Much to learn they still have

GSA CIO Sonny Hashmi’s "Jedi Council" is assisting the development of new technology at the agency, then explaining how to use it.

GSA CIO Sonny Hashmi (Photo by Zaid Hamid)

With apologies to George Lucas for the name, General Services Administration's CIO Sonny Hashmi said an "IT Jedi Council" has helped speed the development of new technology like mobile and social media apps and data analysis tools at the agency.

The group, which consists of 200-300 IT people in GSA business units, has been in existence "for a couple of years now," Hashmi told FCW in an interview after the AFCEA Bethesda breakfast Sept. 10. The idea behind the group, he said, is not just to "develop stuff,” but to then come back and explain how the technology or application can be useful to the larger "Jedi community."

The group's other goals include being champions for new technology within the agency and end-user testing for new mobile apps and devices, he said.

The idea of deploying knowledgeable individuals within a group to address enterprise-wide problems could be extended to GSA's larger mission of being an expert source of information to the federal acquisition community, Hashmi said. Contracting officers could be incorporated into the IT group to build their technical expertise. In turn, he said, those more technically adept contracting officers could help other agencies that come to GSA for acquisition help.

He said that Mary Davie, assistant commissioner of the GSA Federal Acquisition Service Office of Integrated Technology Services,  is looking to hire a cadre of IT experts to help develop her program.

"With a cadre of experienced contracting officers, GSA could be Jedi Masters for federal contracting," he said.