Unpacking Digital Transformation

At long last, Government agencies are getting some real support for their modernization and transformation initiatives. Through the Technology Modernization Fund (TMF) and the American Rescue Plan (ARP), Congress is providing significant funding for updating or replacing legacy systems, with a focus on both improving the security of government systems and delivering better services. The opportunity, now, is to make those investments pay off. How can agencies cut delivery times and meet expected outcomes? Download the guide to access worksheets, step-by-step guidelines, government and industry insights, and other resources that can help agencies launch transformation initiatives鈥攁nd deliver on them.

 

Supercharge Your Agency Service Management

鈥淯sing cloud solutions, organizations can automatically scale up their systems when constituent demand is high and down when demand is lighter. This enables agencies to be more responsive, efficient and constituent-friendly. Most federal agencies are going through a major digital modernization effort, replacing outdated/ legacy systems with cloud-based solutions, said Sandra Trumbull with Atlassian, a software-based company. And self-service 鈥 whether through guided prompts, artificial intelligence or other methods 鈥 is increasingly important because users are more empowered and typically obtain faster responses service teams have fewer headaches, agencies can lower their service costs, and everyone receives a better overall experience.鈥

Read more insights from Adaptavist鈥檚 Phill Fox, Principal Customer Success Advocate, and Atlassian鈥檚 Sandra Trumbull, Enterprise Solutions Advocate.

 

IIG GovLoop Digital Transformation Blog Embedded Image 2023How Agencies Are Driving Innovation to the Edge

鈥淣ot so long ago, Air Force communications meant radios that transmitted information about where to go and what was happening. Now, digital input is being delivered directly into the cockpit. 鈥榃e鈥檙e talking about a situation where edge capability expands the envelope of the missions that we can get accomplished and changes the ways in which we can accomplish them,鈥 said Winston Beauchamp, Deputy Chief Information Officer for the Department of the Air Force. Currently, the service uses edge computing in its Agile Combat Employment, a scheme of maneuvers aimed at increasing survivability while generating combat power. If warfighters are under threat at fixed bases, they must move to alternate locations quickly 鈥 and those might not have all the infrastructure of a traditional base. 鈥楨dge technologies enable you to deploy to that location that you need to accomplish that mission without a huge footprint,鈥 Beauchamp said.鈥

Read more insights from Red Hat鈥檚 Government Symposium.

 

Data, Data Everywhere, but Not a Byte to Eat

鈥淭he first element of intelligent data management is visibility: Where is agency data located? And directly associated, Breakiron said, is accessibility, knowing how the agency organizes and uses its information, and what the data鈥檚 condition is. 鈥榃e often find, especially in the government, in excess of 50% of the data hasn鈥檛 been touched for as much as five years,鈥 he explained. 鈥楢nd we also find that about 20% of the data, you couldn鈥檛 talk to if you had to.鈥 Commvault calls that 鈥渙rphan data,鈥 and it鈥檚 akin to having a VHS tape but no VHS player with which to view it. An intelligent data management system creates a tiered storage approach that identifies long-ignored information, allowing an archival model for 鈥榩ennies to the dollar vs. thousands of dollars in storage costs,鈥 he said.鈥

Read more insights from Commvault鈥檚 Richard Breakiron, Senior Director for Strategic Initiatives for the Federal Sector.

Build a Functional Ecosystem Through Cloud Architecture

鈥淲hile technology is at the core of a total agency transformation, Chang advised against having it 鈥榙ragging process and then dragging people along.鈥 The process and the people need to move along with the technology instead of clinging to its shirttails. 鈥極ne thing I would offer as a piece of advice, having done multiple transformations in the Federal Government, is invest in upskilling your people,鈥 said Chang. 鈥業f your people can鈥檛 use the technology 鈥 no matter how great the technology is 鈥 the organization as a whole does not move forward.鈥 For federal environments, he urged technology upskilling to improve employees鈥 data literacy, analytics awareness and coding abilities 鈥 or at least to provide a basic familiarity with those activities.鈥

Read more insights from Snowflake鈥檚 Winston Chang, Chief Technology Officer for the Global Public Sector.

 

How Open Source Database Technology Can Support Transformation

鈥淢odernizing your applications and services without modernizing the underlying database is like buying a new car but installing your old engine. You鈥檙e just holding yourself back. That鈥檚 the experience of Enterprise DB (EDB), which provides tools and services to large organizations adopting PostgreSQL (Postgres), a relational database management system based on open source technology. Like other enterprise-grade, open source systems, Postgres helps organizations avoid the rising licensing costs and vendor lock-in that come with proprietary software, said Jeremy Wilson of EDB. But just as importantly, Postgres is rapidly replacing legacy, proprietary software as a platform for innovation.鈥

Read more insights from EDB鈥檚 Jeremy Wilson, CTO of North America Public Sector.

