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This article, the fourth in a series, originally appeared on CIO.gov, the website of the U.S. chief information officer and the Federal CIO Council. Richard Spires is CIO of the Department of Homeland Security and vice chair of the Federal CIO Council.

In my first three posts on the challenge of delivering successful IT programs, I introduced the topics of tiered governance and the need to have effective governance at the enterprise, portfolio, and program level. Now let’s move on to key program and project management disciplines.

Over the past two decades, I have conducted hundreds of program and project reviews. Through this experience, I have developed a sense of what does and what does not work.

The single most important element to program success is the skills and experience of the Integrated Program Team. (Former federal CIO) Vivek Kundra understood its importance – IPTs are number 9 in the “25 Point Implementation Plan to Reform Federal Information Technology Management.” The 25 Point Plan specifies the inclusion of the business owner, IT and acquisition professionals, finance, human resources, and legal specialists.

The plan then states “At the hub of these IPTs is a strong and effective program manager who stewards the process from beginning to end.”

Nothing could be more true, and, in particular, I agree with the importance of having a skilled and experienced program manager (PM) and the need to have dedicated resources throughout the program lifecycle, co-location when possible, and aligning performance objectives of the IPT members.

Then what is the point of this blog, given my agreement with the 25 Point Plan? To emphasize and provide additional detail on two areas: the role and qualifications of the IPT members, to include both personnel representing the business and the IT specialists.

When organizations embark on large IT programs, it is critical to ensure the right business involvement. My second blog post discussed the need for program governance that has the right business executive engagement in program oversight.

But at a working level, it is necessary to have full-time representatives of the business who can not only successfully work within the IPT to define requirements of the system, but also support the trade-off analyses that are a constant in a program.

In assessing a program, I look for individuals on the IPT who are steeped in the current process end-to-end, who have true credibility with senior management, and who demonstrate flexibility to deal with unending change as a program unfolds and matures.

Unfortunately, these crucial individuals are all too often absent in Federal IT programs. The business simply does not give up the star players to fill these roles. Many times you will get specialists in particular business areas, but no one person who has an end-to-end knowledgeable view. This negatively impacts the change management process on a program, ultimately impacting the program’s schedule and cost. This does not in and of itself doom a program, but it is a predictor.

In regards to the IT specialists, there is a lot of focus on the program manager position, and to reiterate, you need a skilled and experienced PM. For large, complex IT programs, someone who has successfully managed and delivered numerous programs is vital. I recognize that we don’t always have the talent base to fill all PM positions with experienced PMs, but it is an absolute must for large and complex programs. What I find truly surprising, however, is how many programs will set up shop without all the other key IT management disciplines in place.

Large, complex IT programs vary greatly, so there is not one model that fits every IPT. The following positions, however, are typically core, and I consider programs that lack solid individuals filling these positions as high risk:

System Architect – this individual is both a technologist and engineer and can develop a technical solution to meet the requirements, and fully understand the Agency’s enterprise architecture and how this system will interoperate with our Agency’s systems and external systems.

Data Architect – for any highly data-centric system, this individual is an absolute must to ensure the proper integration of data from different unrelated data sources.

Requirements Manager – this is not the business lead discussed above, but the individual that understands the life-cycle of managing requirements, from elicitation through the requirements change management process, to test and evaluation.

Development and Integration Manager – too often, this individual is missing; but, if you are developing software or implementing a complex configuration of a COTS package, you need such an individual dedicated to this task.

Test Manager – this individual brings a solid end-to-end view of the testing process.

Configuration Manager – this individual accounts for everything, and runs a very tight change control process.

Operations Manager – an individual who knows how to field and operate systems is always required. As we drive to more incremental delivery in the federal government, this individual is even more critical because it is not unusual for programs to have a release in production, another in development and testing, and a third in requirements definition and design simultaneously.

Too often, I find the PM cannot point to individuals filling each of these key roles. Further, many times such roles “de facto” become filled by contractor personnel. I recognize that many successful systems have been delivered with contractors filling many of the roles above. My experience, however, at both IRS and now DHS, is that this again adds risk to a program. I much prefer a model of government personnel filling these roles.

