Title: Final Report of the 199596 SECDEF Fellows Program
1FINAL REPORT of the Secretary of
Defense Corporate Fellows Program 1999-2000
2SDCFP Background
- SECDEF concerns for future Service leaders
- Open to organizational and operational change
- Recognize opportunities made possible by info
tech - Appreciate resulting revolutionary changes
underway - Affecting society and business now
- Affecting culture and operations of DoD in future
- Businesses outside DoD successful in
- Adapting to changing global environment
- Exploiting information revolution
- Structural reshaping/reorganizing
- Developing innovative processes
3SDCFP Origin
- RMA Senior Steering Group recommended- SECDEF
Fellows Program- SECDEF Strategic Studies
Group- Other (Concept Development Center,
etc..) - Established by SECDEF memo- October 6, 1994
- DoD Directive 1322.23- September 2, 1995
-
4SDCFP Organization
- Two officers from each Service (USMC one)
- - High flag/general officer potential- O-6 or
O-5- Senior Service College credit (except
Army) - Eleven months at Sponsoring Company
- Group Education
- Permanent Staff- SDCFP Director, Admin Asst.
- - USD(P), USD(AT), Net Assessment for
oversight- National Defense University for Admin
support
5SDCFP Objectives
- Report and Briefings directly to SecDef, others
- Business insights relevant to DoD
culture/operations - Recommended process/organization changes
- Build a cadre of future leaders who
- Understand more than the profession of arms
- Understand adaptive and innovative business
culture - Recognize organizational and operational
opportunities - Understand skills required to implement change
- Will motivate innovative changes throughout
career
6SDCFP Results
- Program objectives fulfilled- Education,
education, education - - More Sponsors than Fellows available
- - Inter/intra-group experience sharing
-
- Unique corporate experiences- Strong corporate
support - Executive/operational level mix-
Mergers/restructuring
7SDCFP Sponsors
- 99 - Prior
- American Management Systems, Andersen Consulting,
Boeing, CNN, Caterpillar, Citibank, Cisco
Systems, DirecTV, FedEx, Hewlett-Packard,
Lockheed Martin, Loral, McDonnell Douglas,
McKinsey Co., Microsoft, Mobil, Netscape,
Oracle, Northrop Grumman, PricewaterhouseCoopers,
Raytheon Systems, Sarnoff Corp, Sears, Southern
Company, Sun Microsystems - 00 - 01
- ABB, Agilent Technologies, Andersen Consulting,
Caterpillar, Enron, Human Genome Sciences,
Northrop Grumman
81999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
9McKinsey Company
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- World-wide management consulting firm
- 40 countries 86 offices 6500 employees
- 2.0B annual revenue sustained growth 15
since creation - Cradle for future CEOs (IBM, AMEX, Delta
Airlines, Starbucks...) - Mission
- Create value help clients make lasting
performance improvements. - Build a firm able to attract and retain
exceptional people. - 1003 (Firm, Time, World)
- Corporate culture vs. Military culture
- Similar Up or out, Very high attrition, Firm
success at the expense of Quality of Life - Different Non-hierarchical, flat organization
Personal value creation based motivation
10McKinsey Company Observations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- War for Talent
- Universal goal find, recruit, develop, and
retain the best - Demand for top talent is explodingsupply is not
- Talent becoming migratory / reduced loyalty to
the institution - Over 70 passively seeking new employment
- Small, start-up companies gaining share of the
market - Economic boom used as a crutch to explain away
talent problems - Money is a player, but not the key lever in a
decision to leave or stay - Corporate culture is a major lever
- Contact w/ leaders Flexible work schedules
- Autonomy responsibility Recognition
rewards - Dual income family accommodations
- Aggressive / innovative HR methodologies
mandatory
11Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Recognize we have a Talent/Human Resources
problem - Apply resources to solve the problem...or be
prepared to pay a higher price - Improve quality of life (food stamps, medical,
housing, dual income families, stabilized
assignments, selective telecommuting) - Incentive programs for high priority skill sets
- Revise the personnel selection and assignment
process - Longer tour length
- Create new recruiting and retention strategy
- Recruit early - take DoD into the middle-school
classroom - Partner with industry to recruit like skill sets
- Vesting Options
- Bring full financial service to DoD outsource
DFAS - One-stop shopping (Financial, Insurance,
Investments)
121999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
13Lockheed Martin Mission Systems
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- 4 of Lockheed Martin Corporation sales (900M)
- IT Company in an Aerospace Corporation
