work in Australia. As Rosie says in her latest blog post,
Rosie has reached out to a range of potential funding sources, but come up largely dry. Her current work has been funded through the New Enterprise Incentive Scheme (NEIS), a nine-month business building program which is set at the payment level of the dole. This is hardly sufficient to fund an individual, let alone grow a business.
Rosie will shortly finish NEIS and, having attracted only $1,500 in donations for OpenAus, is likely to have to transition back into a normal programming role.
Even if she maintains OpenAus alongside a full-time job, it will be much diminished - as will Australian government transparency.
If you think this is deplorable for Australian democracy (as I do), then please complete Rosie's survey at: https://infoaus.net/openaus/survey.php
You may also wish to donate via the OpenAus site: https://openaus.net.au/contribute.php
Remember that if Australians are not willing to pay for the openness and transparency we expect from our governments, then we will get what we deserve - a much diminished democracy and more opaque state.
Certainly we should expect governments to use more of the funds they already collect from us to support transparency - 'reporting back' to their 'shareholders', citizens.
However for truly independent views on our government citizens need to directly contribute - via effort or funds - to organisations such as Rosie's.
Contribute now at: https://openaus.net.au/contribute.php
Government doesn't quite work the same - many government functions and services are designed as 'public goods' - things we all need, but that many 'customers' cannot or would not pay for.
This includes services such as national defense, law and order, welfare, health care and education.
Democracy is also a service and comes at a cost - as does openness and transparency in government.
It costs money to hold elections, to release documents and data, to provide independent watchdogs that address citizen complaints, monitor agency activities and investigate corruption.
In fact measures that reduce democracy or government transparency sometime receive public support from citizens. Often this is because the consequences are not fully considered or, in a few cases, some of these individuals actually benefit from less democracy or transparency.
Many dictatorships get their start from democratic states where citizens are unwilling to invest in their own freedom and democracy. Governments on this track may gradually reduce what is visible using an economic cost argument, and foster a 'political class' that values cost-effectiveness over public good.
We've seen some of this over the last few years in Australia, with the situation of the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner being a prime example. The (much reduced) Office is now being sustained on a 3-monthly basis grudgingly by the Attorney-General, who lacks the parliament's approval to close it down.
However it's not simply governments who aim to provide transparency into governments. There's a range of non-government organisations working in this space as well, from Transparency International to the Sunlight Foundation and Open Australia.
All of these organisations rely on funds to operate - transparency isn't free - and in Europe and North America there's well-established donors and systems for funding these groups to effectively carry out their roles.
Australia lacks these donors and systems and, it appears, even our governments are not interested in funding these independent organisations.
One such organisation is OpenAus. Founded and run by Rosie Williams out of Sydney, the service has taken a range of government data on budgets and charities and uncovered key insights that have never before been visible to the Australian public.
Rosie's work has been featured in numerous media outlets and attracted positive attention from some of the highest officers in the Australia Public Service.
However there's little in the way of funding available for this type of work in Australia. As Rosie says in her latest blog post,
There is no eco-system providing financial support to transparency projects. Projects like mine tend to veer away from government funding (to remain independent politically) and do not reflect the priorities of the venture capital ideology. As such there is a funding challenge in grassroots transparency projects in Australia that can only be filled by the citizens.
Rosie has reached out to a range of potential funding sources, but come up largely dry. Her current work has been funded through the New Enterprise Incentive Scheme (NEIS), a nine-month business building program which is set at the payment level of the dole. This is hardly sufficient to fund an individual, let alone grow a business.
Rosie will shortly finish NEIS and, having attracted only $1,500 in donations for OpenAus, is likely to have to transition back into a normal programming role.
Even if she maintains OpenAus alongside a full-time job, it will be much diminished - as will Australian government transparency.
If you think this is deplorable for Australian democracy (as I do), then please complete Rosie's survey at: https://infoaus.net/openaus/survey.php
You may also wish to donate via the OpenAus site: https://openaus.net.au/contribute.php
Remember that if Australians are not willing to pay for the openness and transparency we expect from our governments, then we will get what we deserve - a much diminished democracy and more opaque state.
Certainly we should expect governments to use more of the funds they already collect from us to support transparency - 'reporting back' to their 'shareholders', citizens.
However for truly independent views on our government citizens need to directly contribute - via effort or funds - to organisations such as Rosie's.
Contribute now at: https://openaus.net.au/contribute.php
Tags:
community,
edemocracy,
gov2au,
governance,
open data,
transparency
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