It is not that the contractor personnel do not possess the competence. The key is for an IPT to be “integrated.” That is difficult to do with contractor personnel in some of these key roles. We need strong contractor teams to help us execute large complex programs. But even more importantly, we need strong government IPTs to provide leadership and oversight to direct the work.

Keep reading →


At the height of our nation’s economic crisis, 34-year-old Interior Department employee Mary Pletcher became the lead career executive for awarding and tracking $2.9 billion in economic stimulus funds used to preserve and restore iconic national treasures, provide vital infrastructure in impoverished Indian communities and create jobs.

Leading the largest single investment in public lands since the Civilian Conservation Corps of the New Deal, Pletcher managed funds for some 4,000 projects ranging from major improvements to Ellis Island to the nation’s largest dam removal and natural habitat restoration project on the Elwha River in Washington State. Under her leadership, Interior met all of the requirements under the stimulus law on time, and with no significant instances of waste or fraud. Keep reading →

When it comes to buying and delivering government technology projects, few approaches seem to have caught the attention of federal officials the way agile development has.

And there’s good reason, according to management specialists from the Department of Defense, the Department of Agriculture, the FBI and the General Services Administration who spoke at a Washington forum Oct. 14 about how agile development is making inroads in government. Keep reading →


In February 2011, a college student from Saudi Arabia was arrested in Texas for plotting to bomb U.S. targets after trucking company officials alerted authorities about a suspicious chemical they were hired to carry. A few weeks earlier, a Greyhound bus driver in Virginia persuaded a hijacker to let the passengers offload. They notified the police, who were able to defuse the situation and arrest the individual.

These separate incidents had one common thread-the transportation employees had been trained through a federal terrorism and security awareness program known as “First Observer.”
The nationwide program, led by William (Bill) Arrington of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), recruits and trains volunteers from the trucking, school bus and motor coach industries, law enforcement as well as sports stadium personnel, parking lot attendants and other highway transportation professionals to observe, assess and report suspicious activities that might pose a serious public threat. Keep reading →

The first ever nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System will occur on Nov 9 at 2 pm ET http://go.usa.gov/9nq (cc: @fema @FCC) @DHSgov

Throughout my years in government, I engaged in many discussions regarding the convergence of information and physical security assets. While the “why-fix-it-if-it-ain’t-broke?” argument advocating the effectiveness of maintaining the separation of logical and physical security still stands strong in some circles, there is no doubt that convergence has become a growing fad.

At (ISC)2, we often poll our members on topics that represent a potential impact on the information security profession. Just prior to our recent (ISC)2 Security Congress, co-located with ASIS International’s 57th Annual Conference & Exhibits,we took the opportunity to poll our members on the integration of traditional and information security and discovered that many hold to the belief that information security and physical security should not be separate but equal and complimentary entities. Keep reading →

Much of what the federal government spends each year are benefit payments to individuals. As a recent inspector general report showed, many times those payments go to the wrong people, or are made in the wrong amounts, and in some cases to people who are no longer alive. Keep reading →


The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) unveiled a long-awaited plan in December 2010 to restore the water quality of the troubled Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries, a complex blueprint calling for six states and the District of Columbia to substantially reduce pollution in the nation’s largest estuary during the next 15 years.

Among those working behind-the-scenes at the EPA was Katherine Antos, a 31-year-old water quality team leader. Antos is credited by colleagues with being instrumental in helping the states develop and evaluate their individual environmental plans, and in assembling the comprehensive package to cut pollution that has been killing fish and wildlife, destroying wetlands and contaminating drinking water supplies. Keep reading →

As the Defense Department begins making good on plans to cut upwards of $450 billion from defense budgets over the decade ahead, one thing seems certain: A tidal wave of military personnel will soon be looking for work.

A new report, published on CNNMoney.com however, suggests that men and women in uniform will find a relatively wide assortment of high paying jobs in the market that require many of the specialized skills they learned while serving the nation. Keep reading →

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