By
Jeff Erlichman
For the Business Transformation Agency (BTA) Procurement
transformation happens one process at a time.
One of the banes of government Procurement is the poorly written
requirement.
That fact has not been lost on the new Administration. Recently Federal
CIO Vivek Kundra told an AFCEA audience that “the federal
government historically hasn’t done a good job of defining
what
those requirements are. Then it engages in contracts, and because the
needs haven’t been defined very well, you end up with
400-plus-change orders.” He also asserts that the
government’s process for writing requirements and proposals
is
overly complex.
At the same time he said “to be fair, we’re not
holding the
private sector accountable when things do go wrong.” Both
groups
have a responsibility to ensure that requirements are clear said Kundra
and he called for a new means to evaluate solutions.
Kundra may not have to look far for an example. There is an agency that
has Transformation as its middle name. They take this stuff very
seriously.
The BTA Mindset
David Fisher is the Director of the Business
Transformation Agency at DOD.
Established in 2005, the BTA provides accountability and insight into
the business activities around the Department, such as finance,
procurement, acquisition, logistics and HR. “We perform those
enabling business capabilities that enable us to perform the ultimate
warfighting mission,” Fisher said in a recent interview with
1105
Government Information Group Custom Media.
Fisher also said that BTA stood up because DOD wasn’t doing a
good job delivering business services in a cost conscious way.
To get the insight needed to improve that situation, Fisher is candid
when he says he is looking for, “someone who is intolerant of
waste and willing to take on the status quo. There is a mindset of
being associated with an organization like the BTA, because we look at
the whole piece of pie.”
“There are many things that we find that organizations are
doing,
because that is the way they have always done it,” said
Fisher.
“We need people who are analytic enough and strong enough to
challenge that status quo mentality.”
Two Missions - Two Sets of Stakeholders
“We work closely with the policy owners at the
Pentagon
and as they develop policy to align business activities, we provide a
conduit to help guide that information, those
standards, those rules,” Fisher noted.
For things going to be done DOD-wide, BTA plays a guidance role to make
sure those policies are defined at a level of detail that are
implementable. “We are a guidance conduit role between those
who
set policy and those who have to implement it and actually run the
business.”
BTA provides accountability and insight
into the business activities around DOD, such as finance, procurement,
acquisition, logistics and HR.
The other half of what BTA does is actually implement systems
–
only those that are DOD enterprisewide. “We have 27 IT
systems;
some are large, some are small, the common thread is they are used
throughout the DOD. They are not just an Army, Navy or Air Force
capability. We support and maintain those used by everybody in the
entire enterprise. Examples are the Central Contractor Registry (CCR)
and FedBizOpps.”
Standards Quest
Fisher said the BTA is also responsible for the
DOD’s
business Enterprise Architecture. “That’s where we
aggregate those rules and write them into a repository. Everyone knows
that is the one place where the business rules reside coming down from
the corporate level enterprise, so we facilitate getting access to
those rules.”
While that’s nice, it is far from sufficient said
Fisher.
“Developed in 2006, we released our Standard Financial
Information Structure, a set of 70 data elements that the department
has said we are going to use in managing our business, our process and
our systems,” Fisher said. All those data elements were
codified
in the EA and it serves as a model for other processes including
Procurement.
“This is foundational stuff. If we get this stuff right our
ability to share and aggregate information will be significantly
improved.”
Procurement Standards
At this time BTA is developing its first set of
Procurement
data standards that are moving us toward having standard data types
noted Fisher. As BTA has different systems that are doing various
phases of the procurement work and function, sharing information and
doing it on standard data types and standard data business rules will
significantly improve the ability to do that.
“The PDS (Procurement Data Standards) is coming along right
now;
it is making a lot of progress. We are getting to the point where we
can have them codified and implemented in a standard way across the
department,” said Fisher.
Practicing What They Preach
Guidance is one half of BTA’s mission. The
other half is making sure we practice what we preach said Fisher.
“We look at our systems portfolio (CCR, FedBizOpps and 25
others)
and if we are looking to drive transformational behavior in how people
acquire and deliver business systems, then we need to make sure we are
executing along those lines ourselves and have a responsibility to
deliver an important capability.”
BTA procures and maintains these systems. Some they acquired in 2005,
others are being organically grown as needs arise. For those Fisher
said BTA is responsible for the IT lifecycle from initial pre-RFP,
working with functional community to get that right; all the way
through delivery and close.
Being in the systems business has also helped BTA recognize another
issue facing IT system buyers. “One of the things was our
observation that DOD was performing acquisition for business IT systems
in exactly the same model we were using for weapons.”
Let me repeat. The same level of testing, documentation, validation
that you would use to build weapons systems, were required for
Procurement of business IT systems.
“We took it upon ourselves to recommend to senior leadership
that
we streamline that activity, not just streamline for efficiency, but
new concepts that we are using now from the effectiveness
standpoint,” explained Fisher.
Business Capability Lifecycle
The result is the BCL – Business Capability
Lifecycle.
What the BCL does is take a look at the requirements milestones and ask
is the minimal sufficient set of documentation needed?
“It has to be sufficient, we are not cutting
sufficiency,”
explained Fisher, “but we want to be minimally sufficient so
we
are not being over bureaucratic in doing unnecessary work.”
The process asks what are the things that are really value add to the
PM. What part of risk mitigation or test plans or EVM or integrated
master schedules – those elements that could be part of any
program – are most useful for a business system as opposed as
using the same mantra as a weapons systems?
“We have taken that and tried to codify a new set of
documentation and lifecycle reviews which are more tailored to business
systems; that’s the efficiency side,” said Fisher.
“The effectiveness side is that we have introduced a new
approach
to monitoring the progress of these programs with an eye of having risk
drive the monitoring and we call these reviews ERAMS –
Enterprise
Risk Assessment Methodology.”
“The idea is that at certain points of the program a small
team
that is highly skilled at looking at programs comes in and does an
exhaustive, but short review in 2-3 weeks. We rapidly get a clear
picture of what’s working and what’s not from the
people
who are living it today,” Fisher explained.
The team’s job is to the pull all of this together and come
up
with themes that we can share with Program Management and Executive
Sponsors.
“The objective is before leaders make key decisions at each
stage
of the program they know what risks are prevalent and what should be
done to mitigate those risks,” noted Fisher. For Fisher doing
that is real transformation.
Find out more about BTA at
www.bta.mil.