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Get EngagedAs the official Stakeholder Engagement for GTEC 2010, INTERSOL will lead our efforts to engage the community and share lessons we learn at this year’s event GTEC. A team of INTERSOL observers will attend the conference and engage delegates before and after all our sessions. We will also use Twitter extensively during the conference to share comments and news on daily happenings at GTEC 2010 using the following Twitter hashtags: GTEC: #gtec The comments you make to these Engagement Advisors, to GTEC staff and on Twitter will all point to the Closing Keynote Panel on October 7, where we will use a live Twitter feed and significant audience participation to review the highlights and key lessons of GTEC 2010. Delegates will be invited to join us as we bring the conference to a close, and take advantage of the opportunity to shape themes as GTEC begins planning for the next edition of the conference in 2011. Click here for more information2010 Theme: 'High Performance Government'There is pressure on governments world-wide to provide more and better services and to do so within diminishing budgets; doing more with less, while not a new phrase is an accurate one. Doing more with less requires optimal performance. GTEC has traditionally explored the use of IM and IT to enable service delivery, this year we will consider these but look at them within the context of optimal performance. At GTEC 2010, we'll ask the following broad questions: What do high performance governments look like to the citizens they serve, the people who work within them, and their political leaders? We will consider the characteristics of high performing organizations: What does their enabling infrastructure look like, i.e. their technology, their data/information, their people, their HR practices -- recruiting, developing, retaining; their organizational structures and decision-making processes; their service delivery partners; their policy framework? Through our keynotes, seminars and workshops, we'll also explore 5 basic approaches to high performance in government:
History has already shown that technology can enable better service delivery, but high performance governments in the web 2.0 world must find new ways to address the human and organizational dimensions of public sector service delivery. |