CESG Connections Magazine 2020 Issue | Page 29

MORE THAN an independent agency, the U.S. Small Business Administration is a full cabinet-level agency dedicated to American small business. It provides capital, contracting expertise, counseling, and is the nation’s go-to voice for small business advocacy. Maria Roat was named as the agency’s CIO in October 2016, bringing to her role 30 years of IT leadership and professional experience. IT MODERNIZATION AND CLOUD MIGRATION ARE A TOP PRIORITY FOR EVERY CIO IN GOVERNMENT TODAY. WITH GAO ESTIMATING MORE THAN 80 PERCENT OF IT SPENDING OBLIGATED TO LEGACY SYSTEMS, WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES YOU FACE AT SBA IN MODERNIZING YOUR IT PORTFOLIO TO INCLUDE YOUR CLOUD MIGRATION STRATEGY? When you talk about cloud migration strategies, or IT modernization generally, it is not just about moving to the cloud. I look at the entirety of IT modernization as the opportunity for a critical review and rationalization of our entire technology stack—what do we have, what do we need, what is our application portfolio, and how does all of it support the many missions of SBA? I wanted to ensure that what we moved to the cloud was directly relevant to priority SBA operations. Once you take account of your IT portfolio—your assets—you need to understand the processes governing its use across the enterprise. How are applications used? How relevant are they? What works and what doesn’t? In a word—process. We continually evaluate our processes as we transform our acquisition and deployment of new technologies. In developing our IT modernization and cloud strategy, we asked the next important question: Do we have the talent to do the work, employees who understand cloud environments and how these environments operate and scale? I just outlined three challenges that also comprise the framework against which we execute. It’s a trusted framework and a very relevant one. In short: people, process, and technology. We have a strong team and are making great progress at SBA in all three areas. STAYING WITH CLOUD MIGRATION, WHERE DID YOU BEGIN? WAS IT EASY TO START? Pretty simple, really. I started with a prohibition on new hardware in the data center, which forced the discussion and moved the ball forward. REGARDING YOUR IT ASSETS AND ACTUAL SPEND, YOU ARE IDENTIFIED AS A LEADER IN IMPLEMENTING TECHNOLOGY BUSINESS MANAGEMENT (TBM), WHICH OMB IS NOW GUIDING DEPARTMENTS AND AGENCIES TO ADOPT. THIS IS A TOPIC COVERED AT CES GOVERNMENT 2020, SO WHY TBM AT SBA? When I arrived at SBA, I was more or less old school in terms of understanding my IT portfolio. From acquisition strategies, procurements, knowing my operations—network, security, general enterprise architecture—I always had data points, an ability to understand my operations, my IT portfolio. It was very manual, though, and now that we are marching down the path of TBM, I see a more complete picture of actual costs and spend. Now that we have participation from all major SBA program offices, we are able to see more data, other cost factors, understand and evaluate these, and include them in solicitations and thereby receive better results. So, yes, I am an advocate of TBM, but TBM also has challenges, such as data integrity. We started pulling data from across disparate financial systems—from sources across the enterprise, actually—it took a lot of work and cleanup. Data had to be entered into tools and this took time. Data had to be coded properly. So, data quality and data integrity are very important. We’re 18 months down the road with TBM and making great progress, incorporating more automation into the TBM framework. We know what is important to collect and we know what isn’t. We are able to make better decisions because we have a better view—a larger and more visible view—of our assets and the actual spend these encompass. CESGovernment.com • 29