Title: GSA
1GSA SmartPay 2 Driving a Successful
Transition
MasterCard Worldwide Global Public Sector Forum
David J. Shea, CPCM, PMPDirector, Office of
Charge Card ManagementMarch 25, 2008
2Agenda
- Recap from Last Years Forum
- Program Overview
- GSA SmartPay 2 New Products and Services
- Transition to GSA SmartPay 2
- GSA Customer Service and Support
- Q A
-
3Recap from Last Years Forum
- What would happen if the government had to find a
new way to handle 98 million transactionswith
the current shortage of contracting and other
specialists? - What would happen if 26 billion in government
purchases, travel transactions, and
fuel/maintenance disappeared? - What would happen if banks lost 5 - 10 of their
total annual card spend overnight?
4Program Overview
- GSA SmartPay, established in 1998, is the
federal government charge card program that
serves over 350 federal agencies, organizations,
and Native American tribal governments - One GSA SmartPay Master Contract with five banks
(using 2 associations MasterCard and Visa)
currently provides card products and services to
all 350 agencies, organizations and tribes banks
under the current program include - Bank of America
- Citibank
- JPMorgan Chase
- Mellon Bank
- US Bank
5Program Overview
- GSA SmartPay is the largest government charge
card program in the world. In FY07 alone - Total FY07 program spend was over 27 billion, a
4.8 increase over FY06 - Over 91.5 million transactions were processed
through approximately 3 million cards - Over 174 million in refunds were earned by
customer agencies/organizations
6GSA SmartPay 2 New Products and Services
- New or Improved Products
- Contactless cards facilitate faster
point-of-sale transactions - Debit cards help to control the amount of
outstanding credit with cardholders - Pre-paid (stored value) cards can be issued
with required value on short notice - Cardless accounts provide established
vendor-specific charge accounts without physical
cards - Travelers and convenience checks improved
ability to issue and reconcile checks online such
as - Electronic transaction records that must include
merchant name - Online imaging of cleared checks
7GSA SmartPay 2 New Products and Services
- Increased security requirements increased
emphasis on security of both personally
identifiable information (PII) and procurement
data to minimize risk to individual cardholders
and to agencies - Detailed minimum security standards including
FISMA and Payment Card Industry (PCI) security
standards - GSA has conducted bank security system reviews
and determined that bank Electronic Access
Systems (EAS) are Certified and Accredited (CA),
and are Section 508 compliant - Increased data requirements more focus on Level
3 data, which provides better insight into the
program for agencies/organizations and GSA
SmartPay
8GSA SmartPay 2 New Products and Services
- Improved Program Technology
- Increased capability of bank EAS systems to
provide flexibility in reporting and account
management, including the ability to - Generate ad hoc reports
- Change category block templates (e.g., MCC
blocking) - Dispute transactions electronically
- Enable A/OPCs to turn cards on and off
- Data mining tools provided by associations such
as MasterCards Expert Monitoring System (EMS)
offer additional insight into card program data
and trends - Transaction monitoring to detect misuse, fraud,
waste, and abuse (e.g., email alert service)
9GSA SmartPay 2 Card Design Mock-ups
Purchase
Travel
Fleet
Integrated
10Transition to GSA SmartPay 2
- The current GSA SmartPay contract expires on
November 29, 2008 all charge cards must be
cancelled and replaced with new cards no later
than this date - No later than November 30, 2008,
agencies/organizations must transition to one of
the GSA SmartPay 2 banks - Citibank
- JPMorgan Chase
- US Bank
- Agencies/organizations rely on charge card
services to support their missions and operations
ensuring a successful transition, without gaps
in service, is of utmost importance
11Transition Challenges
- Transition activities require significant
efforts, and involve many different stakeholders
- Cardholders
- Agency executives
- Agency IT personnel and Contracting Officers
- Agency finance and accounting personnel
- Approving officials
- Current GSA SmartPay and GSA SmartPay 2 banks
- Merchants
- Associations
- Fortunately, 10 agencies represent approximately
90 of total program spend unfortunately, these
agencies are huge, complex organizations - Bank of America and Mellon Bank are not
participants in the GSA SmartPay 2 program all
Bank of America and Mellon Bank customer
agencies/organizations must transition to a new
