Find the Right Path to Digital Transformation
Many agencies undertaking transformation initiatives struggle with common problems — surprise costs and compliance and security issues, for instance — but the solutions are agency-specific.
Many agencies undertaking transformation initiatives struggle with common problems — surprise costs and compliance and security issues, for instance — but the solutions are agency-specific.
Top agencies are leveraging cloud, AI and machine learning to deliver services quickly and effectively, at the far reaches of operations. Read how the Air Force and NASA are innovating at the edge.
Instead of quitting on the job and hoping others don’t notice, unengaged employees can find ways to make their work-life more interesting.
Data analytics can be like a puzzle — but one where you don’t even know which pieces will be in the final picture or what it will look like. Automation can get you out of the box.
Recent studies have found that employers increasingly emphasized the importance of soft skills when hiring and promoting workers.
Agencies have a wealth of unstructured data — images, audio recordings and other information that doesn’t fit neatly in traditional databases or lend itself to analysis by traditional data tools — at their fingertips. So how can government make sense of all this data? How can agencies actually use it?
The traditional budgeting approach used by local governments has many downsides, including a reliance on siloed data and an inability to identify how agencies can deliver services more efficiently and effectively. But rules-based software, which offers a digital and personalized approach, helps to solve those problems.
Agencies can’t afford to rely on guesswork to hire and retain talent – they need data. Four government and industry experts explain just what that means.
An interview with Tara McGuinness, on how networks, technology, management and data practices can be used to tackle inequity and other challenges.
Manually sifting through data is time-consuming and terribly inefficient. A digital approach to documentation, however, can yield faster, more accurate and more insightful outcomes.