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? Stern Consulting, 2010. 2. Agenda. Web 2.0 DefinedWeb 2.0 MetricsImplementation ProcessPolicy ConsiderationsCase StudiesNext Steps. ? Stern Consulting, 2010. 3. Web 2.0 (Social Media) - Definitions. A set of rich, interactive tools that leverage our need to communicate, collaborate, and inter
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1. Contact Centers in the Age of Web 2.0 and all Things Social Media June 10, 2010
2. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 2 Agenda Web 2.0 Defined
Web 2.0 Metrics
Implementation Process
Policy Considerations
Case Studies
Next Steps
3. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 3 Web 2.0 (Social Media) - Definitions A set of rich, interactive tools that leverage our need to communicate, collaborate, and interact with others by combining hi-touch and hi-tech components
An innovative medium to correspond with citizens, colleagues, and other government agencies
An on-line, engaged community that shares opinions, moderates forums, and provides ratings and feedback
According to the Media Success Summit 20091, the top 4 social media tools are:
Twitter
Blogs
Linked In
Facebook
4. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 4 Web 2.0 Metrics Most frequently used Web 2.0 tools in local government1
RSS Feeds – 75%
Twitter – 72%
Facebook - 72%
You Tube – 57%
Blogs – 43%
Largest growth areas are wikis and blogs1
In 2009, more people communicated via social networks than email2
Future state – 94% of teens (12-17) are on-line and 60% of teens have a social networking profile3
5. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 5 Web 2.0 Drivers Transactional costs savings1
The website acts as the hub to bring traffic and create a sense of community
Web 2.0 tools act as spokes which are tightly integrated with the hub
If the hub is weak, the spokes may become irrelevant
6. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 6 Implementation Approach Understand how the initiative supports the municipality’s goals/objectives
Define the target audience
Balance social equity concerns
Build the project team
Define and set metrics
Select tools
Leverage internal resources
Assess vendors/partners
7. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 7 Implementation Approach (cont’d) Initiate development
Engage target audience – beta testing
Refine tool/service
Initiative outreach campaign
Launch
Assess results
Continuous improvement
8. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 8 Policy Issues Develop an integrated Web 2.0 policy that is synchronized with incumbent policies (Website, privacy, etc.)
Key components should include:
Abuse
Privacy/disclosure
Penalties/Consequences for violation
Point of contact
Monitoring
Network security
E-discovery/FOIA
Protection of IP
9. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 9
10. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 10 San Francisco Background
Launched Twitter in June 2009
Large-scale press conference to announce launch
Not directly integrated with CRM
No CSRs are dedicated to monitoring Twitter activity
Maximum service requests are 100/month
Has 6,000 followers
Lessons Learned
Consistent public communications
Direct integration with CRM (open source or mash-up)
Dedicated CSR support
Defined success metrics
11. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 11 Albuquerque Background
Launched Twitter in Summer 2009 using a Mayoral press conference
Limited public education and outreach
Not directly integrated with CRM
Maximum service requests peaked 60/month (currently less than 5/month)
Lessons Learned
Enterprise-wide approach
Consistent public outreach
Consistent internal education
Direct integration with CRM
Defined success metrics
12. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 12 Boston Background
Worked with external firm to develop an iPhone application which would be integrated with CRM
Launched iPhone application in January 2010 using a Mayoral press conference
Limited public education and outreach; relied on Bus Shelter advertising
More than 6,000 application downloads
Processed 3,000 service requests (SR) to date (annual estimated SR is 200,000)
Lessons Learned
Mandatory executive level support
Fast and agile development process; leverage citizen feedback in beta sessions
Partner with local innovation groups/think tanks
Consistent public outreach
Direct integration with CRM between iPhone and CRM developers
Start with simple service requests (e.g., graffiti, potholes, street lights)
Need defined success metrics
Word of mouth advertising can be successfully leveraged
13. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 13 Other Examples Washington DC
Applications for Democracy http://www.appsfordemocracy.org/
Winning 2009 application (app) that enables iPhone access to 311, coupled with a supporting Facebook app. A demo is at: http://www.victorshilo.com/dc311/2/
Los Angeles
Garcetti 311
San Francisco
Freedom Speaks (iPhone)
See Click Fix (iPhone, Android, Blackberry)
New York
Big apps http://www.nycbigapps.com/
14. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 14 Next Steps Inventory enterprise-wide web 2.0 applications
Identify internal executive champions and project managers
Quantify current usage and potential future penetration
Identify integration points
CRM
Work Order Management
Cashiering
Review data and reporting requirements
Define success metrics
16. Government Contact Centers Contact centers have evolved from paper driven and face to face interactions with citizens
311 has led to consolidation of multiple-departmental call centers and use of CRM in many cases
New wave of tech-savvy customers using new media
17. Open311 and Social Media Background on citizen mobile and social media
Lagan and Open 311 - Collaborative Open Source project with the city and county governments enabling citizens to connect with government via social media platforms
18. Citizen Connect Mobile applications An incident reporting system that enables citizens to report incidents such as potholes
Integrated with GPS and camera on mobile device
Citizens can also see previously submitted requests and status updates from the City from Lagan CRM
