Tom Temin from FedInsider

 

Posts by Tom Temin from FedInsider


You might be hearing it a lot. Federal CIO Steve VanRoekel is calling for departments and major agencies to create vendor management organizations, or single-office gateways for managing contractors.

He comes at this in the context of the 25-point IT reform plan. He’s vetting the idea through the President’s Management Advisory Board (PMAB.) Industry uses VMOs widely. Basically VMO is modern parlance for purchasing department. Keep reading →


This story was originally published by FedInsider.

Like the Gordian knot, software is the perennial unsolvable problem for federal agencies. What program manager hasn’t been stymied by software that is late, over-budget or just takes years to get right? Unfortunately, there is no quick stroke of the sword to solve this one. Keep reading →

Casey Kelley has one main thing to worry about. But it’s a doozy. As director of the Enterprise Acquisition Division at GSA, he’s responsible for the Alliant governmentwide acquisition contract.

Just one contract, but it encompasses 58 suppliers. Many of them are the top tier IT contractors and consultants such as CSC, Deloitte, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and Verizon. And it’s done $8 billion in business in its 29 months since opening for business. Task orders total 180, with the largest – $2.5 billion over 10 years – placed by the State Department. (The companion Alliant Small Business GWAC operates out of a different division in GSA, in Kansas City.)
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This article was originally published by FedInsider.
____________________________________________________Casey Kelley has one main thing to worry about. But it’s a doozy. As director of the Enterprise Acquisition Division at GSA, he’s responsible for the Alliant governmentwide acquisition contract. Just one contract, but it encompasses 58 suppliers. Many of them are the top tier IT contractors and consultants such as CSC, Deloitte, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and Verizon. And it’s done $8 billion in business in its 29 months since opening for business. Task orders total 180, with the largest – $2.5 billion over 10 years – placed by the State Department. (The companion Alliant Small Business GWAC operates out of a different division in GSA, in Kansas City.)

Unlike managers of other GWACs selling commodity products, Kelley and his crew were planning to go home at the usual quitting time of 5 p.m. – that’s Pacific Time since they’re in Los Angeles – on Friday evening, Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal 2011. Enterprise Acquisition is part of the Integrated Technology Services piece of GSA, itself part of the Federal Acquisition Service.
“Oh, we’re doing great,” Kelley said of the Alliant team. “The three predecessor contracts in 29 months? Alliant is exceeding all three combined,” he said, referring to the expired Answer, Millennia and Millennia Light GWACs.

Kelley attributes the early success of Alliant to the team’s pushy approach and to the value added service it gives federal customers.
“It’s not as if, if you build it they will come,” Kelley said. Agency outreach and an annual Alliant Guide published in Federal Computer Week help, he said. Plus, the Alliant team will review statements of work before they are awarded as task orders, to make sure they are totally within the scope of the Alliant contracts.

Alliant offers IT services in the context of Federal Enterprise Architecture and the Department of Defense Enterprise Architecture. That, Kelley said, enables a kind of auto-refresh of products delivered as part of the services the vendors are selling. Put another way, if the services ordered are within scope, and the products are integral and necessary to the execution of the task order, than whatever products are necessary are by definition within scope.
“Because we’re aligned with the FEA, the technology is always up to date,” Kelley said. Alliant avoids the tedious tech refresh, product modification process that characterizes product GWACs.

Federal agencies increasingly seek cloud computing and so-called smart building services when they come to Alliant, Kelley said. Data center consolidation and virtualization have also driven agencies to Alliant, he said.

Kelley has been a federal manager for 13 years. Before joining, he was a business developer in the telecom industry. His first federal stint was as telecommunications director for a federal courthouse in Los Angeles (where his wife was a probation officer). “I bought my services via GSA, and that’s how I got to know them,” he said.

Kelley has also had an impact on the federal scene itself in Los Angeles. He spent a year as chairman of the Federal Executive Board, which is actually housed in Long Beach. In a given city, the FEB members meet quarterly to discuss topics such as crisis management, local interagency coordination and other management topics. Each FEB has a full-time executive director, who is also a federal employee. FEBs were established during the Kennedy administration.

Asked if FEB members talk about Washington when they get together, Kelley replied, “All the time.” But, he said, it tends to be less grousing about headquarters than looking for ways to improve communications. Sometimes, he said, a national initiative can originate in a regional office. Kelley cited the Los Angeles office of Housing and Urban Development. It developed a model for delivering information about services available to people in danger of losing their homes through foreclosure.

Much FEB effort concerns continuity of operations and crisis coordination locally, such as during Southern California wild fires, Kelley said. Sometimes representatives from federal agencies get together for table-top planning exercises.

During his term, Kelley said, he worked to establish a separate Federal Executive Board for San Diego. Although it was included in the Los Angeles FEB, in reality San Diego is a two hour drive away on a good day. The difficulty was convincing Navy officials, he said.

“It was no easy feat, but we convinced them.” Now San Diego federal managers have a Federal Executive Association, a precursor to having their own FEB.

This article was originally published by FedInsider.

The Office of Federal Procurement Policy is turning its attention to a long-neglected function, that of Contracting Officer’s Technical Representative. Starting January 1, COTRs will simply be called Contracting Officers’ Representative, or COR. Keep reading →

This article was originally published by FedInsider.

Imagine moving from a high-pressure, high-visibility federal job in the pressure cooker of Washington – to Hawaii. No more need to wear a suit and tie on humid, 99-degree Capitol summer days. Less bureaucracy, less regulation for procurement, faster new technology deployment. A dream job, no? Keep reading →

This article was originally published by FedInsider.

CIOs often say that cybersecurity should be built into software and systems, and not thought of as a later add-on. In practice this ideal is seldom reached. But the National Nuclear Security Administration is in the midst of a three-pronged IT initiative to both modernize its infrastructure and get closer to having cybersecurity baked in. Keep reading →

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