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February 22, 2012 By AMK

Is government procurement ready for the cloud?

Mention cloud computing to true believers and you’ll likely hear all about speed and agility. They’ll tell you that agencies can simply dial IT services up or down as needed to quickly support new mission plans or workload changes. As a bonus, agencies pay only for what they use instead of bankrolling the often idle, over-provisioned computing capacity common in most data centers.

Unfortunately, there’s a rub when it comes to the cloud. Many IT procurement practices and contracting vehicles were designed to help managers provision hardware and software, not on-demand services. Can the current acquisition practices translate easily to the dynamic world of cloud computing?

Not really, said Barry Brown, executive director of the Enterprise Data Management and Engineering Division at Customs and Border Protection. He echoed a view shared by others in the federal government. With cloud computing, “the technology delivery model has changed,” he said. “What has not changed is the procurement model.”

The methodology gap between procuring IT systems and procuring IT services has been intensifying in the past year, ever since former Federal CIO Vivek Kundra outlined the government’s cloud-first policy. That initiative seeks to reduce costs and increase IT acquisition flexibility by pushing federal IT systems to cloud environments. Each agency has until May to identify three IT resources that it will move to the cloud.

But the move is straining traditional procurement departments. Rather than promoting speed and agility, in some cases cloud initiatives are spawning extended contract negotiations and legal challenges that are making it take even longer for agencies to get the resources they need.

Not all the early obstacles are specific to the cloud, so they won’t be permanent. But other features that are essential parts of the cloud model will continue to present challenges. Technology executives will need to accommodate them with new procurement and vendor management practices if the switch to on-demand, utility computing is to succeed.

Stumbling blocks

Why do some experts believe that current procurement practices are ill-suited to the cloud? They point to four key challenges.

Challenge 1: Variable service levels

With the cloud model, IT managers can shop for new, on-demand services via online catalogs. That approach acknowledges that demands can change from month to month, or even more frequently.

“From a contracting perspective, that’s pretty tough to deal with,” said Wolf Tombe, chief technology officer at Customs and Border Protection. He contrasts that variability with contracts that designate the technologies purchased and specify the delivery date.

Challenge 2: Nonstandard terms of service

Backers of the cloud model promote economies of scale, whereby costs decline because multiple customers share common resources, such as a suite of office productivity software. But consultants say many agencies try to negotiate cloud contracts that have custom services, which slows the procurement process.

“Everybody thinks what they need is special,” said Michael Sorenson, director of cloud services at systems integrator QinetiQ North America. Some compare the approach to asking Microsoft to customize its Office suite before buying the product.

Challenge 3: A shifting landscape

Cloud providers bring additional uncertainties to service terms. In the past, when a software vendor revised a commercial package, agencies could choose to install the new features or stick with the existing version of the program. But cloud providers regularly revise their service offerings, and the changes automatically flow to all customers, whether they ask for them or not.

“This makes procurement uncomfortable because you cannot be sure what you buy today will be there tomorrow,” said Peter Gallagher, a partner in the Civilian Federal Systems group at Unisys. “The pace of change is more rapid than with [off-the-shelf software].”

Challenge 4: Pricing uncertainties

Some agencies struggle to determine whether a firm fixed-price or cost-plus approach delivers the most benefits in a cloud-computing contract. “The best procurement procedure we’ve seen is a firm fixed price, and then if there are any modifications to the core service — say, additional storage for an e-mail user — the agency will pay for it by the drink,” Sorenson said. “But that is more complex than a standard utility scenario.”

All of that is leading some government executives to call for new procurement methods that address contracts oriented to service and performance. Officials are still far from having all the answers, but they understand the challenges they face. “It is a new way of doing business, and it requires new contracts,” Tombe said.

Counterpoint

Not everyone agrees that cloud services represent such a significant departure from past IT practices that they require new acquisition methods. Some say only minor changes are needed for future cloud acquisitions to be well served by existing contracting vehicles, such as the General Services Administration’s Alliant governmentwide acquisition contract and IT Schedule 70 blanket purchase agreements, which specify firm fixed prices for cloud services negotiated on behalf of the entire federal government.

“I don’t think cloud procurement is as different or problematic as people make it out to be,” said Larry Allen, president of Allen Federal Business Partners, which provides procurement policy support for government contractors. “I’m not an advocate for creating new cloud-based contract vehicles. It’s much better to use what’s out there.”

In fact, for all the contracting uncertainties, agencies are making progress toward the cloud-first deadline. GSA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are just two examples of agencies with large-scale cloud initiatives. Last year, GSA moved 17,000 staff members to Google Apps for Government, a cloud-based e-mail and collaboration system, and NOAA awarded an $11.5 million, three-year contract to migrate 25,000 employees to the Google messaging platform.

