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Change-Making at the Largest Public Interest Startup [video] (youtube.com)
15 points by brandonb on July 27, 2015 | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments


Government contracts require long sales cycles, constant relationship management, excessive documentation, and insider experience to navigate the system. What (if anything) has improved the chances for a small team of competent outsiders ?


Mostly because the government itself is changing the way it procures software. For example: http://www.federaltimes.com/story/government/acquisition/201... https://18f.gsa.gov/2015/06/15/agile-bpa-is-here/


FYI, if anybody has questions, there are several YC alums who have joined the government in some capacity (healthcare.gov, USDS, Nava, PIFs), and are on HN.


What is the easiest and smallest way to get started/to help, without getting a job with the gov (which may not be possible for many folks) or without bidding for contracts? In other words, how to help from outside the gov? Is there a list of tasks somewhere that someone maintains that can be done independently?


I had to re-watch the last 2 minutes of the video a few times to pick it out. But, https://www.whitehouse.gov/digital/united-states-digital-ser... is a place to get started.


A colleague at 18F built https://www.govcode.org/. It's a handy directory of U.S. federal government open source projects.


Best way would be to join the USDS "reserves"--they sometimes ask people to come for 2-3 weeks to do an evaluation of a government project. If you can get time off from your job, or you're switching jobs, I think that's a high impact way to contribute without necessarily joining fulltime.




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