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Cloud as innovation driver

by Joe Mariani, Doug Bourgeois, Jon Taillon, Kerry Appleton-Norman
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6 minute read 24 June 2019

Cloud as innovation driver The foundation for employing emerging technologies in government

6 minute read 25 June 2019
  • Joe Mariani United States
  • Doug Bourgeois United States
  • Jon Taillon United States
  • Kerry Appleton-Norman United States
  • Kerry Appleton-Norman United States
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  • Organizational changes for cloud

​Cloud computing was traditionally valued for the cost savings it enabled. Now government is increasingly looking at the greater value cloud can deliver—especially how it can enable future innovation.

For much of the past decade, cloud computing was seen as a less expensive way to store data and run applications. It has been an integral part of most digital transformations in both the private and public sectors. In 2010, then US federal CIO Vivek Kundra unveiled the “Cloud First” policy for federal agencies. The use of cloud in government has been increasing ever since, with federal cloud spending increasing 500 percent in the past eight years.1

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Today, the focus on cloud is becoming even more pressing across the globe. In the United States, the National Association of State CIOs named cloud the No. 1 technology issue facing state CIOs, while the federal government announced a new “Cloud Smart” policy. Both Bahrain and the United Kingdom have adopted cloud-first policies to spur innovation, enhance agility, and improve services for citizens. 2

Why is such a mature platform receiving so much attention? Increasingly, the value proposition of cloud technologies is shifting from just cost savings to greater value. Cloud is the foundational setting for emerging technologies that governments are increasingly using such as AI, robotic process automation, the Internet of Things, and big data analytics.3 For example, 83 percent of enterprise AI is expected to be in the cloud by 2020.4 So while shifting to cloud may or may not reduce costs, investment in cloud can be justified by the greater value that it can deliver. Cloud can help break down data silos, drive AI adoption, and connect various stakeholders. In short, cloud can enable future innovations.

Breaking down data silos. Government often has data that goes underutilized due to siloed data sets. Breaking down these data silos can create new opportunities for innovation in many government domains: reducing congestion,5 anticipating crime,6 analyzing data on the fly for space experiments,7 and reducing fraud, waste, and abuse. 8 For example, transportation agencies in the state of Nevada deployed a cloud-based AI platform to gather data from connected cars, road cameras, road conditions, weather patterns, and apps such as Waze to predict high-risk corridors where accidents are likely to happen.9 Results of this pilot program include a 17 percent reduction in crashes along the highway,10 and, because the agencies were able to clear accident sites faster, a 23 percent reduction in secondary collisions.11

Government adoption of cloud strategies and policies

But cloud offers more than just a link to different sources of data. One of the key benefits of cloud is the flexibility it offers in setting up complex and innovative environments such as deep learning. That is why the Flemish Public Employment Service, VDAB, deployed a deep learning model to match candidates with job openings. The deep learning system can be considered an intelligent recommender system: It learns from the preferences of job seekers and employers. Embedding deep learning enables the department to take a very broad set of data into account and extend the data set. One of the advantages is that by retraining the model, it automatically takes into account the evolution in the job market. A potential drawback is of course bias in the data, a challenge the agency takes very seriously.12

Offering custom solutions to drive AI adoption. One area of cloud technology that is driving significant growth is Software-as-a-Service (SaaS).13 No longer does a government agency have to create its own solutions, when viable solutions are already on the cloud. The use of SaaS applications, where cognitive technologies are built into the software, has the potential to increase the uptake of AI and other emerging technologies in government.14

The US Department of Health and Human Services uses a cloud-based, AI-powered SaaS tool to help analyze grant applications. The tool can analyze data to identify patterns that can help predict the likely outcome of a grant, e.g., identifying applications with a high probability of a negative financial audit finding.15 The tool can also summarize hundreds of pages of information into a paragraph that agency analysts can quickly review and then decide whether or not to award a grant.16

Connecting stakeholders across the ecosystem. When it comes to innovation, connecting people is as important as connecting data. The heart of cloud’s ability to catalyze innovation is its ability to connect a wider ecosystem of partners that includes developers, designers, researchers, and other government agencies. In the past, these stakeholders may have created solutions that benefited just themselves. Now, housed in the cloud, those innovations can be available to all, and participants enjoy new opportunities for collaboration.

Take the example of Caltex Australia. As a fuel company, Caltex has thousands of employees spread out across the country in remote locations. An inability to share key information quickly with colleagues in different cities or divisions was slowing down work. The move to cloud-based productivity tools quickly allowed the sharing of key information, increasing productivity and reducing the need for in-person travel, which, in turn, reduced travel costs by one-third.17

Cloud can also connect players outside of a single organization. Organizations ranging from the FBI to the State of Delaware have found that cloud can connect them to a rich environment of external developers. This allows users to find existing solutions to their problems already developed on the cloud rather than having to build their own tools from scratch.18

Organizational changes for cloud

Unlocking cloud’s full potential can require significant organizational changes. For example, instead of directly developing and managing software, the IT organization becomes more of a trusted broker between business units and cloud solutions. This organizational transition can be a tremendous advantage because it ensures the entire organization adopts leading practices such as Agile and DevOps, but it can also pose significant challenges, often requiring an entire overhaul of an organization’s operating model.

