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Taoti wins Open Gov Hub award for “coolest collaboration”

Open Gov Hub award celebrates the success that can come about when people with completely different sets of skills and experiences, come together to achieve shared goals.
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Taoti Creative

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Taoti is a creative agency hell-bent on using its 20 years in the game developing strategies, websites and apps to help organizations do what they do, but better. Reach out…

Washington, DC – Open Gov Hub, the world’s first co-working community with a mission focused on ensuring more transparent and open governments around the world, presented Stacy Whittle and Zoe Reiter with the “Coolest Collaboration Award,” April 19, 2018.

The award, well-deserved recognition for the extensive, international media attention given to the release of Transparency International’s 2017 Global Corruption Barometer, also celebrates the success that can come about when people with completely different sets of skills and experiences, come together to achieve shared goals. In this case, it was a commitment to fighting corruption.

Whittle, a repertory actor not to mention a full-time strategist for Taoti Creative, and Reiter, the US representative to Transparency International, the Berlin-based civil society organization worked side-by-side to ensure the Corruption Barometer was given the attention it deserved. Through TI’s Global Corruption Barometer, tens of thousands of people around the globe have the power to share their first-hand views and experiences with government corruption; it the only worldwide public opinion survey on dishonesty, misconduct, and fraud by those in power.

image of stacy receiving award

The network of 40 organizations that comprise Open Gov Hub champions justice and government accountability to bring solutions to the many water resources, renewable energy, climate change and urbanization challenges facing the world today.

Whittle remarked after receiving the award, “I’m a strong believer in actively working to give people a voice for justice. Solutions just don’t happen when you say you’re concerned; you have to jump in and get your hands dirty. I teach my teenage sons this every day. Words aren’t enough. It was an honor to work with Zoe to get the Global Corruption Barometer story picked up by media outlets around the world. It’s just one of many steps to ending corruption – but you have to take them.”