I'm not sure how relevent it is here, since I didn't attend the meeting to
find out what is going on, but I did read some options from the
FierceWireless Newletter. http://www.fiercewireless.com

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Successful.com's Craig Settles offers some lessons to municipalities about
managing the expectations of their muni-WiFi efforts.

There's a crazy roller coaster ride we often endure when some new
"revolutionary" technology hits the scene. First, there's the rush of ascent
as promises of "unparalleled benefits" gush forth from the marketing minions
and analysts. The media picks up on the trend, anoints it The Next Big Thing
and on up we race. Then comes the rapid gut wrenching descent as average
users of the technology start discovering what should have been some obvious
flaws.

The pundits and media pick up on this and start widespread hang wringing as
we've seen recently with negative media coverage after muni-WiFi networks
went live in Tempe, AZ, and St. Cloud, FL. San Francisco has become a
disgruntlement dart board, and it hasn't even signed a contract.

Let's level out this roller before we get emotional whiplash. Here are some
lessons for those actively participating in, or following with interest,
these muni wireless initiatives. Vendors, consultants and service providers
have as much responsibility as cities do to encourage putting these into
action. Your profits are riding this same roller coaster.

Lesson 1 - Don't allow others to declare your network a flop. Remind people
why you're building the network. Of the four primary reasons cities deploy
municipal networks--government use, digital inclusion, economic development,
general public wireless Internet access--cheap access is the least
financially defensible. Yet, it is continually the tail that wags the dog,
particularly with this being an election year in many municipalities. Cities
would do well to shift discussions in the media away from whether or not
people are having trouble getting coverage in their homes, and focus on how
the network is impacting government work.

Lesson 2 - Better manage expectations. Early feedback about Tempe's
deployment criticized people's inability to get coverage everywhere. But go
back and review public proclamations by politicians, vendors and others when
Tempe announced they were going to deploy. You see the problem right away.
Officials wrote, or allowed others to write, expectation checks that the
bank of technology reality can't cover. Were there warnings that the
technology will take a few months after going live to get the bugs worked
out? Often, government officials just don't understand the technology or its
limitations.

Unless and until cities realize that poorly managed expectations pave the
road to eventual constituent backlash, the minute you go live there's going
to be hell to pay. And the whole world will read about it.

Lesson 3 - People, reign in your politicians. This is an election year for
many municipalities. "Free municipal WiFi for everyone" is a great hook upon
which to hang a few political hopes. It's the 21st century version of the
1928 promise of "a chicken in every pot."

However, broadband wireless is too complex, citywide WiFi is too new and
examples of cities doing it right are too few for the technology to live up
to campaign promises. Most politicians know too little about technology and
care too much about looking good for voters to drive key initiatives.

Use the mayor to get the initiative off the ground, bring them out
occasionally to maintain its momentum and have them show up to take final
bows when the network goes live. But the CIO, someone in IT or a
multi-constituent steering committee should be out front leading the public
discussion.

Lesson 4 - Find a PR strategist. No, not a press secretary, and not a spin
doctor. Get someone who knows how to craft messages, position products or
services, keep people in various parts of the government on the same page
with those messages and build consensus among constituent groups.

Hundreds of municipalities are about to roll out a major new technology
solution that's going significantly alter how business gets done in those
cities. Build anticipation, set realistic expectations and educate the
market. There are enemies of muni-WiFi who will broadcast every flaw and
scar. Cities and their supporters must drive the public discussion, not
their enemies.

Lesson 5 - Maintain transparency with those whom the network is supposed to
serve. If it's not careful, San Francisco could become an embarrassing
footnote in the short history of muni-WiFi as the only city initiative to be
temporarily derailed by the technology's main supporters. Regardless of the
reality, San Francisco is perceived locally to have acted hastily, with
disregard to community needs and wishes, inspired by political cronyism and
without any credible amount of technology due diligence.