Government Technology - January 2009 - (Page ca2) Transforming Health and Human Services echnology has turned citizens into customers with high expectations. When they interact with government, citizens today require the same high quality of customer care they get from tech-savvy companies such as FedEx and Amazon.com. They want one-stop shopping: a single place on the Web where they can conduct a wide variety of transactions. They expect government employees to have at their fingertips all the information they need to solve constituents’ problems and answer their questions regardless of the interoperability issues involved. They need agencies to climb out of their IT silos, pulling together to tackle the serious issues that challenge our communities. For example, schools, the juvenile justice system, family services agencies and substance abuse programs need to collaborate on the problem of substance abuse among teens. Governments are under tremendous pressure to do more for citizens, and to do it better. At the same time, the recent financial crisis has forced state and local governments to cut budgets and freeze hiring. Public officials are left trying to accomplish more for constituents with fewer resources. This poses a difficult challenge, of course. But for government CIOs, it also presents an opportunity to transform the way government delivers services. Nowhere is this transformation more crucial than in health and human services agencies, which address constituents’ most basic needs to promote their wellbeing and self-sufficiency. To meet these growing demands, government CIOs must find, evaluate and choose technologies that, when Technology enables the service and agility citizens demand while keeping costs down. T deployed wisely, will help produce a leaner, more agile government that exceeds its citizens’ expectations. Several technologies that are used extensively in the private sector also offer the same kinds of advantages to governments. Project and Portfolio Management: Helping Deliver Timely, Relevant Services As stewards of public resources, IT managers must keep their projects on time and on budget and make sure they correctly align with agencies’ business needs. When conducting multiple projects, they must carefully orchestrate their efforts, establish priorities, assign resources and keep stakeholders aware of their progress. In health and human services, for example, executives might simultaneously monitor projects involving health clinics, substance abuse treatment facilities, juvenile justice programs, homeless shelters, services for the aging and a great deal more. Project and portfolio management (PPM) tools help keep IT projects on track and ensure that government agencies get the greatest possible return on scarce resources. Grants Management: A Life Cycle Approach Without grants, state and local governments would find it impossible to conduct some of their most important programs. Managing the grant life cycle — from choosing which opportunities to pursue, to submitting a successful application, to conducting the program and reporting on the outcome — is a complex process. A centralized grants management solution, based on proven PPM methodologies, automates the process, saving time and standardizing procedures. This helps governments pursue grants more efficiently and use the resulting funds more effectively. Identity and Access Management: Securing Effective Collaboration E-government services and Webbased collaboration are feasible only if the data at the heart of these applications stays secure. While protecting citizens’ personal data and complying with federal regulations, governments still must make it easy for employees and citizens to use online applications. An effective identity and access management (IAM) solution automates the administration of credentials and permissions — based on business rules and the roles of individual users — and also provides automated auditing. An effective IAM solution should be highly scalable and must be capable of operating across many platforms to ensure interoperability. Because it uses open interfaces, agencies can integrate it into their infrastructures without changing existing applications or systems. Because their customers include their most vulnerable citizens, health and human services agencies face especially critical challenges in difficult economic times. By embracing IT solutions that transform the way they do business, HHS agencies can continue to provide increasingly better service to all their constituents. ❖ 2 ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT http://www.Amazon.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - January 2009 Government Technology - January 2009 Contents Point of View On the Scene Big Picture Four Questions for... Stemming the Retirement Tide Getting the Picture Fact of Matter Money Trail Rays the Roof Trick or Tweet? The Modern Way to Vote Products signal:noise Government Technology - January 2009 Government Technology - January 2009 - Government Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover1) Government Technology - January 2009 - Government Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover2) Government Technology - January 2009 - Government Technology - January 2009 (Page 3) Government Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 4) Government Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 5) Government Technology - January 2009 - Point of View (Page 6) Government Technology - January 2009 - Point of View (Page 7) Government Technology - January 2009 - On the Scene (Page 8) Government Technology - January 2009 - On the Scene (Page 9) Government Technology - January 2009 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - January 2009 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - January 2009 - Four Questions for... (Page 12) Government Technology - January 2009 - Four Questions for... (Page 13) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 14) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 15) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 16) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 17) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 18) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 19) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 20) Government Technology - January 2009 - Stemming the Retirement Tide (Page 21) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 22) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 23) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 24) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 25) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 26) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 27) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 28) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 29) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 30) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 31) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 32) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 33) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 34) Government Technology - January 2009 - Getting the Picture (Page 35) Government Technology - January 2009 - Fact of Matter (Page 36) Government Technology - January 2009 - Fact of Matter (Page 37) Government Technology - January 2009 - Money Trail (Page 38) Government Technology - January 2009 - Money Trail (Page 39) Government Technology - January 2009 - Rays the Roof (Page 40) Government Technology - January 2009 - Rays the Roof (Page 41) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page 42) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca1) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca2) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca3) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca4) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca5) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca6) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca7) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page ca8) Government Technology - January 2009 - Trick or Tweet? (Page 51) Government Technology - January 2009 - The Modern Way to Vote (Page 44) Government Technology - January 2009 - The Modern Way to Vote (Page 45) Government Technology - January 2009 - The Modern Way to Vote (Page 46) Government Technology - January 2009 - The Modern Way to Vote (Page 47) Government Technology - January 2009 - Products (Page 48) Government Technology - January 2009 - Products (Page 49) Government Technology - January 2009 - signal:noise (Page 50) Government Technology - January 2009 - signal:noise (Page Cover3) Government Technology - January 2009 - signal:noise (Page Cover4) Government Technology - January 2009 - signal:noise (Page hp1) Government Technology - January 2009 - signal:noise (Page hp2)
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