GIS office unfolds marketing plan
Mapping experts in New Jersey seek stories showing the value of the work they do
Mapping experts in New Jersey are looking for a few good stories that convey
the value of the work they do.
They want examples of how geographic information systems have helped
an agency save money, shape public policy or other otherwise have an impact
that can be easily understood by people unfamiliar with the technology.
The Office of Geographic Information Systems, part of New Jersey's Office
of Information Technology, plans to use the stories in a brochure to go
to the state's lawmakers, policymakers and department officials.
The GIS office has only been around for two years, so it's still new
to people, said Kate McGuire, who coordinates public outreach services for
the office. "We just want to let people know what we are trying to do and
how they can become involved in it and how GIS can help their agencies work
better and provide better services," she said.
For instance, North Carolina's Department of Public Instruction used
GIS to create new routes for the buses serving the state's 100-plus school
districts. The technology helped the department find a way to reduce the
number of buses and the overall miles that buses traveled. That translated
into big savings on fuel.
Such a case "explains how GIS can help them solve their problems and
make their decisions, and do it with a streamlined decision-making process,"
McGuire said. "And it will also explain how GIS works."
The outreach won't stop there. The GIS office is working on a Web site
to promote GIS; the site should be easier to develop, because it can incorporate
more images. GIS "is such a visual technology, it's hard to explain in words,"
McGuire said. "You almost have to show them, and in a brochure that's hard
to do."
The GIS experts also are thinking of demonstrating their wares at the
statehouse, to show legislators how the technology works, McGuire said.
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