How Open Data Can Both Be Important and Become Irrelevant

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-09-12

Summary:

In his relentless campaign for the importance of open data, Alex Howard published an interesting article where he mentions a recent press release by Gartner that highlights the ‘big data makes organization smarter, but open data makes the richer’. The press release is based on a research note by my colleague David Newman (subscription required), which looks at the role of open data across industry sectors and rightly points to some of the great examples from the public sector.  As I have always sounded like a skeptic on open data, and certainly so in my conversations with Alex, I think it is important to make a clarification.  We all agree that open data is important and it has the potential to fuel existing industry sectors as well as possibly create entirely new industries. Examples abound already in government and Alex as well as several others have diligently tracked them over time. David’s call is meant to stimulate private sector companies the benefits that they would get from both providing and leveraging open data.  Where Gartner government research takes a more cautionary attitude is on the fact that open data initiatives have been around for a while.  Federal, state and local governments have launched countless contests to involve and recognize application developers, and this is likely to continue in future, as open government remains an essential attribute of many government digital strategies.  However it would be unwise not to consider the possible fatigue that the continued demand of publishing and using open data may generate inside the agencies that are responsible for that data.  Some do live and breath public data (e.g. departments dealing with research, statistics, culture, tourism), so open data is right in line with their strategic priorities. But for many others data is just the fuel for their services and operations and while they may appreciate the importance of data being open, their short-term priorities and primary challenges keep them away from fully leveraging its value.  This is why I have been saying for quite some time that a more immediate connection between open data and agency mission priorities need to be established as early as possible...  A Gartner note published last February says that Survival of Open Government Depends on Short-Term Payoffs (subscription required) and the same argument transpires through much earlier research as well as many of my blog post (just search here under ‘open data’ or ‘open government’).  Just telling people ‘If you build, they will come’ is a hardly sustainable proposition, for those who struggle with doing more with less in an increasingly turbulent and uncertain environment.  So let’s keep a steady focus on open data, but let’s make sure that rather than calling just for the eye-catching headlines around healthcare or development of new business, government agencies find concrete incentives in trying out open-data-based approaches to run their own business and not to just to work for the common good. The risk is that generic calls on the value of open data will cause several government executives to lose steam and interest, making their agencies lose the long-term opportunities coming from open data...”

Link:

http://blogs.gartner.com/andrea_dimaio/2012/09/11/how-open-data-can-both-be-important-and-become-irrelevant/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.psi oa.comment oa.benefits oa.economic_impact oa.government oa.data

Date tagged:

09/12/2012, 11:50

Date published:

09/12/2012, 07:50