Daily Camera (Boulder)

Site helps Boulder residents

Google UX Researcher helps residents connect to city services

- By Lucas High

When Boulder began its updated city website this summer, it featured a new platform built with the help of a local Google employee, aimed at making it easier for residents to connect with public service providers.

User experience (UX) researcher Elizabeth Dressler, who works at Google’s Boulder campus on Pearl Street, embedded with city staffers for six month as part of a Google.org Fellowship program, which provides municipali­ties and nonprofit groups with employee time and labor pro bono to develop the Boulder for Me platform.

“I was essentiall­y acting as a city employee, and it was really cool because it was my first time getting to volunteer some of my profession­al skills as a UX researcher,” Dressler told Bizwest.

Boulder for Me serves as a onestop-shop that allows locals to research, connect with and apply for a range of city services from child care subsidies to residentia­l solar power grants.

The goal is simple, Dressler said: “To make residents more aware of what’s available to them” and to help those in need access services. That goal jibes with Boulder’s overall aim for the website relaunch.

“We’ve created our website in a new way that strives to organize services and informatio­n so they are intuitive for community members and not based on department structure. This reflects our commitment to making government more accessible,” Boulder city manager Nuria Rivera-vandermyde said in a statement this summer when the new site went live. “Our goal with this website is to better meet your needs, save you time and deliver exceptiona­l customer service online.”

Dressler “worked with deputy directors of department­s (to get a high level understand­ing of available services and needs), but I also spent time going to the library and sitting down with librarians, going to the rec center and sitting down with the staff (members) who sit behind the counter,” she said. “We tried to get input and knowledge from as many city employees as possible.”

After gathering research from city staff, Dressler turned her attention to local residents and public service users.

“There’s a network of informatio­n that moves around between city department­s and nonprofits and that happens in a bunch of different ways: word of mouth, emails, fliers,” she said. “There’s tons of great informatio­n out there, but it hasn’t been centrally located.”

In the past, residents often had to visit with staffers in person to learn about the service available to them — an often onerous task made more difficult by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Often a resident comes in only looking for one specific service, but (city) employees are aware of all these other services that they could benefit from,” Dressler said. “One of the beautiful things about these employees is how knowledgea­ble they are about everything that’s out there.”

Boulder for Me takes all of this institutio­nal knowledge and catalogs it online for easy access.

During her six-month tenure working with the city, Dressler was able to devote all of her working time to the Boulder for Me project, which she called “deeply rewarding.”

When she moved to Boulder about three years ago, “one of my goals was to really understand the city better,” Dressler said. The fellowship program put her in a position not only to get to know the city better but also to help the city.

“It was honestly a life-changing experience for me,” she said. “It felt so cool working with my community and delivering something to a population that really needed it.”

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