- Three business lines (Commercial, Defense, Space)
- Large Complex System integration and support
- (US Census , GCCS, Space Ranges- West)
- Environment- Dealing with Adversity
- DoD Mirror Image
- Direct Applicability to DoD
14 Observations/Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Commercial v. government procurements
- Simplicity v. Complexity
- Trust v. Checks Balances
- Continuous v. Staged Communication
- Speed v. Fairness
- Market Value Pricing v. Cost Breakdown
- Reputation v. Fee Structure
- Procurement Recommendations
- Establish commercial business model vision
- Determine set of changes to reduce complexity,
open communications, and generate trust
15Observations/Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Process excellence
- Carnegie-Mellon Capability Maturity Models (CMM)
- Industry Std - Unique online Process Asset Library
- Recommendation Endorse process excellence and
web-based access to current DoD documents. - People Programs
- Effective Processes
- Mentors role
- Challenge and responsibility
- Recommendations
- Develop individualized retention packages using
non-pay related benefits. - Conduct a "self evaluation" of the DoD Personnel
Management - System using CMM for People.
161999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
17Sarnoff Corporation
- The Company
- Founded in 1942 as the RCA research lab
- For-profit subsidiary of SRI International since
1987 - Innovative electronics-based research
organization - 750 employees, 130M revenue, two new patents
every week - 19 successful spin-offs, first IPO in May 00,
more soon - Contract RD, manufacturing, and recently an
Internet Incubator - Balance in tech creativity and business
discipline - Scientists engineers into entrepreneurs, PMs,
and leaders - Assignment Life Sciences and Systems Business
Unit - All phases of technology venture development and
execution - Strategic planning, change leadership, process
improvement - Biotechnology (two ventures, brainstorming, DSB
Task Force) - DoD-Sarnoff RD Strategic Supplier Alliance
- Breakthrough Rapid Improvement Team (RIT)
18Observations/Recommendations
- Technology survival of the smartest
- DoD not aggressive in tracking/contacting the
marketplace - DoD access to technology is decreasing
- Intellectual Property is key - more security
means less talk pubs - DoD seen as a slow, unprofitable fragmented
market - Intellectual property is only useful if it
creates value sooner than later - Cant find the right DoD customer, RD rarely
transitions to warfighter - Marketplace going at hyperspeed DoD takes too
long, too many stakeholders, untimely payments,
full open competition, low fees - Cost sharing favors large, established companies-
NOT new ventures - Expand use of strategic alliances (RD, National
Technology Alliance), spin-offs (CIAs In-Q-Tel),
govt teaming, commercial-like contracts - People are like PCs bio-hacking, bugs,
reprogramming, enhancers - Concerns Ethical use of technology, David
Goliath issues
19Observations/Recommendations
- No integrated approach to biotech
- No real defense for bio attack
- Five key breakthroughs needed
- Biosensors Diagnostics
- Sequence unknown pathogen DNA
- Map protein molecular structure
- find binding sites for drug molecules
- Design and test antigens rapidly
- with confidence safety
- Go from experimental drugs to high
- volume production delivery
- Need National Strategy with cross-
- government and industry cooperation
- One proposal (many out there)
Pathogen Genome Detection and Countermeasure
Process - Current Bug to Drug
cycle is 5-10 years - Need to
get down to months or weeks
- The Engineered Pathogen Identification and
Countermeasures (EPIC) Program - Sarnoff working with Congress and briefing 2
DSB Task Forces
201999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
21Sun Microsystems
- The company
- A teenager in the Silicon Valleyfounded in 1982
- 35K employees 15B revenue 150 in fortune
500 163B market cap - Undergone continuous innovation and reinvention
since 1982 - "The network is the computer"... and still is
- Refocused workstations to enterprise servers
and software to services - Today Were the dot in .Com and the O in
the Old Economy - Vision 1 provider of products, technologies
and services for enabling the net economy - Assignment Assistant to VP, Chief Information
Officer (CIO) - Contributions to Sun
- Active member of Suns staffInformation
Management Group, Leadership Council, Public
Policy Forum - DoD ambassador leadership consultant
disciplined perspective
22Sun Microsystems Observations
- Technology big bets
- Service driven network applications delivered
to the browser - Massive scale bandwidth costs declining 30-50
usage up 3-4X - Continuous, real-time availability mandatory
- Business strategy
- Focus on core competencies 1st
- Acquire to build business position partner to
fill gap - e- everything or mothball it!
