Want to Elevate Equity? Start By Defining the Problem
Understanding and getting consensus on what problems need to be addressed can make the difference between flourishing and floundering endeavors.
Understanding and getting consensus on what problems need to be addressed can make the difference between flourishing and floundering endeavors.
Congratulations on your new role as chief information officer. Here are some things that can help in the early stages of your tenure and beyond.
What started as a goal to improve IT support and service delivery has now become a vision for streamlining many work processes.
Enabling employees to work productively is the highest priority for the agency, said USAID Chief Information Officer. But that productivity may look different than before.
The pandemic and its repercussions have magnified the importance of mental health. The crisis has accelerated a work-from-anywhere environment, as well as the need to help isolated, distributed employees stay mentally healthy.
Ohio CIO Ervan Rodgers is optimistic about his state’s future. Gazing into the proverbial crystal ball, Rodgers imagines Ohio’s technology and workforces reaching new heights in 2020 and beyond.
Regardless of which role you play, the IT infrastructure is a key component in your city and your residents rely on you to protect, maintain, and improve it.
Innovation in the public sector can help solve some of communities’ most intractable challenges.
One of the biggest challenges an agency faces when implementing IT reform is cultural. Just ask NSF Chief Information Officer Dorothy Aronson. Her message to agencies: Start now and be bold.
Theresa Szczurek, Colorado’s new Chief Information Officer, joined GovLoop for an interview to address how her state tackles concerns like cybersecurity, data governance and hiring and retaining IT talent.