Overview

November 10

Watch Now

COVID-19 was the impetus for the public sector’s move to virtual meetings and collaboration tools. But rather than being a temporary fix, these technologies have more than proven their worth. Employees gained back time by not having to travel to in-person meetings. Constituents could better weave appointments like social worker visits into their lives. Residents were able to engage with their governments through online public meetings.

How can state and local governments move forward and further capitalize on this technology to modernize and better serve constituents in the future?

Join Government Technology on November 10 at 11 a.m. Pacific/2 p.m. Eastern as we discuss how virtual meetings and collaboration will remain a top priority as many government agencies move to hybrid work – and how you can continue to innovate.

Register now to hear how a virtual meeting strategy can:

  • Promote cross-agency collaboration and optimize workflows
  • Improve recruitment strategies and offer agencies new options for talent
  • Build better relationships between constituents and government

Speakers

 

Stephen Ellis

Government Solutions Lead, Zoom

Stephen Ellis serves as Zoom's Government Solutions Lead. He manages market development and strategy across Zoom's Federal, State, Local and Global government portfolio. He is a recognized public sector thought leader and frequent speaker in media interviews and at events & symposia serving this vertical. Stephen comes to Zoom with a robust leadership history in the government space, most recently with Dell. He has also had prior senior managerial tenures with Deloitte, and as a contractor to the Federal Government, Microsoft, and businesses now part of GDIT, Boeing, and Perspecta.

 

Otto Doll — Moderator

Senior Fellow, Center for Digital Government

As the Minneapolis CIO for seven-plus years, Mr. Doll was responsible for all city IT services. He also served as South Dakota's CIO for 15 years with responsibility for all state government computing, telecommunications, radio, and public broadcasting.