1 / 13

Management, Change and Culture

Management, Change and Culture. George O. Strawn NSF CIO. Outline. Questions raised by the organizers (and some proffered answers) James Q. Wilson, Bureaucracy: What Government Agencies Do and Why They Do It Daniel Boorstin, Hidden History: Exploring Our Secret Past

tibbitts
Télécharger la présentation

Management, Change and Culture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Management, Change and Culture George O. Strawn NSF CIO

  2. Outline • Questions raised by the organizers (and some proffered answers) • James Q. Wilson, Bureaucracy: What Government Agencies Do and Why They Do It • Daniel Boorstin, Hidden History: Exploring Our Secret Past • Ray Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near • Some observations

  3. Management • How can we promote process improvement:With executives? • In “simple” cases: document the RoI (ie, cost savings) • In complex cases: market the perceived benefits (in spite of cost increase), and/or let nature take its course • Must talk biz, not tech • Must excite management • Even better, be excited *by* management • With business partners?With organizational managers?

  4. Who is responsible? • For process improvement and enterprise architecture? • At NSF, for example, the CIO is "responsible" • Each business owner (if any!) is really in charge of their own processes, improving or not • imho, Clinger-Cohen does not empower CIO's to take charge of EA • Is it beyond the CIO? • Yep, at least as the CIO is currently envisioned • How can we motivate the Government to change? • See below for some ruminations

  5. James Q Wilson • We (USG) have special authority (to tax and spend, make war, etc) • We must be accountable (today that means "transparent") for the tax payers' money • We must be equitable (here equal comes before free) • We must also be efficient (like the private sector is efficient)

  6. Daniel Boorstin • On leadership in DC (although it would seem to apply anywhere): • A leader must overcome the professional fallacy: that the profession exists for itself • A leader must overcome the bureaucratic fallacy: never do anything for the first time

  7. The OMB • We are responsible to OMB for compliance and to agency management for performance (eg, for process improvement) • Compliance often precedes performance (at least in IT matters) • Compliance can lead to performance (improvements), but does not guarantee it

  8. CIO Office Relationships Execs | Vendors – CIO -- Customers | Employees

  9. CIO Office Relationships Execs | Vendors – CIO -- Customers | Employees Strategic Value Outsourcing

  10. Exponential Speedup in Change 5,000,000,000 yBP Solar system forms 500,000,000 Multi-cell life emerges 50,000,000 Mammals dominate 5,000,000 Human line separates 500,000 Big brains, fine tools, fire 50,000 Fully modern, language 5,000 Civ: writing, math, cities 500 Western Civ: printing 50 Electronic computing

  11. Human/technology Changes 5,000,000 yBP Human line separates 500,000 Big brains, fine tools, fire 50,000 Fully modern, out of Africa, language 10,000 Agriculture adopted 5,000 Civ: writing, math, cities 500 Western Civ: printing 200 Steam engine 150 Telegraph 50 Computer 10 Internet

  12. Change and Culture • Technology changes in years to decades • During the last two hundred years • Culture changes in decades to centuries • How can we accelerate culture changes to be at the rate of technology changes? • Or slow down technology changes to be more like culture changes?

  13. Conclusions • The USG cannot be as efficient as the private sector because of its authority, accountability, and equity requirements • If you don’t like the heat that democratic government entails, get out of the kitchen • If you do like heat, learn to: manage contracts better, improve IT security and privacy, and expect accelerating change!

More Related