tag breakfast series: technology in government

17
Technology in Government: What’s Next Patrick Moore Georgia State CIO Executive Director, Georgia Technology Authority August 10, 2010

Upload: melanie-brandt

Post on 01-Nov-2014

732 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

Technology in Government: What’s Next

Patrick MooreGeorgia State CIOExecutive Director, Georgia Technology Authority

August 10, 2010

Page 2: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

2

Today’s IT Headlines

Page 3: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

3

National Trends• Budgets

▪ Two-thirds expect lower IT budgets through 2013 and are managing through staff reductions, consolidation and shared services

• IT Governance▪ CIOs shoulder responsibility but lack equal share of authority

▪ Three-fifths give portfolio management processes a “C”

• Business Models▪ Most CIOs expect to expand shared services and managed services

• IT Procurement▪ They give current processes a “C”

▪ Changes need to align with industry standards and best practices

• Emerging Technology▪ Cloud computing is nothing new

▪ Half are investigating it, one-third are running active or pilot projects

Source: 2010 State CIO Survey, National Association of State CIOs

Page 4: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

4

State CIO Priorities for 2010

• Budget and cost control

• Consolidation

• Shared services

• Broadband and connectivity

• American Recovery and Reinvestment Act

• Security

• Transparency

• Infrastructure

• Health information

• Governance

Source: National Association of State CIOs, November 2009

Page 5: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

5

Building a Foundation for the Future

• Speed of technological change is continuing▪ Gordon Moore’s law: Number of transistors on a chip will double

about every two years

▪ Computers for Apollo moon missions had less processing power than a cell phone

• Government must adapt to technology and how it’s used▪ 234 million Americans subscribed to mobile phone plans in January

2010 300 million projected by mid-2011

▪ 42.7 million owned Internet-accessible smartphones 150 million projected by mid-2011

Government struggles to keep pace with this change

Sources: comScore, The Neilsen Company, Broadcast Engineering

Page 6: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

6

A Picture of Georgia State Government

• $17.4 billion in revenue

• No. 137 if we were a Fortune 500 company

• 116 departments, agencies, offices, commissions and councils

• Wide range of services

• Almost 100,000 employee positions

• 9.8 million customers – 20% increase since 2000

Page 7: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

7

Georgia’s IT Enterprise

• $942.7 million spent on state’s IT enterprise in FY 2009* (5.8% of amended FY09 budget)▪ $274.8 million on IT infrastructure

▪ $383.6 million on applications

▪ $284.3 million on IT projects

• GTA is the state’s IT shared services organization▪ $236.3 million budget for FY 2010

▪ $192 million in pass-through for technology services

▪ $44.3 million operating budget

We still need to rationalize our spend

* Figures do not include expenditures by the University System of Georgia or the Department of Transportation.

Page 8: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

8

GTA Customers – GTA Services

Who we serve What we deliver

1,400 – At Will

85 – Executive Branch

14 – GETS

• Servers• Desktops &

laptops

• Policies & standards

• Network• Mainframe

• Mainframe• Servers

• Policies & standards

• Network

Page 9: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

9

GTA’s Scope Today

• IT Infrastructure Services▪ 35,000 IT infrastructure end users▪ 47,000 e-mail accounts▪ 668TB of storage space▪ 2,500 servers

• Managed Network Services▪ 2,000 firewalls▪ 1,850 routers▪ 7,700 physical sites▪ 133,159 voice ports

Page 10: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

10

Georgia is Privatizing and Consolidating

• Privatized state IT operations in 2009▪ Infrastructure services with IBM

▪ Managed network services with AT&T

• State of Georgia was carrying too much risk

• We were not keeping up with changing technology

Technology is not a core competency of government

Page 11: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

11

From This…

Page 12: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

12

To This

State Print Shop

State’s Tier IVData Center

Consolidated Service Desk

Page 13: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

13

State of Georgia Investments

IT Infrastructure▪ Transition and transformation: $62 million▪ Infrastructure services: $122 million

Network▪ Transition and transformation: $34 million▪ Network infrastructure: $65 million

These are investments the state never could make on its own

Page 14: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

14

What’s Next

AgencyLayer

Core Missions

Collaboration Layer

Project Delivery ArchitectureState Reviews Data Management & Access

Statewide Infrastructure Layer

Data Center Security Network

Shared Applications Commodity Procurements

We’ve been focused on building the

foundation

Customer interactions take

place here

We are making progress here

Page 15: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

15

A Vision for the Future

• Enterprise application strategy▪ Focus on customer interfaces▪ Consider developments like mobile computing▪ Savings opportunity

• Consolidated budget for all state technology

• Improve IT governance

Create a consolidated, transparent enterprise where technology decisions

are made with the citizen in mind

Page 16: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

16

What You Can Do to Help

Educate policy makers

▪ Technology must be seen as an investment – not as an expense

Convey a sense of urgency

▪ Government has to move faster than it does

Page 17: TAG Breakfast Series: Technology in Government

17