Arveen Kohli Archives | FedScoop https://fedscoop.com/author/arveen-kohli/ FedScoop delivers up-to-the-minute breaking government tech news and is the government IT community's platform for education and collaboration through news, events, radio and TV. FedScoop engages top leaders from the White House, federal agencies, academia and the tech industry both online and in person to discuss ways technology can improve government, and to exchange best practices and identify how to achieve common goals. Tue, 02 Apr 2024 17:46:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.4 https://fedscoop.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2023/01/cropped-fs_favicon-3.png?w=32 Arveen Kohli Archives | FedScoop https://fedscoop.com/author/arveen-kohli/ 32 32 What’s different about AI today and why it’s becoming a top priority for federal agencies https://fedscoop.com/radio/rob-carey-president-of-cloudera-government-solutions/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 18:29:07 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?post_type=podcast&p=73680 Rob Carey, President of Cloudera Government Solutions

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Artificial intelligence continues to be all anyone in the government technology space can talk about. But AI is not exactly new. It’s been a topic federal IT officials have discussed and explored for decades now. So what makes this point in the AI development and adoption cycle different?

Rob Carey, President of Cloudera Government Solutions and the former Navy CIO and Pentagon Deputy CIO, joins The Daily Scoop Podcast to discuss that and what federal CIOs should be thinking about as they look to adopt AI.

The Daily Scoop Podcast is available every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon.
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Congress’ former top advocate for tech discusses generational tech threats https://fedscoop.com/radio/former-cia-operations-officer-will-hurd/ Tue, 10 Oct 2023 19:01:52 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?post_type=podcast&p=73424 Former CIA Operations Officer, Will Hurd

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As a member of Congress, Will Hurd made a name for himself in the federal technology space as one of the largest advocates for agency cybersecurity and technology modernization. The former CIA operations officer helped penned legislation that created the Technology Modernization Fund, and regularly conducted oversight hearings around the Federal IT Acquisition Reform Act, better known as FITARA.

Hurd, who left Congress in 2021 and until recently was vying to be president, spoke with my colleague Elias Groll about his campaign and why he wants to convince his party to focus on what he sees as a series of generational technological threats.

The Daily Scoop Podcast is available every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon.
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Why the federal government’s focus on CX has reached a fever pitch https://fedscoop.com/radio/founder-and-ceo-of-dorris-consulting-international-martha-dorris/ Tue, 29 Aug 2023 18:19:33 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?post_type=podcast&p=72373 Martha Dorris, founder and CEO of Dorris Consulting International

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In late 2021, the Biden administration issued landmark citizen- and customer-experience-focused policy items: the President’s Management Agenda and the Executive Order on Transforming Federal Customer Experience and Service Delivery to Rebuild Trust in Government. And to further bolster those efforts, the administration in this year’s budget request called for more than $500 million to support CX efforts across federal agencies, including standing up news customer service offices at departments like Agriculture, Homeland Security, Interior, Labor, Treasury and Veterans Affairs, and more than a 100 employees to staff them.

While it remains to be seen if that request gets funded in fiscal 2024, the message is loud and clear: improving the government’s customer service delivery, largely through digital services, is a top priority.

Joining the podcast to discuss the progress made since 2021 and why CX has become such an important theme in the Biden administration in recent years is Martha Dorris, founder and CEO of Dorris Consulting International, through which she runs the Service to the Citizen Awards. Dorris also worked hands-on with federal CX, IT and acquisition at the General Services Administration for more than three decades.

The Daily Scoop Podcast is available every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon.

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A look at how agencies are implementing a 2020 order to inventory their AI use cases https://fedscoop.com/radio/fedscoops-rebecca-heilweil-and-madi-alde-reporting-on-the-ai-use-case-inventories-across-the-federal-government/ Thu, 10 Aug 2023 18:23:20 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?post_type=podcast&p=71791 Rebecca Heilweil and Madi Alder, Tech Reporters for FedScoop and the authors of the story “The government is struggling to track its AI.

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Recently, FedScoop delved into the ongoing endeavors of federal agencies as they work to document their employment of artificial intelligence. These inventories have been mandated by a 2020 executive order issued during the Trump administration. This directive not only introduced nine fundamental principles but also laid the groundwork for a policy framework designed to ensure the implementation of AI that fosters public trust.


However, the outcomes have revealed disparities across agencies governed by the CFO Act. The inventories for civilian agencies exhibit a lack of consistency, resulting in a fragmented understanding of the government’s embrace of this emerging technology.