bank under GSA SmartPay 2
12Transition to GSA SmartPay 2 - Notional
Relationship Diagram
Legal
Fleet Mgmt
Congress/ Legislation
OMB/GAO Compliance
SP1 Bank
Contracting Officers
Senior Leadership
Agency A/OPC Purchase Travel Fleet
GSAs Office of Charge Card Management
Card Processors
Associations
Finance
Procurement
Approving Officials
SP2 Bank
IT
Cardholders
IG
Human Resources
13Transition Timeline
Now
- At this point in time, agencies should be
finalizing - task order award activities
14Agency Transition Status Report
- The Agency Transition Status Report (ATSR) tracks
the transition progress of 32 designated agencies
and provides - Agencies with a milestone tracking tool to
support transition efforts - GSA SmartPay program and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) with insight into the
government-wide transition status - To date, approximately 38 of these designated
agencies have awarded task orders, representing
approximately 32 of total FY07 program spend
15Key Transition Activities
Now
Pre-Award Tasks (should be completed)
Post-Award Tasks
- Obtain data from current bank
- Cleanse, verify and send data to GSA SmartPay
2 bank - Develop activation and distribution plan
- Bank EAS, interfaces, and other systems tested
and ready to activate - New cards deployed users trained
- Develop contingency plan
- Card closeout procedures
- Develop communications plan
- Define needs/requirements
- Determine task order type
- Develop/issue task order request
- Evaluate and award task order
16Post-Award Tasks
- The post-award transition phase requires
significant efforts to coordinate activities with
the current bank, the new bank, and internal
agency stakeholders
Intra-Agency
GSA SmartPay bank
GSA SmartPay 2 bank
- Establish communication and coordination
procedures with bank - Confirm task order variances and deliverables
- Plan logistics for card distribution and
activation, including inserts and activation
stickers - Complete IT-related tasks
- Plan/coordinate training
- Validate master file data
- Develop effective cardholder communications
- Develop/implement plans to reduce and deal with
trailing transactions (subscriptions, travel
vendor accounts) - Update card policies and internal training on new
card policies - Develop contingency plans
- Identify critical data to be obtained from
current bank (master file/cardholder data) - Establish card closeout procedures
17Post-Award Tasks Considerations
- Have you thought about
- Which agency policies/procedures should be
refreshed? - Will there be any restrictions on card use
leading up to transition? - What are the old card destruction procedures?
- What record retention policies for closing out
the current contract need to be followed? - How will trailing transactions from subscriptions
and vendor accounts be dealt with? - How will new account numbers be communicated to
travel vendors? - How will fleet cards be distributed to their
assigned vehicles? - What will be communicated to agency cardholders
so that they know when to activate/use GSA
SmartPay 2 cards?
18Post-Award Tasks Tips
- Work closely with the current GSA SmartPay bank
to - Obtain master file/cardholder data and hierarchy
data - Obtain historical data and/or other data as
required by agency - Develop plans to manage trailing transactions
- Establish card closeout procedures
- Develop plans soon after task order award with
the GSA SmartPay 2 bank to address - General expectations and communication processes
with GSA SmartPay 2 bank - Card distribution and activation procedures
- Testing/deploying EAS and other systems
- Bank training
- Contingency plans
19Contingency Planning
- Work with the appropriate bank and agency
personnel to - develop contingency plans around
- Cardholders that have not received GSA SmartPay
2 cards by the cut-over date (especially those on
TDY status) - Cardholders that use their old GSA SmartPay
card after the cut-over date - Recurring charges (subscriptions, vendor
accounts) - EAS or other systems that are not ready by
cut-over date, or any system malfunctions (e.g.,
data breaches) that occur around the cut-over date
20GSA Customer Service and Support
- GSAs Office of Charge Card Management (OCCM) is
dedicated to supporting agencies in their
transition activities through - ATSR Tracking
- Transition tools posted on the GSA SmartPay
website - GetSmart newsletter and GSA SmartPay Smart
Bulletins - GSA SmartPay 2 outreach campaign
- Monthly A/OPC meetings
- Discussions with Dave
- One-on-one meetings
- GSA SmartPay Points of Contact
21Q A
David J. Shea david.shea_at_gsa.gov (703) 605-2867
www.gsa.gov/gsasmartpay