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To Fix Government Tech, Take Off the Headphones and Listen

USDS staffers Marianne Bellotti, Sabrina Williams, and David Chang on the steps of the USDS “Townhouse” HQ.

The US government is famously slow and bureaucratic, but when it comes to digital transformation, the Feds have outdone themselves. Case in point is healthcare.gov — the original government solution for identity management cost $200 million to build and would have cost $70 million to run each year. Of course, it failed spectacularly — until a small group of Valley engineers recruited by the President re-built the site for just $4mm.

But while it’s easy to poke fun at our government, it’s also the single most impactful organization in our economy — with millions of employees and services that directly and sometimes dramatically impact hundreds of millions of Americans.

The United States Digital Service — born after that team of Valley engineers rebooted healthcare.gov a few years ago, celebrated just its second birthday last month (for a great overview, read Steven Levy’s post on Backchannel). The program, which taps talent from tech companies for a one or two year tour of duty in government, has some impressive early wins under its belt, but a series of recent conversations with its staffers and leaders yielded a more interesting conclusion: While still a very young organization, the USDS is developing a set of management practices that all businesses — Valley icons and Fortune 500 companies alike — could learn from.

The healthcare.gov project was a crisis situation — the site was the centerpiece of the President’s policy, and it was down, after all — but most government agencies need a different kind of help. Mikey Dickerson, a former site reliability engineer at Google, leads the growing staff of 170 or so, and his team knew that having groups of Valley nerds swoop in to “fix” the IRS or Veterans Affairs just wasn’t going to fly. Government agencies are unique cultural beasts, and to work alongside them requires more than technological prowess — it requires a certain emotional and social intelligence — traits that aren’t always rewarded inside Valley companies.

Wikipedia describes “emotional intelligence,” also known as EQ, as “the capacity of individuals to recognize … emotions, to discriminate between different feelings and label them appropriately, to use emotional information to guide thinking and behavior, and to manage and/or adjust emotions to adapt environments or achieve one’s goal(s).”

That doesn’t sound like an average interaction with the government, but something big is brewing inside Uncle Sam’s house, and if it spreads, it might just change how millions of Americans view their government.

“What if interacting with government services were as easy as ordering a book online?” That’s the mission of the USDS in a nutshell. But given the government’s legendary bureaucracy and ingrained culture, delivering on that mission requires a new approach to getting work done.

USDS Values

According to USDS head of talent Jennifer Anastasoff, it all starts with hiring. When the USDS launched, the tiny team was anxious that no one would apply. After all, the trade was not necessarily compelling: Take a year off, make less money, and work inside agencies infamous for their resistance to change. But the USDS founders underestimated the tech world’s desire to engage in public service: Two years in, the USDS has fielded thousands of applications for less than two hundred positions.

How to sort through that abundance?

In short, Anastasoff and her team look for emotional intelligence. “We are bringing in people for a short period of time,” Anastasoff told me. “So we have to find people who have EQ.”

To that end, the USDS created an interview process that filters candidates by their ability to understand and empathize with others. “We deliberately ask ‘stupid’ questions,” explained USDS engineer Marianne Bellotti, a transplant from the technical team at the United Nations. Stupid, that is, if the question were asked in an interview at a place like Facebook. But more often than not, USDS engineers must interact with non-technical public servants who are ill at ease with technology and concerned about taking risks that might expose them to career-ending missteps. “If you as an engineer can’t explain something to someone in a way that is respectful and enthusiastic,” Bellotti continued, “or if you’re dismissive….you’re probably not going to work out here.”

Here are more tips, tricks and insights gleaned from several conversations with USDS team members:

According to Pew, American’s trust in government has plummeted over the past 50 years, from a high of nearly 80% in the mid 1960s to a low of under 30% in 2015. But what if, in fact, a nascent but promising collaboration between private sector and public service employees can reverse that trend? Thanks to the USDS, we get a chance to find out if it will.

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