Previous Page  50 / 78 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 50 / 78 Next Page
Page Background

Chart 3: Sample KERA Roadmap

Policy&Practice

  August 2016

50

waiver, as well as the availability of

state cost share and budget timing.

Timeline:

The duration and

sequencing of initiatives must be

rational and take into account inter-

dependencies both with initiatives

that are part of the transformation

effort as well as other initiatives that

may be occurring within the agency

or broader enterprise.

Procurement strategy:

Consideration must be given to state

procurement requirements and

restrictions, potentially warranting

consultation with the procurement

office. Procurement is often the “long

pole in the tent” for transformation

initiatives, so emphasis should be

placed on efficient approaches that

reduce time lost to the procurement

cycle, including potential com-

promise on technical options and

sequencing of initiatives.

The completed roadmap serves a key

artifact that can give state executive

sponsors, as well as federal funding

agencies, a clear line of sight for how

the planned incremental moderniza-

tion will reach the ultimate vision and

realization of the goals and benefits

promised to obtain funding approval

(see Chart 3).

The Trip from New York

to San Francisco

Anyone who has ever taken a road

trip knows that they can be fun and,

if well planned, can be less costly

than simply jumping on an airplane

and flying direct. In addition, anyone

experienced with air travel today

knows that ticket prices seem to only

be getting higher, delays are common,

and the experience of being crammed

in a shrinking economy seat for hours

on end is, at best, uncomfortable. In

short, an airplane may still be the

fastest way to get from point A to point

B, but it may not always be the best.

A road trip provides some advan-

tages. You are not confined to the plane,

you have options regarding what route

to take, you can decide mid-trip to take

a detour or to change course entirely.

You might even decide to drive your

MDERNIZATION

continued from page 29

own car part of the way and then jump

on an airplane if it makes sense to

quickly advance to the next stop.

If you decide to take the hypothetical

IT transformation road trip, it is impor-

tant that state executives understand

that they retain much greater respon-

sibility for getting from Point A to

Point B. As a result, it is critical that

the journey begin with a clear idea of

where you are headed and an initial

approach on how to get there that con-

siders the priorities and constraints

your agency may have.

Without that clear plan, you may

spend years and millions of dollars

and find yourself right back where you

started.

Thank you to Deirdre Brodie, Mark

Calem, and David Hansell, who contrib-

uted to this article.

Reference Note

1. McGrath, Rita. “The Pace of Technology

Adoption is Speeding Up.”

Harvard

Business Review,

November 25, 2013.

Retrieved from

https://hbr.org/2013/11/

the-pace-of-technology-adoption-is-

speeding-up/