by Jim Gilliam

Making the Future

I’m getting ready to launch NationBuilder in the next month or two, so I’m starting my blog back up and even giving it a name — Make the Future. The name comes from Carl Pope, the long-time leader of the Sierra Club. In This Brave Nation, a documentary series we made at Brave New Films about a year ago, he said: “Just take what you love doing, and do it with enough other people, to make it the future.”

Shortly before the election, I started White House 2 to democratically set the agenda for the incoming Obama administration, and track it like the Nielsen’s TV ratings. There was so much to be done, I wanted people to think hard about what the priorities should be — there was just no way he could do everything at once!

I put the first site up in two weeks, and people from all over the world started contacting me about bringing it to their country. I’ve been working non-stop since then, and am about 5-6 weeks away from beta on NationBuilder, a web service that will let anyone set up their own site just like White House 2.

You can look at White House 2 and easily see how this could be used for governments of all kinds, but I believe it can also be used to bring democracy to business. Successful businesses of the future need to involve all the stakeholders, whether they are employees, management, shareholders, or customers. They need to establish the right incentives, and have tools that work better when hundreds of thousands of people are involved, not worse. Oh, and it has to be fun, or no one will care.

At Brave New Films, we pretty much turned the documentary world upside down doing a first generation version of this. We built our own audience, and then involved them as much as we could in making and distributing the films. They hosted tens of thousands of screenings, shot footage, took photos of abandoned Wal-Marts, put up half the funding for our last documentary ($260k), and even suggested the name of the company itself. But the only reason we were able to do as much as we did, is because I could code anything we might dream up. There just aren’t many tools designed for companies to operate like this.

NationBuilder will be a general purpose operating system to run democracies online, and we’ll use the software itself to run the company. It’s kind of a far out idea, and I don’t have all the answers on how it should work yet, but I’m having a ton of fun figuring it out. This blog will track the evolution of the platform, and show how people can use NationBuilder to, well, make the future.

  • Ramin
    welcome back!
  • Thank you for creating the conditions and the virtual electronic infrastructure necessary to design the elements and components of a better future!
  • cRitter
    Will NationBuilder be a more robust version of WH2 or are you working on something completely different?
  • WH2 will be running on NationBuilder. Technically, it's all the same codebase, I've just been making the whole thing more customizable behind the scenes. Development will continue on full time, I've got a whole ton of ideas for this.
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About this blog

Jim Gilliam is a geeky activist building internet tools to shake up a broken political system.

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