Weekly Round-up: January 11, 2013
Gadi Ben-Yehuda
In 2013, we're all growing up a little bit.
- Smartphones entering that awkward phase? The Google Nexus 4 is too big for some hands (heck, even the iPhone used big hand models in 2007 to make itself look smaller), and yet the 5-inch Galaxy Note sold 10 million units and is spawning a new device: the phablet. What are the implications for mobile delivery of government services?
- Printing of House Bills entering the 21st Century? The Government Printing Office will start publishing the bills from the House of Representatives in machine-readable XML.
- Are we asking better questions? Way, way back, in 2012, I wrote about the MeriTalk survey, sCIOcial Circle. Mark Drapeau and Joseph Marks have since looked at the way the metrics were evaluated and have some interesting insights.
Dan Chenok
- The latest in a long tradition -- OMB reports on Federal reports to eliminate.
- NIST stepping up its game to help agencies address cyber challenges.
- Management issues that could come before Congress this session.
John Kamensky
- Federal Budget for FY 2014 Will Likely Be Delayed. By law, the President submits his proposed budget to Congress in early February. But Federal Times reports that – because of the lack of a FY 2013 budget and the lack of resolution to the impending sequestration – OMB has not yet finalized agency budgets (which is normally done in early December). As a result, it reports that the budget will likely be delayed.
- Fed Interest in Pininterest. NextGov reports that the General Services Administration has recently signed a Terms of Service agreement with Pininterest so government agencies can now participate on this social network. It will be incorporated into the Federal Social Media Registry and GSA will offer training on its use. Wonder what recipes the government will post [Actually, check out this Pinboard of "Interesting Things the Government Is Selling." Learjet, anyone? - ED]?
- OPM Guidance on Furloughs. Federal Times reports that with the uncertainties surrounding agencies regarding the “fiscal cliff” and sequestration, the Office of Personnel Management has posted guidance on ways agencies can conduct furloughs.
- New GAO Web Page on Key Issues. GAO has launched a new one-stop web page that highlights key issues it follows. It also announced that it will release its High Risk report in February and its annual Program Duplication and Overlap report in April.
- Agency Use of Social Media to Get Their Work Done. Federal News Radio reports that Partnership for Public Service and Booz Allen Hamilton have jointly sponsored a new study, #ConnectedGov: Engaging Stakeholders in the Digital Age, that examines how agencies are using social media and technology to further their agencies' goals and missions.
Michael Keegan
Survey: PIOs turn focus to quality, not quantity
There's an old adage in federal management circles: You can't manage what you can't measure. And now, performance improvement officers say agencies are getting better at the measuring part — using data to driver better performance. Overall, 71 percent of agency PIOs who responded to an exclusive Federal News Radio survey said their agency makes good use of performance data, and a similarly high number of respondents said the administration focus on performance management has increased in recent years. The survey, sent to 46 PIOs or deputy PIOs over the summer, garnered a 15 percent response rate. Most of the PIOs who responded hailed from small agencies.
Sequestration 2.0 would mean furloughs for DoD's entire civilian workforce
When Congress pushed the pause button on sequestration last week, it also made some changes to how the automatic budget cuts would take place. And a new analysis suggests almost every civilian employee in the Defense Department would be forced to take a month of unpaid leave if the new version of sequestration isn't undone.
Congress begins to look beyond the budget
As a new Congress starts a new year, is there a new imperative to find common ground?
Agencies getting better at social tools
There is no shortage of social activity in government, but a new report finds that agencies are becoming increasingly familiar with the benefits of social platforms and discovering uses that further their missions.
Finding structure for unstructured data
If hype equaled performance, big data and cloud computing would already be unmatched cost-cutting, efficiency-increasing, bottom line-building tools in the federal space.
The Business of Government Radio Show: Avi Bender
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