Wake-up calls

But cloud procurements don’t always go smoothly. In some cases, the problems are inherent to the cloud, such as determining how much customization of services, if any, is acceptable. In other cases, procurement officers are still sorting out when and how to apply existing rules to the cloud environment. Working through those issues can put the brakes on cloud procurements.

For example, in October 2011, the Government Accountability Office upheld a protest by Technosource Information Systems and TrueTandem that challenged a specification in a GSA request for quotations for cloud-based e-mail services. The RFQ required that data services be located in the United States or other designated countries.

GSA responded to the challenge in part by arguing that the government needs to control where information is stored because of concerns about foreign jurisdictions asserting access rights to data that resides in or moves through their country. Location would likely not have been an issue for agencies that opted to host services in-house, but in the cloud, data could conceivably be stored anywhere in the world.

Nevertheless, the challenge by the two contractors said the GSA requirement unduly restricted competition. GAO agreed, saying that GSA failed to establish a legitimate government need for the stipulation and calling on the agency to amend the RFQ to reflect its actual needs regarding data centers located outside the United States. After reviewing the decision, GSA issued an amended RFQ, nearly six months after issuing the original request.

Earlier, the Interior Department became embroiled in an even bigger contracting controversy after a lawsuit by Google put the brakes on a $59 million, five-year external private cloud intended to provide e-mail and collaboration capabilities for 88,000 of Interior’s employees. A lawsuit by Google charged that Interior’s request for proposals was “unduly restrictive of competition” because it specified a private cloud solution using Microsoft Business Productivity Online Standard Suite. Early last year, a federal judge sided with Google in a ruling that said Interior violated federal acquisition rules for open competition.

Part of the ruling stemmed from Interior’s choice of Microsoft technology, which the department had been using in a traditional implementation. The bigger question appeared to be Interior’s stipulation of a private cloud, which Google, as a supplier of technology for multi-tenant public cloud solutions, could not support.

Knowing that the private cloud stipulation might be challenged, Interior’s procurement and legal staffs tried to be proactive by documenting market research the agency had gathered about the potential risks of public clouds, said William Corrington, Interior’s CTO at the time and now cloud strategy lead at Stony Point Enterprises, a consulting firm that specializes in cloud strategies for federal agencies.

According to court documents, Interior said its research led it to a single-user, private cloud solution because of the sensitive nature of the data that would be stored in the cloud, the agency’s tolerance for risk, and “the benefits and liabilities of each cloud model.”

The case illustrates how questions about emerging cloud technologies add complexity to government procurements. As a result, some Interior officials felt they were being forced to accept undue risks because acquisition rules altered the agency’s original cloud choice, Corrington said.

The legal challenges also led to significant delays. Interior awarded the original contract in late 2010 but is still trying to move the project forward. In early January, the agency issued a new RFP that just now reopens the bidding. This time the department is calling for a commercial provider that can transition its current in-house e-mail systems to “an integrated, cost-effective, cloud solution.” It makes no mention of a private cloud or specific products.

Such legal challenges and protracted contract negotiations over sticking points such as security and service-level monitoring are prompting some observers to call for new methodologies to guide everyone in the procurement community.

“Our acquisition people are doing the best they can, but progress [toward cloud adoption] represents transformation and change for IT,” Tombe said. “That transformation and change require that some of our partners and stakeholders change along with us.

5 ways to prep for the cloud

Government acquisition personnel must often perform a balancing act to achieve the cost and efficiency benefits promised by cloud providers. On the one hand, they need to contract for solutions that share a common set of hardware and software resources to benefit from money-saving economies of scale. Unfortunately, one-size-fits-all solutions aren’t always appropriate, especially when missions and support requirements differ so widely across the government.

Agency officials and consultants say some core definitions and tools could speed contract negotiations and bridge the sometimes conflicting needs of agencies and cloud providers. Here is a list of techniques that could help speed government’s move to the cloud.

1. Security accreditation

Security fears rank among the top obstacles to cloud migrations. Fortunately, procurement officers could have an important tool to address those issues this year — the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP). It will create a security baseline that any agency can use to ensure that cloud contracts meet a standard level of protection. Combined with security guidelines from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, FedRAMP promises to simplify and speed the acquisition process.

2. Service-level agreements

The FedRAMP model for an accredited baseline of requirements could be useful in other areas, including the creation of service-level agreements. Agencies and cloud providers often struggle to balance conflicting requirements when it comes to SLAs, said William Corrington, former chief technology officer at the Interior Department and now the cloud strategy lead at Stony Point Enterprises.

