Blog Thinking Outside The Inbox by Luis Suarez » The Art of Collaborating Effectively in Virtual Teams

The Art of Collaborating Effectively in Virtual Teams

Gran Canaria - Maspalomas Lighthouse - Meloneras in the Winter

A few days back, over at GigaOm‘s WebWorkerDaily, Aliza Sherman shared a very interesting piece under a rather suggestive title: “5 Reasons Why Virtual Teams Fail“, where she pretty much nailed it on some of the various different issues that virtual teams face on a regular basis when confronted with that good old concept of collaborating effectively in a now more than ever distributed world. Plenty of people say that collaboration is not an easy task, whether face to face or whether remote, but certainly it looks like collaborating effectively online still presents a good bunch of challenges and issues, and Aliza’s article surely highlights some of the most relevant ones. Worth a read, for sure, but is there anything else that we can do to help improve remote collaboration in today’s rather complex environment? … Maybe.

Her blog entry highlights, according to her, and rather accurately, too!, 5 different reasons on why virtual teams seem to fail time and time again, and, while going through the descriptions of each and everyone of them, I couldn’t help nodding and agreeing with her big time, having experienced those same issues myself in the past, after having worked as a remote knowledge worker in multiple projects, in a number of business units, and over the course of the last 9 years. So I thought I would go ahead and spend some time today covering those same 5 reasons she talked about extensively and build further up on some additional tips distributed teams could apply to help avoid those specific issues. Specially, now that we have got social software tools available to us all to help improve, augment and develop further our own collaborative skills altogether.

Folks keep saying that collaborating effectively is an art and, to a great deal, I wholeheartedly agree with that statement; collaboration is not an easy task, specially, when knowledge workers do not know much on the topic itself or they mix it with other concepts like co-operation, coordination or communication altogether, for instance, and that’s why I would love to highly recommend you all have a look into a recent article published by my good friend Hyoun Park under the heading “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Collaborators“, which I am sure will help shed some further light on identifying some key characteristics that would be essential for any effective, and rather efficient, collaborator. As a teaser, here you have got the listing of those 7 habits, to give you a little bit of background on what to expect from the article itself:

  1. “Don’t just work hard, work smart
  2. Partition collaborative goals into appropriate categories
  3. Identify the appropriate tools for each enterprise collaboration strategy
  4. Just do it! (NikeTM)
  5. Build a social life (integrated with your enterprise collaboration approach)
  6. Use collaboration to drive product development and R&D efforts
  7. Think of your salespeople as wolves. Like wolves, salespeople hunt better in packs

Ok, back to the ”5 Reasons Why Virtual Teams Fail“; we have seen how Hyoun describes, quite nicely, what would be some personal traits of highly effective collaborators, but what else can we do to help avoid those same issues that Aliza mentions in her blog post, after going through the wonderful suggestions she has shared across as well on what we can do to help avoid each of those pitfalls when wanting to collaborative more effectively? That’s exactly what I will be doing next.

As a starting point, I would encourage you all to have a look and read her article in its entirety. It will be worth your time, I am sure! She has done a wonderful piece of work, specially, around the different ways she shared across to help tackle each and everyone of those pitfalls for virtual teams. I am not going to cover them all over here again, she is pretty much spot on on all of them, as far I can see; instead, what I am going to do is to develop further on this topic and share an additional set of tips to potentially help overcome those inhibitors towards collaborating effectively, regardless of the nature of the distributed team, so that remote ones out there may have an opportunity to add them up into the original article and have plenty more ammo available to them, should they see those issues come up in their day to day interactions with fellow knowledge workers and may not know where to go for additional help and support.Gran Canaria - Ayacata in the Winter

To get things going, I have taken the liberty of grabbing Aliza’s 5 reasons and next to each of them I will be adding a couple of lines suggesting as well What to do?”, but I would still encourage you all to keep an eye on her initial set of tips as they are all rather helpful at the same time on their own. So, let’s get things going!:

