Jessica Cole

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Jessica Cole

Jessica Cole

@jessunscripted

Civic builder, urbanite | Cofounder @USDResponse | alum Tech Policy Fellow @AspenInstitute @CodeForAmerica @yale | Taker of field trips, believer in people.

San Francisco, CA Katılım Aralık 2008
2.3K Takip Edilen2.5K Takipçiler
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
Some big news @USDResponse & for me personally - today we launch our search for our next CEO, and in Dec I'll be transitioning from full-time to an org advisor. This is the best team & mission imaginable. You should apply. usdigitalresponse.org/press-release/…
U.S. Digital Response@USDResponse

🥳 Big news at @USDResponse: After hitting major milestones, we’re looking for our next CEO to help guide USDR to our next chapter. ❤️‍🔥 What’s more, we’re thrilled to announce that @pahlkadot is joining our board of directors! usdigitalresponse.org/press-release/…

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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
Listened to an education talk where they said they focused on limiting student device use while walking the halls/campus and that change alone led to so many more nourishing interactions. Wondering how that would feel at a city scale. A “no devices en route” intervention?
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
Would be such a public good to pass on some of the tacit experience and norms that otherwise only gets carried through much larger institutions
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
Are there any programs where newer CEOs/EDs/board members get to shadow the workings of established boards for a meeting or two? If not, there should be.
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
The work to be done in this world is so interesting and meaningful. Some days I can’t believe we get to do it.
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
must read @pahlkadot, featuring @MattMahanSJ "I want to find the politicians who are reforming the machinery of government so that it actually works, describe how they spend their time..and how they conceive of their jobs that’s different from others." eatingpolicy.com/p/better-polit…
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Andy Coravos
Andy Coravos@AndreaCoravos·
@KumarAGarg Wahoo thank you for checking it out and sharing! I agree w your take
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Kumar Garg
Kumar Garg@KumarAGarg·
I like the “type of capital” section. Most founders have no idea about the different types of non-dilutive capital and how to access them. Would be pretty good business/service to build.
Astera Institute@AsteraInstitute

Most advice on fundraising comes from VCs, and is written for software companies. We’ve published one that’s a little different. By @andreacoravos & Rachel Katz, who have successfully fundraised for and exited their own companies, here’s a guide for founders in healthcare and the sciences: astera.org/founders-guide…

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Santi Ruiz
Santi Ruiz@rSanti97·
So this is a great question. State capacity is an annoying political science term, and classically the definition is something like “a state’s ability to achieve its goals.” If you’re assessing early states, you’re asking a couple basic questions about state capacity: - Can they collect taxes? Or grain? - Can they muster men for an army? If they can, they have “high state capacity” in those domains. As you get closer to the present day, states try to do more things, so you’re measuring the state’s “capacity” to do those things: like providing a social safety net, or to regulate a given market. It often implies a particular focus on implementation. The king says, “Let it be done.” Okay. Now what? How does “it” actually get “done”? Also, state capacity gets used in the modern day to talk about governance generally, at multiple levels. Although NYC is a city, you could talk about the fact that trash gets dumped out on the street as a failure of state capacity. State capacity is a pretty contestable term, obviously. Do we want more state capacity? For most people, it depends on the domain: maybe you want the state to be better at deporting people who are here illegally, but worse at regulating crypto. Or vice versa. I write statecraft.pub for a couple reasons. For one, I’m just interested in how policy actually happens. I think the stories of the people who are told by Congress or the President “go do this thing” can actually be quite fascinating. But I’m also pretty convinced that a lot of things people think are problems with policy are actually problems with state capacity. Often, the American people have tasked the government with doing something, and we just don’t do it very well, because we haven’t built a system that would be able to do it well. So the project is an attempt to figure out if that’s true — and how we can fix American state capacity if it is.
Santi Ruiz tweet media
Evie Solheim@EvieSolheim

@maxb____ @rSanti97 @wmataGM you guys… what is state capacity… I’ve been afraid to ask

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Aspen Policy Academy
Aspen Policy Academy@AspenPolicyAcad·
⏰ The application for our summer 2025 Science & Technology Policy Fellowship closes tomorrow at 11:59pm PT! This full-time, paid opportunity introduces Fellows to real-world policy training and a tight-knit network. Don’t miss your chance to apply 👇: aspenpolicyacademy.org/Fellowship/
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Saad Asad
Saad Asad@realsaadasad·
After 2 years at @USDResponse, today's my last day. I came in as a tech marketer searching for meaning in my work. Found something unexpected: a team helping public servants solve real problems. We worked with election officials modernizing systems while maintaining trust, local staff cutting through federal grant complexity, and governments building better tools with limited resources. Proud to have transformed how USDR shares its impact and shown how tech can make government work better. Thank you for everything USDR team 🙏 P.S. Please reach out as I hunt for jobs, focusing on marketing or comms in a mission-oriented org.
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Andrew Rose
Andrew Rose@__drewface·
hah, back in 2021 I felt like my work wasn't interesting enough to talk about yet, and that I was doing too many things at once, so people wouldn't believe I could be serious. Turns out I just needed to keep walking. (I still need to keep walking)
Andrew Rose@__drewface

@visakanv Lately I've been feeling very shy about doing so many things at once. Like people around me will think "oh, he doesn't know what he wants" or "he's always getting distracted" But I don't see it that way, or work that way. I've been avoiding sharing my projects due to this :(

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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
5 days ago my friend forgot her fancy hot cocoa mix at my apartment. 4 days ago, I began a tradition of having a 3pm cup of hot cocoa each workday. …when do I tell her.
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Dr. Maya C. Popa
Dr. Maya C. Popa@MayaCPopa·
"We give because someone gave to us. We give because nobody gave to us."
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Joseph Fasano
Joseph Fasano@Joseph_Fasano_·
Woolf was feeling it.
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
Sometimes, when the light
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Jessica Cole
Jessica Cole@jessunscripted·
@tamarawinter I’ve been waiting for the moment we get to get you in public service! Just say the word
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Tamara Winter
Tamara Winter@tamarawinter·
My toxic trait is that I firmly believe if you gave me a month I could fix the way too common problem of deeply inefficient TSA lines.
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