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Open practice: what it means to us

Open

Open by Opensourceway on Flickr – Click on the photo to see Opensourceway’s Flick Photostream

We have been discussing an idea that we call ‘Open Practice’ within the team here at Public-i and we wanted to outline what we mean by this and start to share it a bit more widely.

I have written recently on my own blog about what I see as a need to consider being open as more than a question for source code or data and to think of it as a necessary step towards operating in a more networked and boundary-free way.

Simply put, ‘Open Practice’ applies the same constraints and opportunities of behaving in a more open and transparent way on Public-i, a commercial organisation, as we see as necessary for the public sector to flourish in a more networked and digital society. This is work in progress and we have lots to do, but we are trying to explore this with a number of different actions:-

Personally I think that more openness is a consequence of a more digital life. Clearly, with that the case, lots of people are engaged in this process in different ways and there are many good examples – see Dan Slee’s excellent post on the ‘do and share’ philosophy behind the Comms2point0 site, who has written about this from a localgov/public-sector perspective, or the evolving work of the Government Digital Service’s blog.

As a result, I believe that embracing this ‘Open Practice’ is a question of ‘when?’ not ‘if?’ If you believe that then it is far better to be exploring constructive and positive ways of making openness the best choice and not just your only one. This is all very much work in progress and one of the factors in the speed with which we progress with this will be the way in which our clients – not all of whom are in the public sector – respond to it. That means we are keen to hear what you think.

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