  1. Square pegs in round holes
  2. Lack of a clear process
  3. Weak training techniques
  4. Failure to capture knowledge
  5. No glue to keep it all together”

 

Square pegs in round holes

What to do? My good friend, and fellow IBM colleague, Rawn Shah, touched based on this very same topic over at “Working With Five Generations In The Workplace“, where he comes to talk about the rich diversity we have got nowadays within the workplace not only as far as multiple generations are concerned, but also as global, dispersed organisations for which remote collaboration is no longer a nice thing to have, but an essential trait to cultivate and excel at over time. Yes, we are bound to recognise we have got knowledge workers who are very capable of working remotely very effectively, while others may well not be; the important thing in this case is to realise it’s actually more of an advantage than a disadvantage. The key messages here are being flexible and celebrate multiple working styles trying to accommodate them with one another in the best possible way through one key aspect most businesses haven’t exploited well enough: negotiation. Understanding there would eventually need to be bridges being built up to allow for knowledge and information to flow freely, amongst the various different working styles, and with as little friction as possible. Basically, being agile in a rather complex, engaging, committed, embracing and nurturing diverse workplace.

Lack of clear process

What to do? At this point in time, I don’t think we would need to discuss further the importance of clear processes within virtual teams; like Aliza mentioned, those business processes are perhaps even a bit more rigid for virtual teams than for co-located ones. However, processes for virtual teams need to understand as well how flexibility is, once again, very important to help knowledge workers understand how by being flexible themselves in applying those processes they would have a much better success rate in negotiating how they collaborate with their peers. The key message here is that for that negotiation to take place those processes would probably need to be put together, initially, by the remote, virtual teams themselves, the ones who understand the dynamics of having everyone working distributed with different needs and wants, but also different expectations and trying to accommodate to the vast majority of them. This would be an interesting learning exercise at the beginning, till everyone adjusts and arrives to the same page, which is when those processes would kick in, but it’s that learning path the one that’s going to allow virtual teams shape up those processes according to their needs and requirements and not everyone else’s!

Weak training techniques

What to do? This is one of my favourites! Let’s go back in time for a minute … When was the last time you had some kind of education, or training, on collaborating effectively with your team colleagues in a co-located environment? When was the last time someone spent some time with you sharing further insights on how to make the most out of your team’s collaborative tools, whether you are working remotely, or not? I bet that would be quite some time ago for both of them, wouldn’t you agree? Indeed, the key message in here is to never underestimate providing enough, good, solid education, training and assistance to virtual teams in order to help them understand how they can collaborate and share their knowledge effectively by working smarter, not necessarily harder. You can never have enough education on not just running and managing virtual teams, but also how to be a good virtual team player. It’d be essential as it would help people understand how collaboration is a whole lot more than just worrying about collaborative tools; it’s a mindset, it’s a change of habits, it’s a shift in mentalities going from a need to know to a need to share, it’s an opportunity to learn from one another sharing your knowledge with others and allowing it to grow further in order to achieve a specific task or a specific goal.

That’s what, to me, collaboration is all about. Having the right training resources available to you is one other key element to take into account and that’s why I have always been very fond of the amazing piece of work that former IBMer, and good friend, Peter Andrews did, for a good number of years, in providing an entire course outline, both for managers and remote workers, on how to operate effectively in virtual teams. Plenty of which materials can still be found in multiple different places. Now you can imagine how important and critical such training and education has been for a company like IBM where over 50% of its population are remote / virtual workers. Again, you can never have enough education to train your remote knowledge workers, and their managers, on how they can collaborate and share their knowledge more effectively.

