At USAID, Productivity May Look Different Than Before
Enabling employees to work productively is the highest priority for the agency, said USAID Chief Information Officer. But that productivity may look different than before.
Enabling employees to work productively is the highest priority for the agency, said USAID Chief Information Officer. But that productivity may look different than before.
While the pandemic eventually will end, telework is here to stay. Six best practices can help you raise your game and become a telework ace.
Working from home is here to stay. Working with (and leading) remote employees is a fact of life we need to accept and learn to manage.
Reacting is what IT managers did in March. Now, they are taking a step back to reassess the planning element with the benefit of recent lessons learned.
Like most things, working from home has pros and cons. Employees might get to sleep a little longer or get back hours of their commute time. But they also face new security threats in their home IT environments.
By the count of a recent GovLoop survey, public service has held up pretty well six months later considering the unscripted, tumultuous changes of COVID-19.
A lesson from the Small Business Administration’s experience is that ongoing initiatives toward IT modernization tend to prepare agencies for unexpected emergencies.
To learn more about the VA’s pandemic response, we spoke with the director and a senior analyst of the Enterprise Cloud Solutions Office (ECSO) at VA.
With telework looking like an increasingly long-term capability for agencies, here are three tips for working remotely and securely no matter your location.
Across all levels of government, the number of teleworkers jumped during the pandemic.