How Gov’s C-Suite Is Moving Agencies Forward
Government executives faced sweeping changes the past 18 months, from a “data explosion” to increased virtual collaboration. They’re applying all the lessons they learned into 2022.
Government executives faced sweeping changes the past 18 months, from a “data explosion” to increased virtual collaboration. They’re applying all the lessons they learned into 2022.
For all the success that agencies have had with cloud computing, many experts say that the original clouds did not realize the full potential of cloud computing.
Early on, network outages disrupted NASA’s remote workers, prompting quickly implemented architectural improvements to resolve those issues.
Resilience requires agility – the ability to make slight, sometimes frequent, alterations to technology, processes or organizational goals – while staying within budget and staying true to agencies’ missions.
ERP systems manage an agency’s key business practices with technology that operates in real-time. It can impact such major agency topics as payrolls.
The challenge in migrating this enterprise application to the cloud was finding the right platform. So Treasury came up with a criteria list.
Based on the survey data and research conducted by GovLoop, several trends emerged about how agencies view cloud and its alignment to customer experience.
Automating manual processes, particularly security patching, in the data center is the key factor that will allow federal agencies to meet compliance standards and keep data secure while freeing up resources for other critical tasks.
If one thing is constant in the IT world, it’s change. Technology and procedures are often changing for the better in government, which improves processes and services that citizens can then use to improve their lives.
As the public sector moves further into cloud migration, it’s crucial to approach the process methodically at your agency.