Transcript
Page 1: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

2009 Review ofIAC Shared Interest Groups

July 9, 2009

Page 2: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Agenda

• Charter• Outcomes• Success Factors• Lessons Learned• Committee Membership• Interview Process• Interview Slate• Schedule/Timeline• Q&A

Page 3: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Charter• Review the agenda and structure of the IAC Shared Interest Groups in

order to ensure that the SIGs are: – Addressing the most relevant issues affecting the government’s use of IT– Are providing thought leadership on emerging issues– Are structured and operating in a manner that maximizes the opportunity for industry

and government executives to participate in the activities of the SIGs.

• In conducting its review the SIG Structure Working Group shall consider the following sources of information:– The agenda of the new administration– The ACT government-wide strategic agenda– The reports of the IAC Transition Study Group– Such other documents and reports as are relevant to this activity

Page 4: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Outcomes• A proposed structure for the SIGs;• A proposed agenda of issues to be addressed by the SIGs;• Recommendations for engaging a wide range of government involvement

in GAPs and encouraging IAC member involvement in the SIGs• Recommendations for improving the participation of subject matter

experts in the SIGs; and• Such other recommendations as may be appropriate to improve the

relevance and operation of the SIGs.

Page 5: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Success Factors• The extent to which government and industry executives and

practitioners are involved in the activities of the SIGs;• The extent to which subject matter experts are involved in the SIGs;• The extent to which government executives see the SIGs as a resource

and request their assistance;• The impact of SIG white papers and other products

Page 6: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Lessons Learned• Good understanding of the Government priorities – Think about whether

the government did not articulate some trend that they should have• Identify gaps with the current SIG line-up• Coordinate with the SIG chairs early and through-out the process• Vet the new SIG alignment with Government• Ensure IAC EC is constantly involved• Change Management

– SIGs are used as a stepping stone into IAC– SIGs are managed by volunteers

• Communications, Communications, Communications!!!

Page 7: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Members• Rosa Caldas, Zemitek• Chris Chroniger, NetStar-1• Ellen Glover, ICF• Michael Klimkiewicz, HPTi• Andrew Lieber, Grant Thornton• Venkatapathi Puvvada, Unisys• Paul Strasser, Pragmatics• Michael Tiemann, FEAC Institute• Michelle, Tranter, EDS/HP• Deepak Hathiramani, Vistronix

• Ken Allen, IAC• Dan Twomey, Executive Committee• John Shaw, IAC

Page 8: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Interview Process• Input solicited through multiple channels

– In-person Interviews– Concise on-line questionnaire open to membership, GAP members, Past SIG Chairs and

potential other government staff for approximately 30 days

• Interviews will be conducted during the months of July – August– Conducted by Five teams of two (Team Lead + partner)– Approximately 30 in-person interviews– Questionnaire provided prior to interview– Interviews designed to last approximately 45 – 60 minutes– Potential/perceived Conflicts of Interest to be avoided

Page 9: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Interview Slate• Slate

– SIG Chairs– SIG Vice Chairs– GAP Members– ACT Board– Other related government vested interest groups e.g. CIO Council, Chief Acquisition

Council, etc. – Other Industry and Government individuals as deemed necessary

• SIG Chairs and Vice-Chairs interviewed independently• Please see attachment for final list of interviewees

Page 10: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Timeline May 28 – Kick-off meeting May 30 – Finalize SIG Review Committee membership June 4 – Brief IAC Executive Committee June 12 – Finalize Process; Brief IAC SIG Vice-Chairs

• July 9 – Brief IAC Executive Committee• July 10 – Brief IAC SIG Chairs• July 14 – Brief ACT BOD• July 22 – Brief Membership• June - August – Conduct Interviews• August 14 – Brief IAC SIG Vice-Chairs• August

– Develop Findings and Preliminary Recommendations– Working group briefs IAC Executive Committee on findings and preliminary recommendations– Findings and recommendations circulated to appropriate individuals for review

• September 11 – Brief IAC SIG Chairs• September – Final report of Working Group presented to IAC Executive Committee for action• October 26 – New SIG structure and agenda presented at Executive Leadership Conference• Dec 2008 - SIGs hold elections for 2010 Leadership (no recent precedent on how to hold

elections for new SIGs)• January 1, 2009 – New SIG structure implemented

Page 11: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Q&A

Page 12: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Appendix

Page 13: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

SWOT• STRENGTHS

– Critical part of IAC– Provide a platform for skills development for member companies– Strong & Unique Reputation within the Federal domain– All volunteer organization– Strong Leadership– Cost Neutral– Improved collaboration between SIGs– High Return –on-Investment (ROI) for IAC based on the investment in staff resoruces

Page 14: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

SWOT• WEAKNESSES

– Volunteer Organization– Not addressing relevant areas/skill-sets/roles of government

• Some SIGs more successful than others

– Leadership– Not-Invented-Here (NIH) Culture– Structure/Model of SIGs

• Lack of Focus• Outcome is not even across SIGs• See Structure/Model of SIGs under Opportunities

Page 15: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

SWOT• OPPORTUNITIES

– Expand member organization management buy-in by recognizing the value proposition of IAC & SIGs• Expand involvement beyond Business Development to include management and SMEs

– Improve Model/Structure of SIG• Do we have to many SIGs?• Do we have to many sub-committees?• Review/Replicate Enterprise Architecture SIG model• SIGs should be outcome driven & time-bound

– Improved collaboration with new administration– Expand constituents through relationships with CXO councils– Expand geographic reach of SIGs by engaging SMEs across the country – Improve ability to be in a leadership position within the technology domain

• Positions SIGs to be on the leading edge of technology enhancing our ability to align the use of technology with government initiatives

Page 16: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

SWOT• OPPORTUNITIES (contd.)

– Explore the concept of Communities-of-Interest• Considering our membership consists of a majority of Small Business, should we consider a program, cross

cutting across all SIG, to assist small businesses? • Should the Small Business SIG be a Community-of-Interest?• Current SB SIG has strong leadership and very engaged GAP• Should we consider an Innovation SIG or Community of Interest?

– Leverage technology (Sharepoint, webniars, etc.) to facilitate increased collaboration– Create a Technical/Professional Development environment for Government/Members

• Use Partners/Voyagers as a springboard• Leadership Development• Leverage member company SMEs

– Use of Web 2.0 for SIGs• Expanding reach with Government• Collaboration

Page 17: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

SWOT• THREATS

– Perception as a BD organization– Decreasing relevance if key government initiatives not addressed in a short time-frame

• Healthcare, Cyber-security, Web 2.0

– Are we ready to be engaged in a Web 2.0 environment?

Page 18: 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups July 9, 2009

Supplemental Documentation• 2009 Review of IAC Shared Interest Groups• 2009 Federal Government IT Strategic Agenda• 2009 SIG Leadership, Mission & Structure• Transition Study reports• SIG SOPs• 2004 Report of the IAC SIG DIG• 2004 Interview Guide