As part of that mandate, I helped launch a site called the Public Policy Wiki several weeks ago. A joint venture between the paper and the Dominion Institute (a non-profit agency dedicated to improving the dialogue about public policy in Canada), it’s a combination of a traditional wiki — that is, a publicly-editable resource similar to Wikipedia — and a public discussion forum, with comments and voting features as well. In many ways, it’s a kind of social-media mashup aimed at pulling in suggestions from readers and other concerned Canadians about public policy issues (the Obama administration has also experimented with this kind of idea, with what it called the Citizen’s Briefing Book).
Right from the beginning, the wiki was designed to be an experiment — something we could learn from, and get ideas for future projects involving social media of all kinds. My approach was to adopt something similar to the “rapid prototyping” approach used by many online technology startups: get something out the door in beta, and see what happens. Of course, as many people who have worked at newspapers probably know, this isn’t exactly the kind of thing that traditional media entities are used to doing — not to mention the fact that the last time a newspaper experimented with a wiki (the Los Angeles Times in 2005) it ended rather badly.
Nevertheless, with the help of some open-minded editors and developers, we managed to pull the project together fairly quickly, using the off-the-shelf wiki software called TikiWiki. If I could give any other newspaper editor or staffer working on a similar experiment one piece of advice, it would be this: Hold onto the idea of what you want to do and charge forward relentlessly, and get something out the door as quickly as you can, despite the inevitable roadblocks that will be thrown up by some of your paper’s senior editors and IT people. If someone comes up with a reason why you can’t or shouldn’t do something, find a way around them and do it anyway.
http://www.niemanlab.org/2009/01/the-policy-wiki-a-social-experiment/