Have a safe and happy Canada Day (or 4th of July!) and we will see you all next week.
(if you are really looking for something good to read, try: Working for Government is an Endurance Sport by my friend Nina.
Cheers.

Last week I reacted too quickly. I was upset and tried to prove a point. I still think my point is valid, but in retrospect I went about trying to prove it the wrong way.
Last week I happened upon a blog post from Geordie Adams via a tweet from Tim O'Reilly. In it Geordie explains what he thinks is the major issue facing social media enthusiasts in the public sector: “Cultural change [is] the biggest impediment to a higher adoption rate of social media in the public sector... [it] gets mentioned, everyone agrees, and then conversation turns to a technical or implementation discussion. To not [dig into culture change] is robbing important momentum from public sector social media evolution.” - Geordie Adams, Publivate (full article)Geordie's right, I can't even recall the amount of times I have heard variations of the phrase “Culture eats strategy for breakfast”. Essentially, even the most well thought out strategic approaches are vulnerable to the workplace culture. It would seem that when social media meets the public sector it is culture, not content, that is king. Culture is eating breakfast in plenaries, in tweets and in blog posts on a daily basis all over the world. Initially I thought it was a great line, its retweetable, to the point, and when I hear it I implicitly understand the connotation.
Here lies NickWhile Geordie's list of cultural problems (failure, engagement, and transparency) is a good place to start , I prefer to start with what I think underlies all of them: complacency. It would seem that over the years many of us have earned the fat cat stereotype; even those who haven't earned it directly are now guilty by association.
He went quick
always circled by a vulture
its name was culture
I just wanted to write a quick update to let you know a bit about some key things going on next week. After much anticipation the canada@150 report will finally be officially released at an armchair discussion at the Canada School of Public Service.I hold these truths to be self-evident, that platforms that enable collaboration are valuable, but useless unless they are supported by people and an engagement process, a process that is built on trust, enablers and reciprocity.
-- That to secure these things, bureaucracies must focus more strategically on modernizing their workplace, curating a culture of collaboration in a gift economy.
--That whenever individual bureaucrats resist this cultural shift, it is incumbent on those who embrace it to be courageous, to continue to lay the foundation of public sector renewal in such form, as to maximize openness and transparency.
History, indeed, dictates that long established traditions cannot be thrown by the wayside for the latest social media fad; and that while me must learn from our past experiences, that, while there are risks, the public sector has for more to gain from the adoption of these technologies, than they do to lose by banning them or blocking access to the web.
But if we the evangelists focus on the technologies to the detriment of the people, we will have done the people and ourselves an injustice, and we should be reminded that we jeopardize all that we have struggled to accomplish, and endeavour to rediscover the human element of these technological enablers.
--We have suffered with an outdated culture far too long; and now the rapid development of enabling technologies means that the necessity for change can no longer be constrained. The bureaucratic culture has largely been one of knowledge as power, locked data, and closed government. To change this, we continue to endeavour to open it up to a more transparent world.