On today’s episode of The Daily Scoop Podcast, Rebecca Heilweil and Madi Alder, Tech Reporters for FedScoop and the authors of the story “The government is struggling to track its AI. And that’s a problem” bring forth their insights and discoveries concerning the compilation of AI use case inventories within the realm of the federal government.

The Daily Scoop Podcast is available every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon.
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Why CIOs need to reassess the sustainability of their pandemic IT fixes https://fedscoop.com/why-cios-need-to-reassess-sustainability-of-pandemic-it-fixes/ https://fedscoop.com/why-cios-need-to-reassess-sustainability-of-pandemic-it-fixes/#respond Wed, 15 Dec 2021 21:05:37 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?p=45795 Three questions IT leaders should consider asking as they take a longer-term view of their technology environments.

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Arveen Kohli is a sales leader who advises federal government agencies on digital, IT, security and workplace transformation for Dell Technologies.

It’s hard to grasp the breadth and depth of decisions federal IT teams had to make to keep their agencies operating as the pandemic shut offices down, and teleworking went from option to necessity.

infrastructure

Arveen Kohli, Consulting Sales Leader, Federal, Dell Technologies

The adoption of cloud technologies certainly helped make the transition possible. It also demonstrated to federal officials just how this kind of environment could work, so it’s understandable that CIOs and CISOs want to build on that momentum.

However, in the rush to stand up cloud-based applications and remote connections for millions of federal workers, federal IT leaders now face a new phase of technology triage: the need to step back and reassess the long-term sustainability of the IT they put in place.

The sudden push to modernize agency infrastructure and implement solutions designed to support a work-from-anywhere workforce has put federal agencies in a strong position. But it also added a lot of ad hoc solutions into their digital environments, many of which may prove costly or problematic to maintain in the long run.

It’s not too soon, however, for IT leaders to confront a few critical questions: First, do they have a clear picture of what they own and what they’ve added? Second, do they have a longer-term view of what a sustainable IT portfolio looks like? And third, do they and their management teams have a roadmap for what’s required to strengthen their agency’s long-term IT resiliency and agility?

Put sustainability above solutions

Federal agencies have come a long way in determining which assets are operating on their networks and who’s using them. But sustainability can’t happen if you don’t continuously know what you have.

Some of the lessons we’ve learned supporting global enterprises include the realization that while most organizations conduct application profiling, or take the time to assess application dependencies, those efforts often don’t get beyond a stack of reports. The critical information they’ve spent time and money gathering in many cases doesn’t get put into practice. Consequently, organizations would be better served by moving towards a platform strategy that provides a real-time view of their operations.

The goal is to understand what percentage of your workloads are ready to move over to a public cloud; which should remain in a hybrid cloud environment; and which set of workloads will be most sustainable financially over time in those environments. Rationalizing applications and solutions may achieve shorter-term efficiencies. But in the long run, adaptability and agility are better achieved by choosing the right platforms.

Let strategy drive technology

Agency IT departments would also benefit from looking beyond their IT application and workload portfolios and reassessing how they operate and deliver services.

When it comes to long-term IT sustainability, it often makes greater sense to have IT departments functioning more as IT service brokers and providers, capable of matching internal and external needs with the most appropriate technologies, rather than as IT systems managers.

Again, the goal is to keep pace with innovation and adapt quickly to changing requirements. An agile IT service provider ecosystem encourages flexibility rather than equipment refreshes and application updates.

Today’s federal CIOs have a lot of options. By operating more as an IT services broker and fostering an ecosystem of providers who are familiar with an agency’s needs, CIOs can keep their options open, test multiple approaches concurrently, and ultimately serve their internal customers and the public more expeditiously. To foster a more sustainable and flexible future, CIOs should establish an operating environment in which strategy drives technology, rather than having technology drive strategy.

Bring people into the platform

Lastly, while financial considerations remain central to the technology decisions that government agencies make, agencies can’t march forward by pursuing a financial metric without also bringing their workforce along in the process.

Just as the strategy needs to drive the technology, agency leaders must pay greater attention to the impact that strategic technology shifts will have on their employees’ workflows and outcomes. As agencies push to gain greater technical agility, they must also ensure their people get the training they need to be successful.

Technology providers routinely talk about the need for creating an enterprise-wide, holistic view of an organization’s IT environment. The organizations that will excel the most will be those whose leaders create an environment in which people are as much a part of the platform as the technology. The success of those organizations and their CIOs, however, will depend in large part on putting long-term IT sustainability ahead of short-term technical solutions.

Learn more about how your organization can build a sustainable technology future from Dell Technologies.

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