I don’t eat dog food unless it’s raw
Ken Banks has almost written a manifesto for himself in Time to eat our own dog food? I think there’s a lot of potential in his project FrontlineSMS – mainly because it’s a platform. Like any good platform, it’s up to the end user (in this case, grassroots NGOs) to work out how they want to use it, and how they want to incorporate it into their organisation and activities. I need to work out why I feel more positively towards FrontlineSMS than I do towards Ushahidi, particularly since the two projects have a good working relationship, but right now I want to focus on something that Ken says in his blog post:
If we draw parallels between the concerns of Easterly and Schumacher and apply them to the application of mobile phones as a tool for social and economic development, there’s a danger that the development community may end up repeating the same mistakes of the past.
I don’t think I’ll put myself in any danger by predicting that the development community will absolutely repeat the mistakes of the past, since that’s one of the things that the development community is good at. Ken rightly feels that we need to avoid developing an “NGO digital divide”, but once again I don’t think there’s much danger in stating that there’s already an NGO digital divide. It’s been quite clearly identified, at two levels.
- Between the richer UN agencies and the (usually) Western NGOs who do most of their contracting, and their poorer cousins (particularly national NGOs in the developing world). As the two groups diverge further (which I admit will be a slow process) communications between them will become increasingly problematic. When one organisation has a 24/7 broadband connection and the other needs to go to the local internet cafe twice a day, you’re going to feel it.
- Slightly less alarming but potentially more damaging is the digital divide within organisations. In most organisations, the further out into the field you go – both geographically and organisationally distant from headquarters – the poorer the ICT capacity is. Considering that field offices are our eyes and ears on the ground – the source of nearly all the baseline information our organisations need to do their work – this is something which needs to be fixed.
Ken’s proposal for how we can avoid this:
To do this we need to think about low-end, simple, appropriate mobile technology solutions which are easy to obtain, affordable, require as little technical expertise as possible, and are easy to copy and replicate. This is something I regularly write about, and it’s a challenge I’m more than happy to throw down to the developer community.
It’s a challenge that we all need to deal with, and one of the critical things that Sahana has (and continues to) wrestle with. I think that this approach – exemplified by projects like FrontlineSMS – is the right way to deal with the first point I discussed above, because the most likely common denominator between organisations is the mobile phone. However while mobile phones can play a role in improving communications within organisations, there are deeper political and cultural questions that need to be addressed regarding priorities within the structure.
Read Ken’s full post and leave him a comment – this is a discussion which needs to be continued and expanded.
Hey, Paul
Thanks for the great analysis and commentary on my earlier post. I’m obviously pleased that you largely agree (!) but this is without doubt a conversation that needs to be had. It forms a large part of my conference talks these days, and is a message NGOs often largely agree with.
We need to go beyond recycling interesting case studies (in some cases over and over again) and start to seriously figure out how we get working tools into the hands of NGOs – working tools that are appropriate to their needs, not what we consider to be cool and sexy.
Thank you for continuing and widening the debate! Hopefully others will follow. =)
Ken
kiwanja
7 Apr 09 at 20:20
Hi Ken – what can I say, I’m trying to be more positive these days
I think the conversation is important precisely because I think NGOs do often realise that they need to incorporate technology more effectively, but simply don’t know how. They are dazzled by good-looking technology projects that get more media attention at the expense of… well, things that work right now.
Hey, we’re all dazzled by good-looking technology, no blame game here. A related problem is that the best-looking technology is often a proprietary solution which has a large marketing budget behind it. That’s one thing we have to get out from under if we’re going to succeed – not dismissing commercial solutions but using our networks effectively to market those alternative approaches.
Paul Currion
7 Apr 09 at 20:33
My own way of saying what you’ve both covered very well is that teaching someone to fish is not about giving them a rod and reel they have no hope of building or modding on their own. That’s just teaching them dependence.
Simple stuff. Open stuff. That’s what works.
People who care about helping will get straightforward tools to people that can be opened, changed, re-applied and reworked for a range of core functions…but that’s more or less what you’ve both said.
Ryan Lanham
7 Apr 09 at 21:04
Paul and Ken-
I recently wrote a post titled, ‘Twitter is dead. Long live the microblog!’ (http://tinyurl.com/dalurc). As far as I am concerned microblogs that are accessible via handset apps have leveled the playing field. Once orgs start implementing software packages like Laconi.ca behind their firewalls we are going to see whole new level of communication. We’re already discussing how to control and parse the data flow. It’s not a matter of if but when. Plugging our local partners into such a social stream would be as simple as name and password.
Check out my post and the comments where I lay out the concept. Please shoot holes in it where you can.
Many thanks and best regards,
Jon
Jon Thompson
8 Apr 09 at 1:52
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