What Is Open Government Entrepreneurship?
Tim O'Reilly often explains Open Government, or Government 2.0, as "Government as a Platform" on which citizens and build things for each other and participate in their government (rather than treating it like a vending machine). The co-founder of Personal Democracy Forum and techPresident Andrew Rasiej has a similar notion that he terms WeGovernment.
Right now, Open Government looks a lot like an app marketplace. There are innumerable meetups to discuss the topic matter, apps contests to prove the principle of community action, government challenges rebranded as something innovative, and a variety of small companies and individuals taking stabs at making the government's vision of transparency and open data, improving collaboration, and increasing participation a reality.
But what if one were to ask, "Who are the highly influential / fastest growing / most profitable entrepreneurs leveraging Open Government?" Could you answer that question? And do lists like GovFresh's recent "Ten Entrepreneurs Changing the Way Government Works" truly represent the full range of what's possible with Open Government entrpreneurship topics, business models,and ambition? What about this list from Alan Silberberg,an "innovator, thought leader and a leading analyst on Government 2.0"?
What Is an Open Government Entrepreneur?
The classic example of terrific public use of open government data isn't very sexy, but you nevertheless probably take advantage of it nearly every day. Does the word Accuweather mean anything to you? The data that Accuweather and similar organizations use very often comes from the Federal government's National Weather Service, operated BY "
...people with first-hand knowledge of how the government operates, who understand how to use social software to accomplish a variety of government missions, and who want to use that knowledge for the benefit of all.
The goverati include people in and out of government, and people with and without technical backgrounds. Membership in the goverati is open to all. And yet, it's difficult to think of many people who, in the last two years or so, have become high-profile goverati thinking-and-doing leaders. I mentioned people in my Feb 2009 article, and had others in my mind, who were part of the informal goverati tribe. Most of those people still are, and many are doing more than ever as thought leaders, event organizers, and tactical executors.
Why I do I write "the fall" of the goverati above, then, you may ask. I write it because while there certainly is a core group leveraging social media, open source software, cloud computing, and mobile and geo-location technology and knowledge of government and the non-profit space to do well (and it may be that technically, this group has grown in size), the general enthusiasm, sense of adventure into the unknown, and novelty of trying things has largely disintegrated into a large conglomorate of events and blogs and apps with no general directon, and no emerging, clear standout businesses.
With so many societal problems ranging from local economic troubles, to the rising cost of education, to locating missing children, that could be potentially affected by unlocking public data and visualizing, analyzing, and utilizing it in new ways by leveraging other innovations, the question of why there aren't more people joining the ranks of the goverati in order to help with these problems through entrepreneurship must be asked.
Two Great Examples of Open Government Entrepreneurship
Non-profit or for-profit, young or old, urban or rural... it just doesn't seem like there are many entrepreneurs making a business model out of the cornucopia of Open Government. Why don't Open Government entrepreneurs have business models akin to what a variety of people - UrbanDigs.com, among others - are doing with real estate and related data? The new UrbanDigs will charge $20 per month while empowering people to mine real estate data in real time. "Gov 2.0 success stories" in the blogosphere along these lines are rare.
There are exceptions, of course, but those tend to come from companies with leadership that was involved in the business world prior to the rise of the goverati and the current Open Government movement.
PASSUR is an aviation business intelligence company, specializing in predictive data analytics for airlines, airports, and other aviation customers. They also contract with government agencies like the FAA and TSA. PASSUR's customers utilize their live and historical information to make better decisions in real-time, increase sales, and improve servicing. At Gov 2.0 Summit, the CEO and President of PASSUR James Barry stated,
I think that PASSUR, working with government data, in conjunction with the government, is a perfect example of the tenets of Government 2.0.
BrightScope, on the other hand, deals with data of a more financial nature; specifically, 401k data. I heard BrightScope CEO Mike Alfred tell an inspiring story of forming a business model around quantitatively rating 401k plans to give participants, plan sponsors, and advisors tools to make their plans better. All he needed was... the public data. From walking directly into the Department of Labor and asking for it, to filing FOIA requests and receiving piles of boxes, Mike Alfred and his co-founders - from San Diego - showed what can be done with a plan, some entrepreneurial spirit, and a little moxie.
Open Government Entrepreneurs Look Like 'Regular' Entrepreneurs
The most striking thing to me, as I sat in the Gov 2.0 Summit audience learning about PASSUR and BrightScope, was that the CEO's speaking were really into business. Their business. Not being cool, not attending tweetups, not even technology. (Just look at Mike Alfred's bio - Stanford graduate, financial literacy teacher, portfolio manager.) No fantasies about how open source code can save the world, no hopes for someday planning one's own BarCamp, no accounts on 18 distinct social networks.
There's no inherent problem with any of these things. Open source code is fine. BarCamps are useful. Some social networks are terrific. But has it occured to people that maybe the true Open Government entrepreneurs are... just like "regular" entrepreneurs?
What's a "regular entrepreneur" though? I'll take a stab at this - people who have started companies before, who read Entrepreneur and Inc. and have a business plan, who perhaps even have an MBA or another advanced degree and some hardcore corporate experience. Maybe they're not Millenials and "digital kids" swimming in Facebook but rather Gen Xers with a decade of real-world training under their belts - not just in programming, but in finance, government, education, and other activities.
I have a feeling that's the vision for Open Government entrepreneurship. I'm not yet sure what the implications of that might be.
Maybe you have a different viewpoint on the future of the goverati, the usefulness of Open Government data, or the definition of an entrepreneur. Regardless, perhaps there is no better way to summarize and end this post than with a simple quotation from Jim Traficant's talk at the Gov 2.0 Summit: "The answer's in the data - Let's get to work."
Pictures of a "lucid dreamer" and an "illuminati" from Flickr and used under a Creative Commons license.