Get Fired up About Data
Agencies are launching new and innovative data initiatives, but many of their employees are being left behind. Creating a culture of analytics can bring everyone into the fold.
Agencies are launching new and innovative data initiatives, but many of their employees are being left behind. Creating a culture of analytics can bring everyone into the fold.
Ronins were masterless samurais in feudal Japan — and, it turns out, are excellent models for navigating uncertain job markets in contemporary culture.
Data storytelling bridges the gap between accumulating data and doing something about it. Megan Huss, Director of the Process and Performance Improvement Program at the Center for Leadership Development in the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), explains how to make data storytelling work.
Do you know what will differentiate you from being just an employee, to a good employee?
Communities of Practice (CoP) are popping up everywhere in my agency. What seemed to me to be a novel approach to learning, sharing and leading, I have discovered is an aged old phenomenon that stems from learning theory. Cognitive anthropologists Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger coined the term “community of practice” when studying apprenticeships asRead… Read more »
While the technology that agencies buy has changed considerably in recent years, the process of buying it, not so much. So just as government IT faces modernization, the procurement of government IT needs to modernize, too.
The federal government has long encouraged use of small businesses and is making a greater effort to incorporate racial equity in that endeavor. But there can be challenges when small businesses team up with large firms to deliver on a contract. Here are tips to make the partnerships work better.
Think about the large digital displays agencies use to direct visitors and share information with employees. While not traditional devices, these displays must still be protected.
We can compare our view of life to a camera lens. What can we do to expand that lens and re-assess our view of what’s really going on?
Authentication factors don’t govern security; the authentication infrastructure determines security. So what’s with all the “killing passwords” talk?