Failure to capture knowledge

What to do? This is, perhaps, one of the biggest issues for virtual teams, specially, if they are rather distributed across timezones and geographies or across multiple silos. And perhaps this is one of the areas where social software tools could surely help make that task of capturing knowledge much much easier. As a starting point, knowledge workers who are very keen already on sharing their knowledge and collaborating across with their peers will keep using these social tools regardless, in an effort to try to capture most of the transferred knowledge. The potential issue may come along with those other knowledge workers who are still a bit reluctant about jumping on board. And, to me, the key message here is to embrace that reluctance and look into it as an opportunity to introduce lower, common denominators in the social networking space, which, in most cases, would start with that well known low hanging fruit that we have all fallen in love, cultivate and nurture over time: Activity Streams.

Yes, that’s right! Microblogging or microsharing, the lowest common denominator to dive into the social software world; the one key component from the Enterprise social software landscape that will require very little effort as far as the buy-in is concerned, but that would provide a tremendous amount of added value, as I have mentioned already on a good number of different blog posts, on this very same topic. In this case, it’d be all about finding that sweet spot to move into, as those remote knowledge workers transition from that physical water cooler concept that we used to call coffee corner over at this side of the pond, to that virtual water cooler one that we know as the wonderful world of Status Updates, where keeping up with your social capital through ambient intimacy, following some declarative living guidelines to eventually end up narrating your work is probably going to be one of the most powerful means to capture that knowledge before it goes away or vanishes.

No glue to keep it all together

What to do? And, last, but not least, the biggest challenge all virtual teams face, don’t you think? That one of having a “vigilant, organised and nimble” leader. Not an easy task, for sure, perhaps one of the biggest challenges, but one thing that we could all perhaps acknowledge as a starting point is that as virtual teams get to develop their relationships with those daily interactions and conversations amongst remote workers, there is a great chance that you will have an opportunity to go and locate those natural leaders, the ones whose main premise would be to look after the health of the virtual team, since they realise, from moment one, on the true importance of remote collaboration in an environment where most knowledge workers are distributed anyway already.

Gran Canaria - Degollada de las Yeguas and Surroundings in the Winter

The more understanding and involvement from that natural leader a team has, the better; the more aligned those natural leaders are towards working as if operating in networks and communities, versus organisations and traditional, rigid structures, the better. Ideally, those natural leaders should be a blend of traditional management and new radical leadership, as Steve Denning has put it just recently, and quite nicely, too!, in his latest book on “A Leader’s Guide to Radical Management“. In fact, every virtual team should probably strive to look for their own leaders, versus their own managers, because that’s eventually what managing a virtual team is all about: leading by example with their passion, wit, know-how, experiences and knowledge, more than managing by command and control.

And that’s it! I surely understand this is probably one of the longest blog entries I have put together over here in a long while, but I am hoping it would be a useful read for those folks who are not only working as remote knowledge workers in virtual, distributed teams, but also for those co-located peers who would need to understand some of the different dynamics as well behind working remotely than being at the office; changing such perceptions is also going to be key and rather fundamental for virtual teams to succeed, because not every single remote knowledge worker out there is doing the laundry, or watching TV, every time they work from their home office. They may actually be doing some good / excellent work altogether.

Rating: 5.0/5 (3 votes cast)
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

The Art of Collaborating Effectively in Virtual Teams, 5.0 out of 5 based on 3 ratings
  • TwitThis

  • FriendFeed

  • Facebook

  • Digg

  • Google Bookmarks

  • del.icio.us

  • SphereIt

  • LinkedIn

  • StumbleUpon

  • Tumblr

  • E-mail this story to a friend!

A few days back, over at GigaOm‘s WebWorkerDaily, Aliza Sherman shared a very interesting piece under a rather suggestive title: “5 Reasons Why Virtual Teams Fail“, where she pretty much nailed it on some of the various different issues that virtual teams face on a regular basis when confronted with that good old concept of collaborating effectively in a now more than ever distributed world. Plenty of people say that collaboration is not an easy task, whether face to face or whether remote, but certainly it looks like collaborating effectively online still presents a good bunch of challenges and issues, and Aliza’s article surely highlights some of the most relevant ones. Worth a read, for sure, but is there anything else that we can do to help improve remote collaboration in today’s rather complex environment? … Maybe.

