Thanks to new technologies, now accessible also in remote places, development work - and development workers - have an increasing digital footprint. Quite litterally, what was invisible can now become visible, with major implications for aid effectiveness, transparency and fundraising. Being able to manage such footprint effectively and analyse it to identify emerging trends is going to be a differentiating skill in the Development 2.0 world. This presentations illustrates some key concepts, examples and tools that development organisations can use ti analyse and manager their digital footprint.
Making the invisible visible. Managing the digital footprint of development projects
1. Making the invisible visibleManaging your (and your projects’) digital footprint Photo (CC) : http://flic.kr/p/7PZwbo @gquaggiotto Practice Leader, Knowledge and Innovation United Nations Development Programme
12. Advantages of digital footprint It’s searchable/findable Analysing “invisible” patterns Supports networking with like-minded people Predictions Possibility of adding “layers” Read more: http://bit.ly/lsIVgs
16. What % of your work & expertise is “invisible”?
17. Why does this matter? http://www.peerindex.net/undp_europe_cis
18. Competencies to manage your digital footprint Know what your footprint is Listen/monitor conversations about you/your projects/ areas of expertise Control vs. influence Talking while you are doing something, not at the end Being interesting to stand out from the clutter Think not only information, but people & networks Professional vs. personal boundary Know your privacy and security Curating and facilitating
19. Tools to assess your digital footprint- aka the digital narcissist toolkit Google.com “Me on the Web,” Google dashboard Pipl.com Klout.com Linkedin Inmaps PeerIndex.com Vizualize.me http://www.the-social-list.com The Museum of Me Personal Digital Footprint Calculator
24. What do you want the rest of UNDP to see/know about you?
25. What is your digital influence? Arrows pointing “in” indicate this person is “followed” This person does not have “expert” in their official title…
26. What about the footprint of your projects? Photo (CC) : http://flic.kr/p/9pBhet
34. Imagine a world where 80% of our work is “visible” Less “I don’t who does what?” Emergence of expertise More sophisticated understanding of what doesn’t work Transparency Emergence of patterns More self-organising, less top-down Real-time response Greater visibility vis a vis donors
35. > Digital footprint = > donations? Source: Mashable, http://on.mash.to/jSjqmh
36. > Digital footprint = > Long term sustainability? Source: The Media Blog, http://bit.ly/qYdue9
37. > Digital footprint = > Transparency? Tier 2: “These donors generally show an explicit commitment to aid transparency but they are inconsistent in their current levels of performance on the availability of information. Good performance in one area is usually counterbalanced by poorer performance elsewhere”. Source: Aid Transparency Assessment 2010
38. Successful development2.0 orgs- the “social business” Real time Ability to identify patterns/analyse data Every employee is a communicator Experts as thought leaders Engaging content Feedback loops
39. What is the digital footprint of..(aka what other case see of…) Your daily work You workshop/conference Your CoP Your project
40. You can start today! Online Personal Profile Facebook Twitter Linked in Slideshare Flickr Blog Issuu Open Data
41. Read more The power of the visible: open up for social change Web squared: web2.0 five years on The information shadow of development projects Digital smoke signals (UN Global Pulse)
42. Make your work visible! @gquaggiotto Photo (CC) : http://flic.kr/p/7PZwbo