CIO Council plans mentor program

Mid-level IT professionals are likely candidates for program, aimed at advancing interagency e-gov

The CIO Council plans to launch a governmentwide mentoring program in September aimed at advancing interagency e-government initiatives.

During the first year of the program, the leaders of the CIO Council's five committees will serve as mentors and will pair up with proteges from agencies across government.

The proteges will work full or part time on assignments that have been defined by the mentors and that are tied to the council's strategic plan, said Tom Horan, team leader for the mentoring program and an official at the General Services Administration. Mid-level information technology professionals are the most likely candidates for the program, but employees from other areas are welcome to apply, Horan said. The council is looking for "anybody that would best qualify to get the job done and benefit from mentoring from the CIO or deputy CIO they are assigned to."

Once the first-year pilot and a subsequent evaluation are complete, the CIO Council plans to expand the program. Then, it likely would include mentors and assignments from other groups such as the Procurement Executives Council and the Chief Financial Officers Council.

The program aims to produce well-rounded employees who become familiar with issues that other agencies are facing, Horan said. "There are a lot of folks doing good work," Horan said. "This is a good opportunity to work on cross-cutting horizontal government activities that need more attention."

The council will release information on available assignments when it unveils the program at the end of July. Committee leaders plan to select applicants and iron out work arrangements with the proteges in August. Each mentor would have one or two proteges who would work on one or more projects beginning in September.

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