For example, the Office of Management and Budget or the General Services Administration might specify that all cloud-based e-mail solutions achieve a minimum uptime rating of 99.95 percent, which would relieve agencies and vendors from hashing out those terms for each contract and thereby speed negotiations.

“Government lawyers would have some confidence that contract language is coming down from OMB or GSA, and cloud vendors would understand what the government is expecting for terms and conditions,” Corrington said.

3. Standardized service definitions

A similar framework for predetermined terms and conditions would benefit common cloud services, such as e-mail solutions or IT infrastructure services. “There are a lot of variables, but if you lock everyone down into a set of services that are utilitarian, then many challenges go away and agencies can compare pricing apples to apples,” said Michael Sorenson, director of cloud services at QinetiQ North America.

The framework would differ from traditional governmentwide acquisition contracts and blanket purchase agreements (BPAs) by establishing standard service definitions all vendors in a particular cloud category would use. Cloud providers might be willing to embrace standardized definitions as a way to discourage agencies from negotiating special terms for commodity solutions.

“Even when the new BPA for [GSA’s proposed e-mail-as-a-service agreement] comes out, I still think agencies will look at terms of service and want to negotiate them,” said Peter Gallagher, a partner in the Civilian Federal Systems group at Unisys. “If you are a [software-as-a-service] provider, it is difficult to negotiate different terms of service in a multi-tenant environment.”

To accommodate varying needs, the government could create standardized terms for tiers of service, such as gold, silver and bronze levels with different performance characteristics, Gallagher added.

4. Clear rules for data management

Today, agencies must negotiate to insert clauses into cloud contracts that specify how their information is maintained and protected by cloud providers. For example, officials at Customs and Border Protection are concerned about having exit strategy options for their data if they decide to switch cloud providers.

“I want that language in the contract going in,” said Wolf Tombe, the agency’s chief technology officer. “I don’t want that to be an afterthought.”

Another issue is the physical location of the storage systems that house government data. Some security rules call for sensitive data to remain in the United States or in select overseas countries. But that can be hard to nail down, as GSA learned when two contractors successfully challenged its original e-mail-as-a-service request for quotations, which restricted data services to certain specified locations.

5. New skill sets for procurement employees

Some acquisition officers might need training to help them negotiate and manage cloud contracts. “Agencies don’t necessarily need to hire legions of new people, but they should make sure their acquisition workforce understands the difference in service acquisitions and why they’re different from products,” said Larry Allen, president of Allen Federal Business Partners.

Key skills for a cloud-rich environment include project and vendor management. The IT Acquisition Advisory Council, among others, is working with the government to promote new acquisition methodologies that are better suited to the cloud, Tombe said.

About the Author: Alan Joch is a freelance writer based in New Hampshire.  This article was published by Federal Computer Week on Feb. 15, 2012 at http://fcw.com/Articles/2012/02/15/FEAT-cloud-procurement-DO-NOT-PUBLISH.aspx?Page=3&p=1.

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: acquisition strategy, acquisition workforce, cloud, cybersecurity, GAO, GSA, Interior Dept., IT, pricing, service contracts

January 9, 2012 By AMK

GSA steps up cultivation of elusive agency ‘customers’

The current frugality push across government presents a special opportunity for one agency in particular. The General Services Administration, which outfits other federal agencies with everything from purchase cards to cloud computing know-how, sees today’s belt-tightening as a new “sweet spot,” in the words of Federal Acquisition Service Commissioner Steven Kempf.

Because all agencies work with GSA, it can effect changes governmentwide, an ability that “puts us in a unique position to assist others — particularly in these times — to get better prices and services, and to leverage the resources they do have,” he said. “If the agencies ever needed a best friend, now is the time.”

In an interview with Government Executive, Kempf spoke enthusiastically of President Obama’s November 2011 executive order directing agencies to curb spending on travel, personal technology devices, printing and vehicle fleets.

“One of the big changes it means here at FAS is that customers and industry are seeing the kind of things we actually offer for agencies to help them save money and do their jobs better,” he said. “We’re moving into more of a consultant role in helping them meet their business goals and get more for the mission.”

Nearly all agencies count on GSA for such basics as purchase cards and landlord services, and many rely on its schedules, or catalogs of some 11 million commercial products and services available from thousands of companies.

But not all are as quick to embrace, say, GSA’s governmentwide acquisition contracts for IT services. While fully 90 federal entities use GSA’s domestic shipping and delivery services and 60 use its office supplies plan, only 24 use its print management tool, 20 use its general wireless devices plan and six use its special Wireless Telecom Expense Management Services. (See GSA’s previously unpublished list of individual participating agencies here.)

Why is there reluctance? “Over the last 10 years, agencies received more sources and had more in-house capability to do things, so they got used to it,” said Kempf, a former contract attorney with a business background. He acknowledged that agency pride also may explain some hesitation to call in GSA.

An April 2010 Government Accountability Office report examined the military’s reasons for not using governmentwide acquistion contracts from GSA. It conveyed the sense that GSA prices were too high, that outsiders could not ensure that products were in compliance with Defense Department standards, and that such cooperation created a dependence on external agencies.

More recently, a December GAO study confirmed much of GSA’s own research showing that interagency purchasing of office supplies saves the government money, but the report expressed some reservations about the GSA study’s methodology.

Hence, some salesmanship is required to remind agencies, for example, that GSA contracts, which are available to state and local as well as federal agencies, assure compliance with all government regulations, such as those affecting the environment and economic fairness.

One of the tools GSA is using to persuade more managers that its fees and prices are a good deal is the Federal Strategic Sourcing Initiative. Defined as “optimizing the government’s supply base while reducing total cost of ownership and improving mission delivery,” strategic sourcing was introduced in 2005 by the White House Office of Federal Procurement Policy as a partnership between GSA and the Treasury Department.

“We went out and took a handful of commodities and put in place relatively large ‘precompeted’ contracts with great prices so the heavy work is done for them,” Kempf said. “They don’t have to spend a lot of resources to put it in place themselves,” freeing up managers whose inboxes are always full to “focus on things more specific to their mission. We’re seeing savings as much as 10 percent.”

Strategic sourcing currently deals with supplies, wireless plans, printers and telecommuting, with two more functions set to roll out in the next two months. The most frequent users of the initiative are the Defense, Homeland Security, Treasury and Veterans Affairs departments, as well as GSA itself.

One of its notable success stories is the Commerce Department’s use of what’s known as the PrintWise campaign, Kempf said. “They worked with us early,” when the department was spending $25 million annually on printing, generating 25 percent of its pages in color, 90 percent single-sided, and contracting with 350 or 400 vendors. GSA quickly helped Commerce shave off $3.5 million in costs through frugal paper purchasing, altering employee habits and abandoning desktop printers. The number of contractors, Kempf says, could be trimmed to two or three.

Dan Gordon, retiring this month as administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, told Government Executive that his office has “been pleased to see GSA focused on three key areas: listening to the user agencies to be sure that GSA is meeting their needs; negotiating good prices for the government; and increasing opportunities for small businesses. You see the results in the office supplies strategic sourcing effort: agencies looked at GSA’s offerings, and concluded that GSA was offering what they needed at low prices. The result is that agencies are buying their office supplies through the GSA vehicles — and more than 70 percent of the dollars are going to American small businesses.”

GSA’s reputation, Kempf said, “is on the rise and dynamic.” The most recent customer loyalty survey, done by a private contractor, gave the agency an 8.5 of a possible 10. “But a better number is our sales,” he said, “which rose from $54 billion to $55 billion in the past year. There’s no better indicator of customer loyalty than spending more money on using us. And when we go out and talk to agencies, they’re glad to see us.”

Where the old GSA provided assistance or watched as agencies relied on their own resources, the new GSA is now helping with spending analysis and acquisition strategies, helping customers use the tools that “make them better users of GSA solutions,” Kempf said.

True, some customers have said the agency needs to simplify and become easier to work with. So GSA employees now are commonly out in other agencies training contract officers in using GSA schedules, exploiting data and embracing such Digital Age tools as e-Buy, GSA Advantage, webinars and the www.Interact.GSA.gov site.

How does the economic downturn affect price negotiations with more eager private sector suppliers? “It puts us in an interesting place,” Kempf said. “To some extent, more competition is good for the government because it can increase its effectiveness by leveraging procurement, by understanding more of what [it’s] buying in order to maximize the volume discounts, the return on the procurement, and really use the effectiveness of good procurement to drive more value into each procurement and then deliver more for the mission and get more for every taxpayer dollar being spent.”

Another big change at GSA acquisition, he said, is that the agency is less “coy” about getting its success stories out. “People talk about us as the best kept secret in government, and we want to erase that and get our story out. We want to share results of specific projects,” Kempf said. “Then other agencies will see the opportunities and mimic them.”

