GovLoop

Managing Cross-Agency Collaboration

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This interview is part of a DorobekINSIDER mini series with experts looking to help shape a management platform for the new administration. Check out all of the stories in the new series, Good Government Management, here.

Planning for a smooth presidential transition is not only recommended, it is legally supported. In 2010 Congress passed the Pre-Election Presidential Transition Act, enabling eligible candidates to utilize certain presidential transition services before the general election. The IBM Center for The Business of Government and the Partnership for Public Service strongly believe in taking advantage of the Act to create a better management agenda.

Which is why they’ve collaborated in launching a Management Roadmap for the next administration. A recent report, Building an Enterprise Government: Creating an Ecosystem for Cross-Agency Collaboration in the Next Administration, focused on one of the initiatives they hope to see in the next administration.

Dan Chenok, Executive Director of the IBM Center for The Business of Government, sat down with Christopher Dorobek on the DorobekINSIDER program to discuss the report’s cross-agency collaboration recommendations.

“Many major national priorities that affect large volumes of citizens and key parts of the economy involve multiple agencies. They create the need to work together in new ways, across agencies,” Chenok said.

But, there are inherent difficulties associated with creating proper management across agencies. “Each agency tends to look at problems separately, which creates inefficiency at the government level. A lot of burden at the institutional level could be reduced through better collaboration,” Chenok explained.

As such, Chenok shared some of the report’s recommendations for transition teams to consider:

There is a strong connection between proper cross-agency management and policy. Therefore, it is key that transition teams think about this type of management early on. Otherwise, the next administration will find it hard to achieve their mission and policy goals in the desired manner.

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