Obama Inauguration Commentary: IT Change You Can Believe In by Jake Sorofman VP of Marketing, rPath
(An IT Agenda for) Change You Can Believe In
The excitement leading up to the historic inauguration of President Barack Obama got me thinking about what we can expect for the next four — or eight — years. Clearly, the Obama Administration enters office on a platform for change — and at a time during which the demand for change has nearly unanimous support. With historically high approval ratings, President Obama has significant currency to trade on. This means that he has the unique opportunity to transform ideas into action, proposals into policy, and rhetoric into an actionable agenda for change.
I think it’s fair to say that our collective support for this agenda transcends political ideology. Perhaps I’m seeing what I want to see through the rose-colored lenses of an idealist (delusion beats disillusion any day!), but I sense that partisanship has given way to a sense of necessary cooperation. After all, when the stakes are this high, partisan division can only lead to the wrong outcome.
But let’s get back to what all of this means for IT. President Obama is due to appoint the first cabinet-level Chief Technology Officer. Inspired idea, to be sure, but whether this role has value will depend on the person and the definition of the role.
It’s far too easy to equate
Of course the definition and
duties of the
History tells us that the private sector is the better steward of innovation. This is no surprise — more independence of thought, fewer political hurdles, and a more attractive system of economic incentives. Large bureaucracies may create drag on new ideas, but they have the potential to act as powerful implementers.
That’s the opportunity for the Obama Administration: Bring together the vast resources of the federal government and private sector innovation, trading on unprecedented political currency to affect change. Automate paper-based processes; use the web for transactions, transparency, and collaboration; and use what’s available in the private sector to make the public functions … function.
Today, the U.S. remains far
behind many other less well-heeled countries in the application of technology to
the administration of its key functions. As citizens, we’ve all witnessed this
first hand. There is certainly no shortage of technology innovation happening in
the private sector. What we hope for in the first
That’s (an IT agenda for) change we can all believe in.
All the best,
Jake
Jake Sorofman
Vice President of
Marketing
D:
C:
Got a Press Release, News Announcement, Commentary, Upcoming Presentation, Webinar, White Paper, etc. - submit to www.pr2web.com for free posting to this News Blog or send to CLOUD@pr2web.com
For more resources on Cloud Computing check out: THE CLOUD NETWORK
Back to Main Page
Gary E. Smith
Cloud Architect - Doing IT in the Clouds

IT RESOURCE NETWORK
THE CLOUD NETWORK | THE BPM NETWORK | THE SAAS NETWORK | THE SOA NETWORK | WEB 2.0 NETWORK
THE SOA NETWORK
SOA Governance | SOA Management | SOA Networking | SOA Security | SOA Identity | SOA Test
SOA Verticals
SOA Finance | SOA Government | SOA Healthcare | SOA Insurance
SOA Manufacturing | SOA Retail | SOA Telecom | SOA Utilities



Comments