- Strategic planning horizon 20 months v. 20
years _at_ DoD - Innovation and speed to market valued and highly
rewarded - Challenging work, compensation packages keep the
best - Greatest strength (agility) is also greatest
weakness - Leadership gaps negatively impacts retention and
execution - Being the UNIX employer of choice aids
recruiting!
23Recommendations
- Accelerate transition to electronic environment
- Use DoD expertise to get security procedures
right - Partner to develop MyMilitary.mil portal
- Personalized, content-rich serviceanywhere,
anytime - Web enable ALL tools and processes
- Great way to advertise to present and future
workforce - Grant universal internet access to troops
- Leverage economic position FREE internet
service and PCs - Remove barriers MILCON, financial, hardware,
policy - Invest in thin client architecture
- Perfect for the Pentagonbillions in savings
- Totally Wireless for workers authorized cell
phones - Cell phone laptop OR desktop PC w/ desk
phonenot both - Smart card must include additional applications
- Purchase card, Credit card, Club card, building
access - Outsource non core IT function insist on
interoperability
241999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
25 Citigroup
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Worlds 2nd largest full service financial firm
- 100 countries, 200K employees, 100M customers
- 1 trillion dollars in financial transactions
daily - Two Products Money and Customer Trust
- Customer Trust
- Citicorp hacked in 1994
- Cant let it happen again
- Built financial industrys best Info Security
framework - Elevated level of responsibility to top
management - Assignment Corporate Information Security Office
(CISO) - Global corporate business oversight
26Citigroup CISO Observations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Info security program based on informed risk,
- information ownership, top management
responsibility - Information is an asset, not a resource
- A leadership, not just technical, issue
- Industry facing same challenges as DoD
- Inherently insecure architecture
- Challenges harder as technology change quickens
- Globalization, e-commerce, COTS, outsourcing,
- open architectures, wireless, miniaturization
- Rush to market often more urgent than system
security
27Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Cant assume a system is secure until you test
it. - Citigroup tests every system prior to fielding
- Info Security is an operational requirement
- DoD needs to play a leadership role in driving
national information infrastructure security - Partnering Opportunity
- Hire, train and retain the best
- Info Security personnel shortage demand high
- Join because organization seen as the best
- Stay because leadership, challenging work, QOL,
pay
281999-2000 Fellows
- LTC Keith Armstrong McKinsey Co.
- Houston, TX
- RADM(S) Steven Enewold Lockheed Martin
- Gaithersburg, MD
- Lt Col Brenda Johnson Sarnoff Corporation
- Princeton, NJ
- Col Darren McDew Sun Microsystems
- Palo Alto, CA
- CDR Burt Palmer Citigroup
- New York, NY
- Col Art Sass Federal Express
- Memphis, TN
29Federal Express
- Worlds largest express-transportation company
- Serving 210 countries worldwide
- Employees 156,000
- Revenues 1999 17 Billion
- Ground Transport Vehicles 44,500
- Aircraft Fleet 650 (air cargo fleet second only
to USAF) - Assignment FedEx Strategy Core Team
- Embed strategic thinking throughout the company
- Identify potential future market spaces
- Validate market spaces against plausible
realities (scenarios)
30Federal ExpressObservations
- Strategic Planning (6-18 Months)
- Short-term, narrow scope
- Flexible budget process accommodates changes in
strategic plan - Recruiting/Retention Issues
- Approximately 22 annual turnover (mostly lower
levels) - Morale among tenured employees (12 years)
- Operate Independently- Compete Collectively
- FedEx Express, Ground, Custom-Critical,
Logistics - Transportation/Distribution/Information Network
- Best in the world?
