So make it about them. Thank you David Brake and Cartoon Bank.
Category: Uncategorized
Shift Happens
[youtube]ljbI-363A2Q[/youtube] Hat Tip
Open source tendering – New Model or New Madness?
Scroll down and you can listen to David Wilcox talking about what I suspect is a unique experiment in producing an online open source collaborative tender for the £1.2 million Cabinet Office programme to create an Innovation Exchange for the Voluntary Sector. David explains the process with relevant links here , and you can see where the online collaboration took place through this link. The picture (find it here) is of Simon Berry of Ruralnet UK delivering the bid documents last week. The smile says a lot.
So what’s it all about? The Third Sector Minister Ed Miliband was looking for “a partner to deliver a new £1.2m Innovation Exchange – a programme to support the third sector’s capacity to innovate. The Innovation Exchange programme aims to provide third sector innovators with access to the people and potential capital they need to make their ideas a reality”
In short share knowledge to improve the way the sector delivers public services.
As David explains in the interview he and others wondered why such a bid couldn’t be created collaboratively and in public. As he says, their consortium thought about playing some cards (their best cards) close to their chest, then chose to go the whole hog. Everything they were proposing could be seen, and evolved in public. So what can we make of this:
New Madness?:
Clearly competitors know what you’re proposing and can nick the best ideas and neutralise or undermine others. The collaborators though placed copyright restrictions. Anything lifted from the bid had to be credited. If it was then developed and evolved competitors were asked to put that back onto the site. Naieve? Perhaps, we’ll know eventually.
Who does the government deal with? A shifting collaborative process has many stakeholders, but ultimately the people handing out the money will want to know who’s head is on the block – who is resonsible for delivering. hat may give and internally generated single organisation a stornger hand.
After that though I’m struggling with the problem of madess because for me it is a really a
New Model:
Closed doors, closed minds. Cards to the chest bidding can lead to bidders being blind to the best ideas. The open source tender had at least 500 minds involved.
Planning and delivery are different.… Often the people who will have to deliver are not involved in the bid. Someone comes along to them afterwards and says we thought you could do this for this much money. The open process could solve many of those problems earlier.
It raises everyones’ game. With an open source bid in the frame all the competitiors have find ways of beating that bid in terms of ideas and value for money. that can be good news for the public.
It builds flexibility into delivery. By collaborating openly at all stages it should be much easier to innovate along the life of the contract. It also creates transparency in delivering, which should make it easier for full feedback whilst the contract is delivered.
The winner can still involve the losers. As david says, if their bid wins one of the first things they’ll do is talk to the losers. likewise if another bid wins it may make sense for them to approach the consorium for input.
You never know where the ideas will come from. Online collaboaration improves the chances of bright new notions coming form unexpected places.
It challenges old ways of working – which with government can often be a great thing.
Losing is a good thing – well not really, but if an open source bid fails a much wider range of people have learnt from the process and learnt from the failure.
So all of this is why I’ve nominated this project for the Modernising Government category of the New Statesman New Media awards. Anything which brings more minds and more doers to the business of solving public problems is good in my book.
The bid partners are
RNUK Ltd, Delib Ltd, nfp 2.0, Partnerships Online, UnLtd and Warwick Business School. Contributors included Policy Unplugged, Sheffield Hallam University, National Rural Exchange, Common Purpose, Team Rubber, Work Empowerment Foundation, Unique Social Enterprise, Matrix Research & Consultancy, Switch On Shropshire, Local Level and others.
Blogging for a Children’s Charity
My friend Beth Kanter has just posted a request for help from a charity based in North Yorkshire and Nairobi.
Alison Lowndes is asking what she can do to attract more interest in the blog she co-writes about the situation of vulnerable children in Kenya. Nedra Weinrich and Celeste at the Studio501c have already chipped in. Alison here are 5 thoughts from your side of the Atlantic.
1 Use your network and your networks’ network. Do more of what you have just done by aproaching Beth for help. E-mail as many people as you can who may blog and ask them (and their friends) if they can write an entry about your blog. It will help increase the number of blogs linking to yours – which in turn will draw attention to what you write (good content by the way).
2 Use more links in your blog entries. Blogging is as much about conversation as it is about sharing information. Write more posts which make linked references to other blogs. Thinks of these as the body language of blogging – each link sends a message to other bloggers that you want to join their conversation.
3 Use tags – your recent piece on Madeleine McCann is pertinent and provocative. Tagging it will help other bloggers (and news organisations) find it and respond to it. If it’s not clear how to do this in your blogging platform you can generate tags using keotagger and other similar sites. You might also like to agree a tag with bloggers who share your interests – so you can find each others work. the Nptech tag is a great example of this.
4 The old blogging mantra of “trackbacks are good”. Trackbacks are a special type of link. If someone uses a trackback link for your site what they write on their blog will also appear as a comment in your blog. That encourages people to write about your material. If your current blogging platform doesn’t allow you to easily include trackbacks think about moving to another platform sooner rather than later. (I think though you can now use trackbacks on blogger)
5 Use Flickr to host photos and link it back to your blog. Kenya is a magnet for British holiday makers, They are likely to find your pics on Flickr and that will attract their attention to your work. From that you may find donors and even online or on the ground volunteer effort.
It won’t happen overnight – but good luck.
Update – the pic is from AVIF’s Flickr site. See also this entry from David Wallace – more on principles than practicalities. he suggest the four p’s:
- Participate
- Plug-in
- Play
- Persist
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