The use of Nonprofit News Organizations broadened as News Source by Main Stream Media Organization AP

In the ever-changing world of the evolution of media over the last two decades, and especially the past five years, the quality and availability of reliable news sources has decreased. Staff on newspapers were slashed as papers were bought out and run based on a corporate model, rather than commitment to journalist excellence in the deliver of news. International news really took a hard hit as foreign bureau offices were closed at many locations around the world. The goal of media became making a profit, rather than delivering the news.

  Cable News has sucked up the former newspaper subscribers into their viewing audience in a 24/7 cable news cycle. These cable entities mix opinion-based, almost what one would label "entertainment" shows  --- with popular media personalities (e.g. Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilley --- mixed with the delivery of "news". The best example of this disgrace to journalism is Fox News on the Fox Network. 

     This article announces a new model of news delivery via nonprofit news organizations. It reports that, "Newspapers, for the first time, will be able to request that feeds of nonprofit materials be delivered directly into their content management systems through AP's Webfeeds software." So AP is creating a convenient, fluid link of feed of news generated by true journalists. As the article points out, this is a win-win proposition for both sides. It will assist newspapers in making up for the losses the corporate owner's hatchets took to their staff of journalists as they strive to survive and deliver a reliable, quality source of news. You may read the entire announcement of this change in cut and pasted article below, or at the original linked source.  
rkm

 



source:  Editor & Publisher: America's Oldest Journal Covering the Newspaper Industry
Published: April 21, 2011

 

NEW YORK - The Associated Press is expanding its project to distribute content from nonprofit news organizations to newspapers through delivery technology that will make it easier for newspapers to find and use the material.

 

Newspapers, for the first time, will be able to request that feeds of nonprofit materials be delivered directly into their content management systems through AP's Webfeeds software. The project will begin testing with nonprofit organizations in California and will use Internet delivery feeds that have been put in place at newspapers over the past year.


"I think this is a win-win for all involved. Newspapers will get professional content from award-winning journalists and we have wider distribution," said Dori J. Maynard, president of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education.


The Maynard Institute, which produces America's Wire, is one of about a dozen nonprofits that are discussing ways to set up the system. It expands on an earlier project that brought several nonprofit publishers and content on issues such as campaign financing into distribution through an AP website. The move expands the footprint of nonprofit journalism as a growing number of foundation-supported and nonprofit organizations produce public service journalism. 
"The goal of the project is to provide the nonprofit journalism organizations an additional distribution channel for their work while making it easy for newspapers to find and use the content. As a not-for-profit news cooperative, AP was founded to enable publishers to share content as well as to provide original AP coverage," said Sue Cross, senior vice president, Business Development & Partner Relations, Americas.


The service is for nonprofits who provide content to other news outlets free of charge. AP provides distribution for paid nonprofit and other syndicators through its APT delivery services. Newspapers must opt in to receive the content through Webfeeds. Newspapers that do not receive Internet delivery will be able to find the content in the Marketplace section of AP's Exchange portal.


The project started with four nonprofit investigative organizations in June 2009.


About The AP
The Associated Press is the essential global news network, delivering fast, unbiased news from every corner of the world to all media platforms and formats. Founded in 1846, AP today is the largest and most trusted source of independent news and information. On any given day, more than half the world's population sees news from AP. On the Net: www.ap.org

"Net Neutrality and Nonprofits" - link to a free audio discussion recorded on 04/28/2010 speaking with experts on the topic

ship         
 The issue of Net Neutrality has been raging hot through the late spring and summer with the communications industry versus the one small advocacy group attempting to raise public awareness about the importance of the issue and educate Joe American what the words “Net neutrality” even mean.