31Recommendations
- Invest in an all out effort to integrate military
logistics throughout DoD -- REINVENT where
necessary - Emphasize distribution over transportation
- Integrated information network
- Continue to explore and invest in Web-based
technology - Dont let best get in the way of better
- DoD must posture itself for highly skilled
personnel - Better to partner than compete with Corporate
America
32Common Observations/Recommendations
- Operational Change
- Organizational Change
- Transformation
- Service and DoD Implications
33Common Findings
- Human Resources
- Dealing with DoD
- Information Technology
- Information Security
- Technology Use/Access
- Strategic Planning/Resource Allocation
- Business Best Practices
- Partnerships/Alliances/Teaming
- Internal Organization
34Human Resources Common Findings
Andersen Consulting Observations/Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Renew focus on DoD strengths for recruiting
- Institutional values duty, honor, country
- Leadership development, education and training
- Challenging work, significant responsibility at
early age - Gender race-blind mentoring - diversity as a
strength - Ensure leaders understand impact assigned HR
accountability - Performance report comment
- Help DoD close cultural divide with civilian
community - Carefully manage the top 10 and the bottom 10
- Benchmark Fortune 100 - become equivalent
- War for Talent EXISTS - no easy fix apply all
available resources now or experience greater
costs later - Intellectual property, intangible assets more
valuable than fixed assets - Talent migratory long-term dedication, loyalty
waning
35Human Resources Common Findings
Andersen Consulting Observations/Recommendations
SECDEF Corporate Fellows Program
- Money NOT only key lever to attracting
retaining top talent - Increase total compensation and benefits package
- Tax exemption options
- Launch Mileage Plus frequent flyer program
- Match market value
- Reduce gap between officer and enlisted salaries
- Build Perks_at_work web site leverage DoD buying
power - Provides one-stop shopping for employees
- Raise QOL attention to detail use new methods
and techniques - Gen-X is different, not better or worse
- Recruit individuals retain families
- Vet new ideas outside the Pentagon
- Pick low hanging fruit do easy fixes quickly
- Robust health and dental plans, dual worker
family plans, adult day care, telecommuting,
on-site child care, hospice services, major
signing bonuses, incentive pay, investment
packages (TSP or 401K for active duty) - Develop military to civil service transfer plan
36Dealing with DoD Common Findings
- Dealing with DoD
- Companies dont care, cant get in, frustrated
- Dont care - commercial business booming
- Cant get in - funded sponsor identification
- Frustrated - complex burdensome system
- Multiple customers and checkers
- Cost accounting standards with audits
- Funding instability
- Low fee structures
- Recent DSB findings similar
- Reach out to industry (on their turf)
- Barriers to entry, fee structures, partnering
enticements - Determine set of changes to reduce complexity,
open communications, and generate trust
37Information Technology Common Findings
- Accelerate INFOTECH transformation to electronic
environment - Use DoD expertise to get security procedures
right - Partner to develop MyMilitary.mil portal
- Personalized, content-rich serviceanywhere,
anytime - Web enable ALL tools and processes
- Great way to advertise to present and future
workforce - Grant universal internet access to troops
- Remove barriers MILCON, financial, hardware,
policy - Leverage economic position FREE internet
service and PCs - Invest in thin client architecture
- Perfect for the Pentagon!billions in savings
- Totally Wireless for workers authorized cell
phones - Cell phone laptop OR desktop PC w/ desk
phonenot both - Outsource non core IT function insist on
interoperability
38Information SecurityCommon Findings
- Information Security
- Cyber attacks increasing
- DoD and commercial systems similar
- Firewalls ONLY PARTIALLY effective
- Off-the-shelf hacking tools available
- Information protection requires training and
tools - Commercial systems (banking) are the edge leading
- Centralized IT management
- Network monitoring
- Intrusion detection and tracking
- Ethical hacking required before fielding systems
- Recommendation Partner with industry for
process, - training and tools
39Technology Use/Access Common Findings
- DoD use of Technology (Infotech, Biotech,
Nanotech) - Need Board/Council for the Ethical Use of
