|
Summary
of Key Points
Strategy
- Understand the underlying business need and ask "Why are we doing
this?"
- Negotiate the environment and determine who has stake in this and
why.
- Account for existing infrastructure, practices, history, and culture.
This is working in the real world.
- Look ahead to keep one eye on the future.
- Devise a clear approach and plan then share it with stakeholders.
Policy
- Information policies guide decisions about
how, why, when, and by whom information is used.
- Information policy principles rest on fundamental democratic principles.
- Stewardship encourages policies that regard government information
as a public good.
- Usefulness principle promotes policies that encourage the innovative
use of government information to improve the quality and lower the cost
of government services.
- Policies should ensure good quality and ready availability of data
for action.
Data
- Data issues are the biggest challenges to government agencies transitioning
from legacy, stovepipe systems to integrated systems.
- Data quality goes beyond 'clean data' to evaluation of data for 'fitness
for use'.
- Data that is not used cannot be correct for very long.
- Laws of data quality apply equally to data and meta data.
- Lack of data standards is a significant barrier to information use.
- Meta data is critical when dealing with data quality and data standards.
- Understanding the complex program environments within which the data
is used is as important as the quality of the data.
Cost
- Managing relationships with team members, project sponsors, and external
stakeholders are hidden costs that must be addressed.
- The greater the different between old and new work processes, the
higher the cost.
- Identify the gap between the technologies you have and the technologies
you want. Costs will increase with the size of the gap.
- Separating independent tasks into parallel efforts helps control
costs.
- Integration is costly. Know what you need to integrate and how much.
- Identify the differences among your data resources. The greater the
differences the more it will cost to integrate them.
Skills
- Organizations, like people, are information
users.
- Skilled information users define problems, select information, analyze,
interpret, and present results.
- Every project involves five kinds of skills: analytical, information
management, technical, communication and presentation, and project management.
- There are a number of ways to acquire necessary skills.
Technology
- Technology choices affect an organization's current and future capabilities.
- Technologies become imbedded in every aspect of the organization
including processes, user practices, and infrastructure.
- Technology can change the way government does business.
- Technology can improve customer service and streamline administration.
- Technology can help government solve complex problems.
|