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Message as the Medium
Agencies reach out via portals and handhelds to expand collaboration and tap user knowledge. IT Governance
OMB and the agencies have set the horses in motion — now agency leaders and CIOs must control the reins. The Next E-Chapter
What agencies can do to make the move beyond one-stop Web sites and portals. CIO on the Front Line
Technology changes the work of Army reservists deployed in the Middle East, both for supporting the troops and for connecting with loved ones. Next-Generation Government
Serving citizens and improving services into the future is beyond e-gov, Web 2.0 and LOBs — it’s about the data and exposing it securely. The X Factor
Women find mind and mission align in government tech jobs. What’s the takeaway that agencies can capitalize on to help maintain a skilled federal IT workforce? Facing Up to the Millennials Challenge
What happens when technology develops so swiftly that the qualifications of prospective workers essentially become moving targets? Get Ready for the N-Gen
The Net Generation, or N-Gen, is the first group of young people to be immersed in an interactive, hyperstimulating digital environment since birth. In the Beehive
What's most important to employees, and how can agencies provide it? Programs, Projects & People
Imagine if one-third of your workforce quit tomorrow. Doesn't sound like a situation most organizations could handle easily and one that most would hope to forestall. |
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Create a whole new work environment. That’s a chief takeaway from the new analysis of federal IT skills released by the Office of Personnel Management and the CIO Council.
“Traditional methods will no longer necessarily apply in recruitment and retention,” the report notes. “More nontraditional arrangements may be needed; examples include the use of flexible work schedules and the use of incentives, such as student-loan repayment and recruitment/retention bonuses.”
The issue of finding and keeping the right tech team resonates with Avi Bender’s view of the federal technology workforce. As the enterprise architecture director at the Internal Revenue Service, he’s heavily involved in cross-collaboration projects and recasting the IT infrastructure at IRS to support service-oriented applications.
“How do we identify the ‘A Team’ and make sure we find the right people with the right skills to do these jobs?” asks Bender, who spoke at a recent AFCEA briefing. He says as a government manager he has no immediate answer to that question.
In this latest assessment, the CIO Council and OPM detail findings based on survey responses from 40 percent of the federal IT workforce, or nearly 32,000 employees. OPM took the snapshot of competencies in late 2006 and then compared it against skill demands in 2007. (The analysis also takes into account data gathered in 2004 and 2005.)
The report team makes 13 recommendations on how agencies can bridge skill gaps in IT jobs: