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Introducing Web 2.0 to your Organization: Seize Opportunities

City of Ottawa Case Study: Part 2 of 4

At the City of Ottawa the policy on surfing the internet is simple: only business-related access is allowed. Consequentially, many staff are insulated from what is happening outside the firewall.  So when a public transit strike crippled the city last winter for over 7 weeks, through Christmas and numerous days of minus 40 degree (Celsius) weather,  a small team within the City of Ottawa saw an opportunity.  This team was the newly minted e-Media team, tasked with introducing social media to city staff.

The transit strike allowed the e-Media team to showcase to city staff what was going on outside its boundaries in the online world and also to help staff provide temporary solutions to residents.

  • On Twitter, people were self-organizing to carpool, park, provide traffic updates and to just commiserate with each other
  • Listening in on the blogoshpere helped staff track people’s needs, opinions and ways of organizing.
  • Liveblogging at city council meetings really caught the attention of city managers
  • Both Union and management used You Tube to communicate with their respective audiences.
  • You Tube was used by residents to comment, react and share humour
  • The city, guided by the e-Media team, provided a traffic map mash-up to help residents navigate congestion

The transit strike provided an eye-opener for staff at the city to become more aware of the power of social media and how it can be used.  The e-Media  team then looked for a way to demonstrate how this technology can help staff collaborate and get their work done more effectively.

In the next post I will describe how the e-Media team at the City of Ottawa  created an opportunity to showcase the value of how web 2.0 applications can facilitate effectiveness for a cross-functional team distributed across the city.

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