This is a quick presentation I did for the Canada School of Public Service on the latest examples of effective government blogs in Canada and around the world.
10. “An easily updateable
web site, usually maintained
by an individual with regular
entries of commentary,
descriptions of events, or
other material such as
graphics or video. Entries are
commonly displayed in
reverse-chronological order
and are available via
RSS”
11.
12.
13. “The Blogosphere is the
collective community of
all blogs[…]commonly
used by the media as a
gauge of public opinion
on various issues.”
53. 1: Can you regularly update a blog (several times a week)?
2: Do you have a good writer(s) to feed the blog?
3: Do you have something to say other than just sending links?
4: Can you provide information of value to your readers?
5: Do you read other blogs relevant to your topic?
6: Is your organization willing to be open and authentic?
7: Are you ready for negative criticism?
8: Have you written blogging guidelines for your organization?
9: Do you have performance metrics in place?
10: Are you ready to commit lots of time?
68. My Our Government 2.0 Wiki
http://government20bestpractices.pbwiki.com
69.
70.
71. •Print Measurement Bureau (Statistics)
•Interactive Advertising Bureau (Statistics)
•Technorati.com (Statistics)
•InternetWorldStats.com (Statistics)
•Alexa.com (Statistics)
•Statistics Canada (Statistics)
•ComScore.com (Statistics)
•iStockPhoto.com (All non-personal photos and images)
•Brian Solis (Social media tools diagram)
•Mitch Joel (Concept of ending with a Google slide)
•Marta Z. Kagan (Simplicity of presenting stats)
•Garr Reynolds (Presentation style)
•Jeff Braybrook (Policy information)
•Debbie Weil (Blogging Guidelines)