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White House crackdown on IT might be a moneymaker for vendors

Source: nextgov.com

Some contractors are welcoming the White House's threat to cut off funding for rsiky information technology projects as a moment that could be financially advantegous to them.

The Office of Management and Budget on Monday released a list fo roughly 30 at-risk, mission-critical IT projects worth about $30 billion that need reworking.  Simulataneoulsy, OMB officials are deciding the fate of about 30 financial system projects a historically costly class of IT systems that the White House halted on June 28.  Agencies must downsize the projects or scrap them to start afresh.

The drastic measures are part of the Obama administration's effort to end the traditional practice of rolling out complex IT systems that take years to build and often fail.

OMB now wants agencies to break projects into smaller chunks that can be deployed more quickly and cheaply.  This means some system contractors will be paid less while agancies stop to redirect wayward projects.

That's just fine for some suppliers of easy-to-confugure software, even though they were affected by the pause in the projects.  Executives from these companies said they could receive more business when departments recompete canceled projects, or when they buy smaller systems in the future.

"When you get beyond the fear and anxiety of, 'Oh my God! I'm on the list,' most people who've been around will confide in you that this [megaproject] model has to go," said David Lucas, chief strategy officer for Global Computer Enterprises, which provides Web-based hardware and software for financial management.  GCE is the contractor for the Labor Department's new financial system, which is one of the projects OMB put on hold.

GCE specializes in delivering small, incremental functions that take less than 18 months to deploy, an approach that aligns with what the administration is encouraging all agencies to embrace, Lucas said.

He claimed the company has attracted more attention from chief information officers and chief financial officers since the White House put the freeze on financial system deployment.

Industry group TechAmerica, of which GCE is a member, came out with a statement on Monday that raised concerns about the criteria the White House used to identify projects in need of adjustments.  The trade group has argues that instituting blanket freezes on IT projects will force contractors to raise prices to protect themselves from financial losses if work is halted.

But Lucas said, "You have to be able to say, 'Maybe I am going to make less this year, but the end goal is to be able to help the agency in the long term.'"

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Cloud Computing: The Future of Public Sector IT


Source: Oracle Profit Magzine

If the experience of Victoria, Australia’s Department of Human Services (DHS) with Oracle CRM On Demand during the devastating bushfires of February 2009 is any indication, more and more public sector customers may be heading to the cloud.

"[The fire] was a learning exercise for other government departments as they watched the Department of Human Services with the cloud service," says Grahame Coles, chief information officer at the DHS for the state of Victoria. "It certainly started the process of other departments thinking about, 'Is cloud actually appropriate?’ in a positive sense."

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