WikiCED manual
This is just a draft placeholder while the overall document is developed. Please do not edit.
Change from within:
Creating innovation in an organization as an individual.
Introduction
This manual is designed to help individuals, working in an organization, find ways to effectively introduce beneficial change, without full “top-down” support (management, funders, other power sources). In other words, you may be working in an organization and learn about a better way to do things. Everything from suggesting a composting programme, telecommuting, to using a new Web-based communication system. Everyone else is too busy doing things the same way they always have, management has their own long term plans, but you think it's worthwhile to push for your change. This manual can help you.
This manual is particularly designed for those involved in Community Economic Development (CED). We're going to use change based on low cost technology as our lens, because thanks to the spread of the Internet and low cost computers, many opportunities exist. But aspects of this manual should be applicable to many circumstances.
Our references include Appreciative Inquiry, an organizational development process designed to engage individuals within an organizational system in its renewal, change and focused performance. We're also going to reference CED approaches, current software development methodologies, and our own experience and opinions.
One of the technologies we'll be focusing on is wiki. Wiki is a Hawaiian word for fast, and the first wiki was developed to support computer programmers share information on the Web. Wikis allow easy publishing on the Web, including editing pages (after learning a few conventions), and can help solve a lot of different problems as a group, and when including the public. Currently the most famous wiki is Wikipedia, but many other wikis exist.
We're going to use some characters to talk about implementing change. They are as follows:
Description | Image | Characteristics | |
---|---|---|---|
Anti-tech Arnie | Fax machines are the height of human achievement |
| |
Bureaucrat Bev | Everything by the book, for the organization! |
| |
Busy Betty Bee | Everywhere, doing everything with no time to spare. |
| |
Innovator Irene | We can solve this problem with a few simple technological conventions |
| |
Iron-fisted RARRRR Thor | It's simple. My way or the highway! |
| |
Mélanie Hughes | |||
Whiny Negate No No Nancy | Whiny Negate No No |
|
The promises and risks of introducing change
Most people would dream about being a change hero, making one suggestion – example and suddenly we have a successful transformation that everyone recognizes. The reality is usually far more complicated.
Computer systems can yield tremendous efficiencies, but they can force people to work in ways they have difficulty adapting to. There's always a question of individuals adapting to tech versus the tech adapting to the person. Good technology will make the user experience and impact as important as the potential gain. This can recognized by learning about successful uses of the technology, and the kind of background and processes went into its development. Many companies and projects are very technically driven. Whatever clever “invention” a technical person managed to come with becomes the focus. Good projects will have multidisciplinary teams that include, where practical, designers, content experts, and end user representation.
Sometimes, change can mean completely changing the way things are, for example replacing factory workers with machines, but it's often better to think of augmentation of people's roles, particularly when it comes to today's imperfect computer systems. In a hospital, a new system can yield a patient death if a system loses a record, but having a receptionist who recognizes people and expects events can lead to a richer system that is still safe, and personal.
advantageous, being a slave to tech
Using innovation successfully
go past using tech as typewriter
curb cut
don't expect more than what is offered
keep it simple
Description | Image | Destiny | |
---|---|---|---|
Anti-tech Arnie | Fax machines are the height of human achievement | The leader of the underground organization SQUASH where members are committed to maintaining communication by fax. Of course this will prove an enormous challenge for the group since fax paper is no longer being produced. Anti-tech Arnie continues to eat burnt toast for breakfast. | |
Bureaucrat Bev | Everything by the book, for the organization! | Went on to create the Bureaucratic Center for Centering Bureaucracy, which increased efficiency by allowing them to organize and access information with themselves and the public, making everyone in the world a bureaucrat. | |
Busy Betty Bee | Everywhere, doing everything with no time to spare. | Eagerly promoted the use of kiwis through her continued involvement in the CED affinity group and her community organizing. Eventually Busy Betty Bee helped to create other affinity groups both within the CED program at Concordia University as well as within the broader population. Busy Betty Bee hopes to create international affinity groups. She helped to edit Innovator Irene’s book on kiwis, she consults for Bureaucratic Bev’s agency, she also writes funding proposals for the Blue-Chip Program and she visits Whiny Negate No No Nancy every Tuesday morning between 5 and 5:30. | |
Innovator Irene | We can solve this problem with a few simple technological conventions | Went on to invent more conventions for kiwis and founded an organization that trains thousands on the proper use of kiwi conventions. Her success led to a number 1 best seller “Kiwi and Community Organizing” that was featured on the Oprah show. | |
Iron-fisted RARRRR Thor | It's simple. My way or the highway! | Developed REBOOT a boot-camp style initiative funded by the federal government whose aim is to re-educate the general population to the effective means of organizing, data-collection, and information sharing. Iron-fisted Thor obtained special funding that is currently piloting a Blue-Chip Insertion program aimed at ensuring that people do things “his way or the highway!” | |
Mélanie Hughes | |||
Whiny Negate No No Nancy | Whiny Negate No No | Had a difficult time understanding the change in her CED classmates. She cried herself to sleep every night for six months until she finally sought help. She was hospitalized in a private hospital where she received experimental treatment through the Blue-Chip Insertion Program. |
How to introduce change
Katherine, I would like to move this from presentation to here Often, creating value requires significant change. John Kotter concluded in his book "A force for Change: How Leadership Differs from Management" (1990) that there are eight reasons why many change processes fail and to prevent making these mistakes, Kotter created the following eight change phases model:
- Establish a sense of urgency
- Create a coalition
- Develop a clear vision
- Share the vision
- Empower people to clear obstacles
- Secure short-term wins
- Consolidate and keep moving
- Anchor the change
Individuals who want to introduce or lead change in organizations are key agents who should have the ability to connect people to their specific requirements, and must be committed to working with people during each developmental phase.
Discussing as a group
Including management
Including the hesitant
Change in CED organizations
government money, focuses
Implementing change
Change processes
CED waterfall agile 1.describe key goal (including baselines and measurements), critical budget and timing issues 2.define and refine goal(s) 3.research solutions and select working set 4.refine goals based on working set 5.implement solutions (with as much iteration as permitted) 6.measure effectiveness 7.summarize effects avoid custom software vs accessibility what do the non profit tech workers want? - problems
Access
Including group members and the public
Types of technology solutions
Wikis promote one of the original ideas of the Web, easy participation, and newer developments promote easier exchange of information – for example, using another organization's data in your Web site using systems such as Freebase and Semantic Mediawiki.
Connecting and getting advice
Measuring success, learning from failure
Participating in WikiCED
real time additions