Transforming With Visibility and Agility

鈥淪taff working their way through a digital transformation, such as a cloud migration, will need new skillsets. They鈥檙e going to use new services and capabilities 鈥 and none of them will be the same, Shopp said. SolarWinds helps users build knowledge, intelligence, configuration smarts and cloud awareness, he explained. 鈥業ntelligence in a box,鈥 as Shopp called it, is codified into SolarWinds products and helps agency employees monitor workloads. 鈥榃hen it comes to understanding your infrastructure and your workloads, no matter where they reside 鈥 on premises, the cloud or hybrid 鈥 we鈥檝e got you covered,鈥 Shopp said.鈥

Read more insights from SolarWinds鈥 Brandon Shopp, Group Vice President of Product.

 

Observability Made Simple

鈥淭he task of monitoring these complex systems gets more complicated, too. 鈥楾he question is, how do I know there鈥檚 an issue?鈥 said Brian Mikkelsen of Datadog. 鈥業s it when the tickets start flowing, when complaints increase, when your leadership team asks why something isn鈥檛 working?鈥 None of those options is ideal. Datadog鈥檚 application performance management platform provides a real-time window into the digital environment, identifying performance and security issues 鈥 quickly. Its 鈥榝ull stack鈥 hybrid infrastructure capability means everything from the back end to the front end is monitored and reported via infrastructure metrics, application performance traces, and correlated logs.鈥

Read more insights from DataDog鈥檚 Brian Mikkelsen, Vice President and General Manager.

 

Download the full GovLoop Guide for more insights from these digital transformation leaders and additional government interviews, historical perspectives and industry research.

The Open Source Revolution in Government

Open source technology accounts for a significant portion of most modern applications, with some estimates going as high as 90%, and it is the foundation of many mainstream technologies. Its strength lies in the fact that a vibrant ecosystem of developers contribute to and continually improve the underlying code, which keeps the software dynamic and responsive to changing needs. Enterprise open source software further augments these community-driven projects by providing enterprise-grade support and scalability, while retaining the innovation and flexibility driven by the open source development model. By providing the best of both worlds, such solutions represent a powerful arsenal of tools for addressing government鈥檚 most pressing challenges. In a recent pulse survey of FCW readers, 93% of respondents said they were using open source technology. And more than half of respondents to FCW鈥檚 survey see open source as an integral resource for strengthening cybersecurity. That number reflects a positive trend toward a better understanding of open source software鈥檚 intrinsic approach to security. The power of enterprise open source technologies lies in a combination of collaboration, transparency and industry expertise. As agencies expand their use of such technologies, they maximize their ability to achieve mission success in the most secure, agile and innovative way possible. Learn how the combined power of community-driven innovation and industry-leading technical support is expanding the government鈥檚 capacity for transformation in 探花视频鈥檚 Innovation in Government庐 report.

 

Why Open Source is a Mission-Critical Foundation

IIG FCW Open Source Revolution November Blog Embedded Image 2022鈥淥pen source transforms the way agencies manage hybrid and multi-cloud environments. The most critical technology in the cloud, across all providers, is Linux. Everything is built on top of that foundation 鈥 both the infrastructure of the cloud and cloud offerings. Given the right partner, the promise of Linux is that it provides a consistent technology layer for agencies across all footprints, including multiple cloud providers, on-premises data centers and edge environments. From that foundation, agencies and their partners can build portable architectures that leverage other open source technologies. Portability gives organizations the ability to use the same architectures, underlying technologies, monitoring and security solutions, and human skills to manage mission-critical capabilities across all footprints.鈥

Read more insights from Christopher Smith, Vice President and General Manager of the North America Public Sector at Red Hat.

 

How Open Source is Expanding its Mission Reach

鈥淭he real power of open source technologies was revealed when they cracked the code on being highly powered, mission-specific, distributed systems. That鈥檚 how we are able to get insights out of data by being able to hold it and query it. Today, open source innovation is being accelerated by the cloud, and the conversation is still changing, with people now demanding that their open source companies be cloud-first platforms. Along the way, the open source technologies that start in the community and then receive a boost of commercial innovation have matured. The most powerful ones are expanding their ability to address more of the government鈥檚 mission needs. They are staying interoperable and keeping the data interchange non-proprietary, which is important for government agencies.鈥

Read more insights from David Erickson, Senior Director of Solutions Architecture at Elastic.

