Thursday, December 18, 2008

E-mail Notification Reduction Strategy

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January 8, 2009

UPDATE:

The Grants.gov PMO announced on September 4, 2008 its inclusion of an RSS feed on the Grants.gov website.

Its development and Inclusion of the RSS feed adds to the 255+ existing U.S. Government RSS feeds. The URL launch site for the U.S. Government feeds is: http://www.usa.gov/Topics/Reference_Shelf/Libraries/RSS_Library.shtml

The present feed sorts grant opportunities by Agency and Category. In January 2009 the RSS will evolve by adding two additional feeds: new opportunities and existing opportunities that have been modified.

In the coming months the Grants.gov RSS will undergo further evolution and increased usability.

At the present time the RSS feed supplements, it cannot replace, the Grants.gov email notifications system.
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On a nightly basis, Grants.gov transmits >650,000 emails updating potential applicants of grant opportunities and or modifications. The present burden consumes significant processing power on a system with finite capabilities. As a consequence, the applicant attempting to submit an application may find him/herself competing with the email burden for processing power.

Our strategy to alleviate the burden consists of 4 steps:
Implement and evolve a dynamic RSS feed that may, in some cases, obviate the need for email notification.
Because we know that many emails are sent to dead mailboxes, we will eventually require all present recipients to periodically re-enroll in the email notification system. This will clean up our present email listing inasmuch as non-existent email addresses will be culled from the list.
When re-enrolling, the term of the enrollment will be time limited (i.e., six months or annual). This will prevent the open-ended nature of the present system allowing for and institutionalizing a continuous self-scrubbing approach to business.
As the RSS feed matures, there will be a continuous campaign encouraging movement to RSS feeds vice emails.

The Grants.gov e-mail notification system may not entirely disappear to the degree the PMO desires, but any significant reduction will save monies during a time of limited funding. Moreover, as Grants.gov moves to a cloud computing environment, an arena based on transactional costs, the fewer e-mails sent the lower the costs for the grantor agencies.

10 comments:

Shirley said...

Greeting from Shirly.

We have a tool called myDocs integrated with Outlook that allows document and email management.

DEATH NOTE - THE LAST NAME VIDEOLOG said...

even better!

CollegeFinanceGal said...

This is a great idea that will help many students!

Beth said...

This plan for a thoughtful transition to better RSS and better management of notification enrollments is a big improvement over earlier notes on the same subject. *This* is a transition I can stand behind!

LB said...

Chris - Grants.gov at: http://www.grants.gov/applicants/email_subscription.jsp indicates that the email notifications will terminate 1/31/09.

Your message indicates that that the email notifications may not be terminating and in fact grants.gov may ask people to re-enroll to help clean out bad email addresses.

Which scenario is correct? Thanks.

Dima said...

=======================
January 8, 2009

UPDATE:

The Grants.gov PMO announced on September 4, 2008 its inclusion of an RSS feed on the Grants.gov website.

Its development and Inclusion of the RSS feed adds to the 255+ existing U.S. Government RSS feeds. The URL launch site for the U.S. Government feeds is: http://www.usa.gov/Topics/Reference_Shelf/Libraries/RSS_Library.shtml

The present feed sorts grant opportunities by Agency and Category. In January 2009 the RSS will evolve by adding two additional feeds: new opportunities and existing opportunities that have been modified.

In the coming months the Grants.gov RSS will undergo further evolution and increased usability.

At the present time the RSS feed supplements, it cannot replace, the Grants.gov email notifications system.
=======================

LB said...

Dima - Thanks for the clarification. Could you provide me with additional direction?

Based on your and Chris' comments, it sound to me like the grants.gov website (http://www.grants.gov/applicants/email_subscription.jsp) has 2 errors in it, re: the move to RSS feed.

Based on the grants.gov website information, I have alreadly notified several thousand people that the email notification system was terminating 1/31/09...I would like to be able to give these people a confident and informed update as soon as possible.

Therefore, please clarify whether I am understanding Chris and your discussions correctly:

1) The Grants.gov site says that funding opportunity email notification will terminate on 1/31/09. This is incorrect. There are no immediate plans to terminate the email service.

2) The Grants.gov site encourages people to discontinue email funding opp notificatations right now, and sign up for the RSS feed. However, at this time, the RSS feed is a supplement to the email notifications rather than a subsitute.

And finally, given the number of people that go to grants.gov and in this case seem to be receiving inaccurate information, can you please notify the webmaster and have that site updated to reflect the real situation, whatever that is? Thanks. LB

Thanks, LB

Dima said...

LB—as part of our weekly content website updates we will be updating our site tomorrow to take off the January 31, 2009 date. This is based on our recent decision to continue the daily e-mail notifications. We update the site on Fridays. We still plan to terminate the daily e-mail notifications at a future date so we will continue to encourage people to unsubscribe. Please let us know if you have additional questions.

Anonymous said...

Dima - Thanks for answering my questions.

I am impressed by how large the grant opp email distribution list is (650K+). You all have a lot of people counting on you. Hang in there and thanks for all your work providing transparency and access to federal grant making systems. The improvements have been monumental. LB

Anonymous said...

I wonder how many of the notifications go to dead email addresses.