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I hope this is of interest.

The Leadership for a Networked World program will run a small online research seminar from April 14 to approximately the end of June. The group will use wiki and other technology and will focus on:

  1. What CIOs need to know and do, especially in settings where IT-enabled change is or should be a strategic concern to the organization's senior leaders.
  2. The extent to which wiki-enabled collaboration could generate cost-effective improvements in the dissemination of IT-enabled innovation in government.
We seek experienced researchers and/or practitioners able to work online and participate in roughly 5 conference calls. The first call will be Monday April 14 at 3 pm U.S. Eastern Time (UTC-5).

Our research will deepen and possibly modify a framework for public sector strategic management developed over the years at the Kennedy School. A description of how that applies to the work of CIOs can be seen HERE.

The calendar for the course can be seen HERE.

Participants will work with me and others deeply interested in these issues. Will will produce two papers through the work of the seminar, one assessing course materials for CIOs, and the other assessing the value of wiki-enabled research methods. Seminar participants will be recognized in the reports, and specific contributions will also be acknowledged. Participants who complete the work of the seminar will receive a certificate of completion.

Please contact me immediately if you are interested, indicating your interests, background, and skills for this work. There are only a few places still available.

I hope to hear from you soon.

Best regards,

Jerry

P.S. This research will inform and extend work will do will at a Harvard Workshop on Leadership and Strategic Management for CIOs to take place June 17-18 at Harvard. Here is the link to workshop information and registration materials.

 

09:10 PM, 09 Apr 2008 by Jerry Mechling

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A recent DOJ decision looks to have completely ignored the long-term impacts of digital data infrastructure on energy conservation and the global climate. I'm speaking of narrowly focusing on music distribution in allowing the merger to proceed between XM and Sirius satellite radio.

According to a recent post of Philip Greenspun -- a friend of my former deputy Cesar Brea -- the new XM/Sirius monopoly will jump the price of satellite data (doubling it or more). This will limit the benefits of mobile data in a wide variety of transport decisions -- giving cars and trucks and airplanes, for example, real-time information on weather and congestion, in some cases along with congestion pricing signals. Monopoly profit maximization will generate negative spillovers through congestion, energy loss, pollution, and global warming.

DOJ allowed the merger when they judged it would not create a monopoly -- for music distribution. It ignored the crippling impact on the public value that would otherwise be created through intelligent transportation.

Here's the link to Philip's post.

Jerry

What do CIOs really need to know?

Come join us at our June workshop on what CIOs need to know

08:43 AM, 02 Apr 2008 by Jerry Mechling

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