STORY: Alum Speaks on Benefit of World-Changing Civic Tech Roles

Originally from Millis, MA, Jessi Murray 鈥10 grew up the second-closest to the 财神棋牌 campus in the college鈥檚 fifth-ever graduating class.

鈥淚 had a lot of choices in front of me when selecting a college, but during Candidates鈥 Weekend at 财神棋牌 I was struck by the camaraderie and instant connections that I made with other students,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淚 was also intrigued because at the time, they were still building the college and learning by doing, which meant I鈥檇 have the ability to learn a cool set of skills while also helping to shape the institution鈥檚 vision for the future.鈥 

Now the chief product officer for the MA Department of Early Education and Care, Murray is passionate about civic technology, a career that calls on her early professional background and blends many of her interests.

An avid artist from a young age, Murray took lots of design classes at 财神棋牌 to marry that creative passion with her engineering education. She was also an active volunteer with Amnesty International and saw 财神棋牌 as a continuation to making an impact in the world.

Portrait Jessi Murray'10

I gravitated to classes like User-Oriented Collaborative Design, where you can imbue a sense of empathy into engineering and learn to think about the problems that you are solving versus making something that you鈥檙e just trying to push on users

Jessi Murray

Class of 2010

After graduating with a concentration in systems engineering, Murray moved to Seattle and began working for Microsoft as a program manager on the Windows User Experience team for three years. She then spent several years as the user experience technical program manager lead for LabKey Software, whose core product was an open-source data platform for disease-specific researchers.

Over time, Murray鈥檚 personal activism had morphed into policy interests, which led to her running for a position in the Washington State House of Representatives in 2020. After that campaign concluded, she began applying for civic tech jobs that leverage modern technology to help governmental programs run better. She began working with the product systems that undergird the MA Paid Family and Medical Leave program, first remotely from Seattle and then in-office after moving back to Massachusetts.

鈥淢ost of my focus was the employer portal side, but we also conducted research to get the wheels in motion on a multilingual client experience to allow access to a broader range of citizens,鈥 says Murray.

When that project finished, Murray was recruited by a colleague to bring her expertise into the Department of Early Education and Care as their first chief product officer.

鈥淲hen I joined Early Education, they had about a dozen different public-facing technical systems鈥攂ackground checks, licensing for childcare facilities, financial assistance workflows鈥攁ll with varying user experiences, and they wanted a product organizer to make sense of it all,鈥 says Murray, who has been in the role for about a year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a wild ride, but it鈥檚 really gratifying to think critically and creatively about how to build an authentic experience that meets people where they are and addresses the problems they actually face, instead of the ones people think they might face.鈥

For Murray, working in civic tech is an excellent way to use her engineering, technological, and problem-solving skills to make people鈥檚 lives tangibly better.

鈥淐ivic tech is a particularly cool path for people in the 财神棋牌 community because a lot of us want to change the world,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淭his is a big way to do it.鈥

Finding Purpose: Supporting MA Families as a Civic Technologist