 

The Open Source Community鈥檚 Commitment to Security 听

鈥淎 central tenet of software development is visibility and traceability from start to finish so that a developer can follow the code through development, testing, building and security compliance, and then into the final production environment. Along the way, there are some key activities that boost collaboration and positive outcomes, starting with early code previews, where developers can spin up an application for stakeholders to review. Other activities include documented code reviews by peers to ensure the code is well written and efficient. In addition, DevOps components such as open source, infrastructure as code, Kubernetes as a deployment mechanism, automated testing, and better platforms and capabilities have helped developers move away from building ecosystems and instead focus on innovation.鈥

Read more insights from Joel Krooswyk, Federal CTO at GitLab.

 

The Limitless Potential of an Open Source Database

鈥淥ne of the most important elements of any database migration is ensuring that proper planning and due diligence have been performed to ensure a smooth and successful deployment. In addition, there are some key considerations agencies should keep in mind when moving to open source databases. It is essential to start with a clear understanding of the business case and objectives for adopting an open source approach. Agencies also need to decide how the database should function and what it should do to support their digital transformation. Then they must choose the optimal method to deploy the database.鈥

Read more insights from Jeremy A. Wilson, CTO of the North America Public Sector at EDB.

 

Modernizing Digital Services with Open Source

鈥淎 composable, open source digital experience platform (DXP) enables agencies to overcome those challenges. Open source technology is continuously contributed to by a community of developers to reflect a wide array of needs across organizations in varying industries and of varying sizes. A composable approach allows agencies to assemble a number of solutions for a fast, efficient system that is tailored to their needs. When agencies combine a composable DXP with open source technology, they have access to best-of-breed software and the ability to customize the assembly to suit their requirements. An enterprise DXP will enable agencies to achieve a 360-degree view of how constituents are engaging with their digital services and gain valuable data to understand how to enhance their experience. Finally, a composable, open source DXP provides a proactive approach to protecting against security and compliance vulnerabilities.鈥

Read more insights from Tami Pearlstein, Senior Product Marketing Manager at Acquia.

 

Creating Secure Open Source Repositories

鈥淧rotecting the software supply chain requires looking at every single thing that might come into an agency鈥檚 environment. To understand that level of visibility, I like to use the analogy of a refrigerator. All the ingredients necessary to make a cake or pie are in the refrigerator. We know they are of good quality, and other teams can use them instead of having to find their own. At Sonatype, our software equivalent of a refrigerator is the Nexus Repository Manager. A second aspect of our offering, called Lifecycle, allows us to evaluate the open source components in repositories at every stage of the software development life cycle. One piece of software can download a thousand other components. How do we know if one of those components is malicious?鈥

Read more insights from Maury Cupitt, Regional Vice President of Sales Engineering at Sonatype.

 

Better Data Flows for a Better Customer Experience

鈥淎 more responsive and personalized customer experience isn鈥檛 much different from the initial problem set that gave birth to Apache Kafka. When people interact with agencies, they want those agencies to know who they are and how they鈥檝e interacted in the past. They don鈥檛 want to be asked for their Social Security number three times on the same phone call. They also expect that the information or service they receive will be the same whether they are accessing it over the phone, via a mobile app and on a website. To elevate the quality of their service, agencies must be able to stream information in a low-friction way so different systems are consistent with one another and up-to-date at all times, regardless of the communication channel an individual uses. President Joe Biden鈥檚 executive order about transforming the federal customer experience is based on this capability. The most successful companies across industries have figured out how to do it, and for the most part, they鈥檝e done it with open source software.鈥

Read more insights from Jason Schick, General Manager of Confluent US Public Sector.

 

An Open Source Approach to Data Analytics

鈥淔or the past 40 years, agencies have used data warehouses to collect and analyze their data. Although those warehouses worked well, they were limited in what they could do. For instance, they could only handle structured data, but by some estimates, 90% of agencies鈥 data is unstructured and in the form of text, images, audio, video and the like. Furthermore, proprietary data warehouses can show agencies what has happened in the past but can鈥檛 predict what might happen in the future. To achieve the government鈥檚 goal of evidence-based decision-making, agencies need to be able to tap into all their data and predict what might come next.鈥

Read more insights from Howard Levenson, Regional Vice President at Databricks.

 

Download the full Innovation in Government庐 report for more insights from these open source thought leaders and additional industry research from FCW.