 It seems that this issue is off of the radar entirely for most of the America general public as they happily watch Netflix on via their net enabled new HD 55” flat screen TV, or download their favorite sounds from iTunes.

 The one politician that has led the effort to keep the Net free from corporate control is Senator Al Franken (D – MN). Franken has long been a vocal proponent of net neutrality since he first spoke out on the issue in his questioning of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor during her confirmation hearings in July 2009. In August of 2010, he delivered a speech at an event in Minneapolis hosted by the nonprofit organization Free Press, where he called net neutrality "the First Amendment issue of our time”
rkm

Archived Webinar: "Ask the Expert: Is Your Internet Censored? Net Neutrality and Nonprofits"


 

Cost: FREE
04/28/2010 11:00 am
04/28/2010 12:00 pm
US/Pacific

(dates previously recorded for archive)


"By now, the Internet is an essential part of meeting our missions. Every day, our sector sends millions of emails, our web sites receive millions of views, and we host hundreds of thousands of videos and podcasts

Now Imagine a world where access to your information online was suddenly censored -- slowed down or cut off completely. Sound crazy? It's something many of the major Internet providers are fighting for in Washington right now.  Our ability to use the Internet without censorship is at stake.

Join us for this discussion of the issues around Net Neutrality and learn what you can do to protect your right to communicate freely online.  We'll be joined by:

Free Press has created a letter from the nonprofit community to the FCC to urge them to keep the Internet open and free it from discrimintation."

> Please Sign FreePress' "Save the Internet" campaign petition to Congress.

China attacks Internet website of Nonprofit Change.org to attempt to disrupt electronic signatures of a petition to release Chinese artist Ai Weiwei

The country of China's government leaders continue to befuddle me with their on again, then off again posture towards small improvements in "human rights". Which are often the  followed by large pendulum swing backwards in the direction of Orwellian control and the Big Brother mode. It's almost as if they spruced up for the Olympics, and then. after their showcase to the world was over, the Chinese leaders returned to the control and isolate mentality of the old guard Communist regime.

In the world of IT and the 384 million internet users in China, first the Chinese government secretly used a darker element tried to figure out, or crack Google's proprietary code via hacking. Then parties acting on behalf of the Chinese government hacked into a number of GMail email accounts to frame Chinese human rights activists. In their final move with Google China took a chain saw to Google's access in China by entirely blocking Google's Chinese website. China made this decision after Google boldly took a position that they would no longer be a contributor to China's game plan of censorship imposed on their citizens by Google blocking the sites the Chinese government had insisted they block previously. One of the owners said the decision was based on their operating principle of "do no harm".

Today, I opened a subscription email in my personal email account received yesterday evening from a U.S. based nonprofit organization called Change.org. Here is what they wrote (Note: author added some of the bold face type formatting in email to bring out key elements of it):

From:
"Patrick Schmitt, Change.org" <mail@change.org>     

Wed, April 20, 2011 7:08:15 PM
Subject:  Chinese cyber attack on Change.org

Dear Ronald,
 

The petition demanding the release of Chinese artist Ai Weiwei has nearly 100,000 signatures. 

Here's how we know it's really gotten Beijing’s attention:  For the past three days, the Change.org website has been repeatedly targeted by cyber attacks coming from China that aim to bring our site down, which would keep people from signing the petition. 

Our engineers are working around the clock to fend off the attacks and, for now, the petition is still up. 

We need to let the Chinese government know that illegal tactics from within its borders won't stop the mounting pressure on them to release Weiwei. If you haven't already, please join nearly 100,000 Change.org members and add your name to the petition now.

To recap: Acclaimed dissident artist Ai Weiwei -- who helped design the famed “Bird’s Nest” stadium for China’s Olympics -- was arrested on April 3rd by Chinese security forces at the Beijing airport. His office and studio have been ransacked, and no one has heard from him since. 