19. Social Networking Now citizens can send direct messages 24 hours a day to the sf311 Twitter account
20. Social Networking Twitter to request services or information from the San Francisco 311 Customer Service Center.
21. Social Networking Citizen tweets go directly into Lagan CRM and are presented to contact center agents as inbound messages
22. Social Media Impact at the Contact Center Key is to avoid needing contact center agents to monitor and read inbound messages
Concern over citizen expectations that the larger the number of citizens complaining about a problem, the faster the city/county will respond
Need to see growth in the ability to use social media to deal with the 70% of interactions (on average) that are information inquiries only
Access to the city/county knowledgebase using social media will be key in the future to help reduce the number of agents required to meet demand via all channels of communication with citizens
23. From Social Media to Open311 Several cities have begun to run open government initiatives, open data programs, and app contests to improve civic technology and civic engagement.
Recently cities like Washington D.C. and San Francisco have begun to open up Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) to provide richer access to their data and allows citizens’ applications to interact with the same data that a city uses internally
This concept of a read/write API is what has fueled the growth of many new technologies, providing whole software ecosystems around platforms like Twitter and the iPhone
Open311 applications and mash-ups to fully interact with a city’s 311 system are now possible
24. What is Open 311? A open and transparent participatory model for how 311 services are provided
Traditional 311 services are modeled around the contact center with a 1-1 city to citizen interaction communication channel
Open311 allows more than the traditional 1-to-1 call model interaction involving just two people, but can allow more collaborative interactions with multiple contacts
Make these types of transactions more open and transparent to encourage citizens to get engaged with their local government via a public forum
Open Technology and Open Standards to pull it all together
25. Why is Open 311 Important? A common foundation for civic engagement and participation on a local level
City’s are the user interface to our local government, using Open 311 can provide more open and ubiquitous ways to interact with government
A method for multiple cities and agencies to collaborate with something as open and collaborative as the web
Huge significance in how citizens can interact with each other and their local governments
Huge significance in how governments can interact with each other and share innovations in technology and business processes – potential for a regional 311 approach
26. Who is Supporting Open 311? San Francisco and Washington DC have been the leading cities in this effort
Los Angeles, New York City, Seattle, Portland, Boston and Edmonton are initially involved and pledged to support the Open311 API
Non-profit agencies like OpenPlans have promoted the Open 311 initiative via websites like Open311.org
Firms like Lagan are supporting the Open 311 API as standard feature in CRM products
Organizations like SeeClickFix and CitySourced are really pushing community focused applications that also support using Open311
27. Lagan and Open311 Initiative Lagan is supporting the use of open source technology, based on the City of San Francisco’s pioneering work in making 311 services accessible to all citizens at all times on all platforms.
28. Lagan and Open311 Initiative Open 311 is being supported by the Open Government Initiative of the Obama administration and has significant real estate on www.whitehouse.gov.
29. Lagan and Open311 Initiative
30. Lagan and Open311 Initiative From now on, the data for any SeeClickFix issue reported in San Francisco will immediately be entered into the city’s Lagan CRM.
That connection went live on Thursday afternoon, May 6, 2010 when SeeClickFix co-founder Kam Lasater reported graffiti outside his mother’s house in San Francisco.
31. ? Stern Consulting, 2010 31 Question & Answer Thank you!
Spencer Stern
Office: 312-578-2286
Cell: 773-965-1650
Email: sstern@gfoa.org
Steve Carter
Office: 240-994-4176
Email: steve_carter@lagan.com