Technology - Personnel privacy/security concerns w/ DNA
collection and use - Partner with industry on potential use of DoD DNA
database - Train personnel on biotech nanotech just like
for infotech - Need new doctrine, strategy, tactics,
international agreements - Integrate approach for biotech nanotech
acquisition and use - David Goliath studies to look at
vulnerabilities asymmetrical attacks - Outsource everything not core to DoD
- DoD needs Commercial Mindset to access Technology
- Consider RD as a commercial service max use of
commercial-like contracting - Conduct Entrepreneurial training for all
personnel - Provide all DoD personnel online access to best
business literature tools - Use Commercial front door
- Databases connecting DoD with enterprises and
vice versa - Organization/infrastructure to support commercial
interface - Send 50 of Defense Leadership and Management
Program (DLAMP) to industry - Integrate DoD personnel working in industry using
common web umbrella - Enhances interaction across programs and
participating sponsors
40Strategic Planning/Resource Allocation Common
Findings
- Strategic Planning
- Everybody talks it, few actually do it
- Strategic window shorter than DoD
- 6 to 20 months v. 20 years
- Short-term window drivers
- Competition
- Technology
- Business Environment
- Resource allocation
- Flexible processes support strategic plans
- DoDs resource allocation plan must be more
flexible
41Business Best Practices Common Findings
- Executives must understand more than profession
of arms - Military and civilian officer and enlisted
- Initiate business training at commissioning
source PME - No price is low enough for a bad buy avoid deal
fever - As important to kill a bad acquisition as to
close a good deal! - Treat change acceleration as a process have a
champion - Create shared need reason must be instilled In
organization - Shape vision desired outcome must be clear,
widely understood - Fully Commit key people must invest, demand
attention - Make change last learning transferred throughout
organization - Monitor progress set benchmarks, establish
accountability - Install trained CIO at wing/brigade level
- Smart card must include additional applications
- Purchase card, credit card, club card, building
access - Leadership conferences reinforce values and vision
42Partnerships/Alliances/Teaming Common Findings
- Determine core competencies first
- Build on TRUST must be win-win
- Look for long term commitments for non-core
competencies - Re-compete only if necessary
- Complicates planning and execution for all
parties - Develop web-based business partnering database
- Accessible to government and Industry
- Facilitates inter-service/agency teaming and
benchmarking - Outsourcing is a partnershipnot just a hand off
43Internal Organization Common Findings
- Agile fast are the most important attributes
- Flexible, task organized, not hierarchical
- Decision-making and execution mostly
decentralized - Business models keep pace with the marketplace
- Org structure keeps pace w/ new business
strategies - Dedicated change agents, top-line outside
consultants - Very customer oriented (internal and external)
- Want repeat and new business
- Resolving issues quickly is key
- Quality check with customer surveys
- Automated support (pay, travel, legal, IT,
financial, etc.) - Dynamic very proactive top leadership
- No transformation without it
44Backup Slides
45DoD-Sarnoff Strategic Supplier Alliance
RIT(Research and Development Partnerships)
(Backup) SARNOFF CORPORATION OBSERVATIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
- Purpose Make contracting with government more
"commercial like" to encourage emerging - firms and companies developing technology to
provide government access to the new technology - Why Sarnoff?
- A dual use business model
- A leading RD company in both commercial and
government markets - 18 Sarnoff Technology Ventures
- Strong connections to the Venture Capital
community - RIT Proposed Solution
- Operationalize a could be process for working
with both Sarnoff and its commercial - spin-off/start-up technology ventures
- Implementation Action Plans
- Create training to apply O.T. and Commercial
Contracting practice to RD partnership - Develop contract template for O.T. and
Commercial Contracting practice for Sarnoff - Establish basis for a commercial pricing model
for RD across DoD - Target projects to test Could Be process and
contract templates - Clarify requirements for making RD a commercial
item designation