The international art community banded together, demanding his release -- and the directors of more than twenty leading museums (including the Tate Modern, Museum of Modern Art, and the Guggenheim) started a petition on Change.org that has garnered worldwide attention, including in the New York TimesLA Times, and Guardian.  

The campaign has helped to give rise to an international outcry. Political leaders around the world are calling for Weiwei's release and activists have organized peaceful protests at Chinese embassies and consulates

Though China is desperate to silence its critics, the pressure to free Weiwei continues to grow. You can help by signing the petition now: 

http://www.change.org/petitions/call-for-the-release-of-ai-weiwei

Autocratic governments know that the Internet is a democratizing force, and they'll do everything they can to suppress online activism. Know that we stand with you for change, and that we will continue to fight to make sure your voice can be heard. 

- Patrick and the Change.org team 

P.S. Due to these repeated attacks, our site may be slower than usual or unavailable at times over the next few days. Thanks for your patience.

(END of EMail)

Below is a message regarding the status of Change.org's website when I clicked on one of their embedded links in this email on Thursday, April 21, 2011 at 6:20 p.m. (and again now at 9:40 p.m.)

"Uh oh.

The Internet is misbehaving

  • Change.org is currently unavailable due to a problem at our hosting provider, Amazon Web Services. You can follow Amazon's status here."
I was excited that this provided me my first "live" opportunity to view Amazon's Web Services reporting system. Amazon calls it the AWS Service Health Dashboard. (Click on the hypertext link above to check it out). It is a table of status reports on various locations, and web service resources. 

I personally invite everyone seeing this post to join me some time during the next several days to attempt to access the site again, and add our names to the internet petition on Change.org!

********

Health apps soon will get RockHealth incubator

Halle Tecco, a business-development intern at Apple Inc., couldn't
help but notice that health apps were well behind other apps such as
entertainment and education. They were not popular and not put to good
use. She recently launched a nonprofit and in June is launching
RockHealth, which is devoted to health care software. Mayo Clinic
Center for Innovation and the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital is
partnering with RockHealth and it has raised over $500,000 from
investors.

The rising popularity of smart phones allows many opportunities for
apps to help patients monitor health problems. Why shouldn't we be
able to have health access at our fingertips? It seems that there are
smartphone apps for almost anything you can dream of, it is time for
us to have access to reliable health information. There is the issue
of privacy and other federal regulations that would make it extremely
difficult and expensive process to approve an app that will treat or
diagnose and illness. Over 40 grant applications have come in to
RockHealth in the last month for $20,000 grant to develop an app. I
can really appreciate the efforts Tecco is putting forth to expand our
access to health care in a convenient way.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/04/10/BURN1IRATU.DTL

The Nonprofit Evolution of the Cloud

A technology revolution is upon the nonprofit sector. Nonprofits are
constantly looking to reduce costs, maximize efficiency, and still
reach their supporters through social technology. Cloud computing is
the answer nonprofits have been looking for. According to the article,
large nonprofits, like Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation, Greenpeace USA and the Humane Society of the United
States, have led the way in adopting open cloud-based platforms. As
far as being innovative, cloud platforms allow nonprofits organization
members 24/7 access to their database from multiple locations and can
be managed from anywhere in the world. They can manage their assets in
the cloud rather than using the traditional Excel spreadsheet or
Outlook contact lists. Also there is always a worry that technology
will constantly change. It is easy for nonprofits to manage since most
of the updating is done behind the scenes and are almost always the
most current. This article says “if any technology comes close to
fulfilling the promise of being future proof, it’s cloud computing.”
I can see this type of technology providing short term, cost efficient
solutions nonprofits need, but also leading the way to long term
business and technology solutions. It will be interesting to see how
many nonprofits choose to incorporate this type of technology into
their organization, and how it will revolutionize the nonprofit
sector.

http://www.cioupdate.com/trends/article.php/3928651/The-Nonprofit-Evolution-o...