— by Charles S. Clark – Government Executive – published December 29, 2011 at http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=49672&oref=todaysnews 

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: acquisition strategy, budget cuts, cloud, competition, GAO, GSA, GSA Schedules, GWAC, OFPP, Pcard, strategic sourcing

October 21, 2011 By AMK

GAO strikes down part of cloud e-mail RFQ

The Government Accountability Office on Monday struck down part of a blanket bid solicitation for cloud computing services that protesters claimed would unfairly restrict them from storing government data including email and records management systems in cloud facilities abroad.

A May 9 General Services Administration request for quotation for government cloud services stated bidding agencies could store government information abroad but only in countries designated under the 1979 Trade Agreements Act.

That list includes war-riddled nations and failed or failing states such as Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan, the protesters pointed out, but restricts some major tech havens, such as India, Brazil and South Africa.

GSA had wanted to prohibit storing any government data outside the U.S. but was told by the United States Trade Representative that position would violate numerous trade agreements. The two agencies settled on the TAA list as a compromise that saved GSA from developing a country-by-country analysis of where data could be stored and where it couldn’t be, according to Monday’s decision. The result, though, was an arbitrary list of approved nations that couldn’t stand up to reasonable scrutiny, GAO said.

The agency recommended that GSA amend its RFQ to include a more reasonable rule and re-open the bidding.

The government has embarked on a massive program to move roughly one-quarter of its $80 billion information technology budget to Internet-based cloud storage, a move officials say will save the government $5 billion annually.

— by Joseph Marks – NextGov.com – 10/17/11 at http://techinsider.nextgov.com/2011/10/gao_strikes_down_part_of_cloud_email_rfq.php?zone=NGtoday.

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: cloud, GAO, Trade Agreements Act

March 3, 2011 By AMK

GSA improving acquisition slowly, steadily

The Federal Acquisition Service is pursuing initiatives in digitization, cloud computing and strategic sourcing aimed at reducing costs and improving productivity.

“I think the challenges facing the federal government have certainly increased,” said Steve Kempf, commissioner of the General Services Administration’s FAS, during an interview with the Coalition for Government Procurement‘s Off-the-Shelf program on Federal News Radio.

“The challenges in respect to the complexity of the market place and the changes in the market place. For internally, for us, some of the workforce issues that we are still facing in terms of retaining great people to run our programs and finally some of our systems,” Kempf said.

Kempf, who has been on the job for a year, has been working on these issues. In three months, FAS added 200 people to their workforce.

“We have a lot new people, we’ve got some new regional commissioners but I will say this, they’re great people who are really starting to work together well and I am really looking forward to some really great results from this team,” Kempf said.

With his new leadership team in place, Kempf said he has been focusing on modernizing the service while continuing to deliver to their customers.

Kempf said communication is key. First, he said he focused on stakeholders and employees to “make sure they knew what we were doing, they were on board and they knew what was going to be happening.”

Second, Kempf said he reached out to customers and industry to make sure they’re on the same page. Among the priorities Kempf discussed were:

Strategic Sourcing Initiatives
With a focus on office supplies and domestic delivery options, Kempf said the government is leveraging their purchasing to secure the lowest prices.

Other projects include printers, copiers and multi-function devices in a program called print management. As well as wireless plans and the telecommunications expense management service. All of which are part of the GSA’s schedules program.

Kempf said that “even the losers on these contracts have gone back in and dropped their prices so people who are not even using the strategic sourcing are actually getting some benefit from this.”

Cloud computing
FAS has also taken initiatives in infrastructure-as-a-service, software-as-a-service and are working on an e-mail contract through the schedules program.

“It’s really looking at how could we provide some value add to what is already existing on the schedules program already,” he said. “So with infrastructure-as-a-service, can we align the service offerings from the commercial vendors in a way that the government wants to buy it in order to meet its cloud computing objectives.”

Digitization and customers
FAS’s “enterprise acquisition solution” is working for full scale electronic contracting in almost all of their programs. As well as the “supply chain modernization,” that will update the broad infrastructure of supply operations.

“I really think that we are seeing some things like customers wanting more data, more transparency and again that feeds into improving our systems so we will be able to supply them with better information,” Kempf said.

In updating their systems, along with dynamic pricing, Kempf said customers are able to benefit more from the services.

The schedules program Kempf said FAS will continue improving the schedules program. He said customers have a well known complaint that the schedules program is difficult to use.

“We are beginning to work very carefully on the training around the schedules program…working with customers on how to use the schedules properly and how to use it for advanced purchasing,” Kempf said.

Kempf said GSA will hold training May 10-12 in San Diego at the GSA Expo.

— by John Buckner, Federal News Radio, Feb. 22, 2011

Read more at: http://www.federalnewsradio.com/index.php?nid=46&sid=2281041

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: acquisition workforce, cloud, FAS, GSA, strategic sourcing

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