Public Sector Clean Energy Innovation at Work: Thin-Film Solar

General Electric announced this past week the plans to build the
largest solar manufacturing facility in the United States. The
facility will produce cheap, efficient thin-film solar panels that are
flexible and can fit onto most surfaces rather than being confined to
bulkier housing as is precent with solar technology. The expected
cost of the energy produced by this technology should be less than one
dollar per watt. The driving factor for this innovative facility was
the government support for clean energy innovation. The article states
that this breakthrough in the cost of solar energy is thanks to many
years of development and investment by the federal government. The
government program is an open relationship between federal lab
researchers, university researchers, and private sector solar
manufacturers. The program has received accolades from Boeing, BP, and
Siemens for its innovative technologies.

It is good to know that among all of the problems the government is
currently dealing with, that efforts are still being made to work with
corporations who have the funds and research means to work toward a
cleaner, more sustainable energy. Hopefully this is just the beginning
to many energy technology breakthroughs toward clean energy solutions
we are desperately in need of.

http://theenergycollective.com/mstepp/55641/public-sector-clean-energy-innova...

The Recon Scout Throwbot has been approved by the FCC for use in the civilian field by law enforcement officials.It was previously used by military personnel in Afghanistan and Iraq.  The problem with its use in the homeland is that the frequency used to control the device is also used by many amateur radio enthusiasts.  A suit made by them tried preventing the use of the device by providing evidence that it actually didn't work and would not help to save lives.  The two sides came to a compromise, only allowing the use of the device away from air force bases, and the first two years it is on the market there can only be 10,000 units sold.  After that two year period, the use and need for the Throwbot will be reevaluated.

The proponents of the Throwbot say that it can help save lives by taking the place of the first officers into a hostile environment.  The stealth aspect is also something that really appeals to law enforcement officials.  A Throwbot can creep into a building and give a video feed of possible offenders as well as give other vital information to law enforcement officers watching the feed.  The Throwbot varies in price between $4,800 and $13,000 depending on the options you select.

Cameras in Park Stop Crime, Concern Other Citizens

Recently, cameras were installed in Flushing MI's Riverview Park.  The cameras were installed in order to help prevent crime in the park.  they have already helped to identify three juveniles that were defacing park property, including benches and play equipment.  The cameras were purchased with $!00,000 of money from the Reinvestment and Recovery Act money.  The cameras, which were installed to help prevent crime, have created irks in the community.  Some feel that the cameras are an invasion of privacy.  The chief of police in Flushing has stated that the park is public, therefore the idea that a person would be in private in a park in the first place is a little ridiculous.

 

The cameras have been placed in other areas before, and similar public outrage has ensued.  In Seattle for instance, the cameras that they had installed in public parks to decrease crime created such a public outcry that they were removed in order to keep the public happy. They do not feel that these cameras will have to be removed in order to keep the public happy, yet they will stay to continue to prevent crime in the area.

GOP looking to better utilize social media in 2012

Unlike 2012, you can bet on the Republican Party utilizing social media in the next presidential campaign. With Obama's campaign in 2008 having gained so much momentum from social networking, Republicans will be ready to tap into the online market of voters that showed up in election results for Obama in 2008. Technology, in terms of online social media, will certainly influence voting in the upcoming election unlike any election prior to it. In the midterms, Republicans and Democrats were virtually matched in their use of social media tools. Republican strategists are optimistic looking forward because of the strong online support for tea party candidates last year. This use of technology has brought about a new concept in politics; that older adults, mostly conservative, embrace the tea party candidates and activists online. This use of technology has also spread much farther than just presidential campaigns. State senators, city commissioners, and local politics are all starting to utilize online tools such as facebook and twitter to connect with constituents. Nevertheless, social media will certainly have the biggest impact on the presidential campaign, where candidates, especially the incumbent, are able to connect to voters across the nation with the click of a button.