The Australian federal government aims to use the cloud as a foundational platform to leverage emerging technologies such as AI, blockchain, and quantum computing. As part of the initiative, all Australian federal agencies will get access to cloud systems, applications, and software, helping them to automate processes and accelerate digital transformation.19

Government policies and investment dollars can help encourage cloud adoption. But ultimately, using the cloud for innovation requires a mindset shift in government: from solely measuring cost savings from cloud to developing innovative capabilities.

Data signals

  • US$49.2 billion is the estimated value of the global government cloud market by 2023.20
  • Sixty-two percent of US federal government respondents in a Deloitte survey reported that their organization had moved at least some applications to the cloud.21
  • More than 50 percent of all software will be developed in or for the cloud by 2020.22
  • The UK government is spending more than £1 billion each year to transition to cloud.23

Moving forward

  • Introduce cloud-focused policies that go beyond location and vendor details to define and measure how all of the organization’s policies will help it better accomplish its mission.
  • Break data silos by making data more organized, standardized, and accessible across the agency.
  • Focus on innovation capabilities enabled by cloud, and work with your cloud vendor to gain access to the right types of tools and capabilities.
  • Understand and define the spectrum of identity access management and ask questions such as “who owns what data?” and “who can access it?” for each application.
  • Understand the organizational changes the shift to cloud might demand and make a deliberate change management plan.

Potential benefits

  • Enable rapid testing of innovative ideas;
  • Evolve a data-driven culture of collaborative decision-making; and
  • Provide a platform to leverage emerging technologies.

Risk factors

  • Obtaining funding for cloud migration;
  • Growing cybersecurity concerns;
  • Lack of strategy, governance structures, and standardized cloud procurement processes; and
  • Conflicting state, federal, and international regulations on privacy, data use, security, and other issues.

Read more about how can cloud technology can enable innovation in government in Government cloud: A mission accelerator for future innovation.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Pankaj Kishnani from the Deloitte Center for Government Insights for driving the research and development of this trend.

The authors would also like to thank Diwya Shukla Kumar for his research contributions.

Cover image by: Traci Daberko

Endnotes
    1. Chris Cornillie, “Three takeaways from Trump’s ‘cloud smart’ strategy,” Federal News Network, October 19, 2018. View in article

    2. Bev Bellile, “How Bahrain implements ‘cloud-first’ culture, starting with AWS training,” Silicon Angle, October 3, 2018; National Enterprise Architecture, “Cloud-first policy,” April 24, 2017; Derek du Preez, “Government cloud strategy goes native and public first,” Diginomica, February 7, 2017. View in article

    3. Helena Lisachuk, “Super friends: IoT, AI and cloud create a powerful team,” IoT Agenda, March 25, 2019. View in article

    4. Jeff Loucks, Artificial intelligence: From expert-only to everywhere: TMT predictions 2019, Deloitte Insights, December 11, 2018. View in article

    5. Pamela Victor, “Cloud computing and artificial intelligence could ease Southeast Asia’s traffic woes,” Asean Post, March 3, 2018. View in article

    6. Sara Friedman, “Sheriff's office spins up cloud-based facial recognition,” GCN, June 20, 2017. View in article

    7. Frank Konkel, “In just a few years, cloud computing could help aid the search for extraterrestrial life,” Nextgov, November 12, 2014. View in article

    8. Andy Pitman, “Using Azure to help governments fight fraud and waste—Part 2,” Microsoft Industry Blogs, January 24, 2018. View in article

    9. Theo Douglas, “Las Vegas AI pilot improves highway patrol response times,” Government Technology, January 10, 2018. View in article

    10. Waycare, “Waycare and Nevada transportation agencies partner to dynamically identify roads at high risk for accidents, resulting in 17% reduction in crashes along I-15 in Las Vegas,” November 19, 2018. View in article

    11. Douglas, “Las Vegas AI Pilot improves highway patrol response times.” View in article

    12. Amazon, “AWS partner story: VDAB & Radix.ai,” accessed April 30, 2019; also see Maysam Ali and Leonardo Quattrucci, “Machine learning: What’s in it for government?,” AWS Machine Learning Blog, February 19, 2019. View in article

    13. Jonathan Ende, “3 reasons why SaaS is the future of government technology,” GovLoop, July 20, 2018. View in article

    14. Rachel Keyser, “Benefits of SaaS for government—Why cloud-based software is the future,” Viewpoint, August 24, 2018. View in article

    15. GCN, “Turning to machine learning for better ROI,” November 1, 2018. View in article

    16. Ibid. View in article

    17. Microsoft, “Fuel Company uses online tools to energize employee communications, drive mobility online tools,” May 10, 2015. View in article

    18. Doug Bourgeois et al., Government cloud: A mission accelerator for future innovation, Deloitte Insights, March 28, 2019. View in article

    19. Digital Transformation Agency, “Digital transformation strategy,” Australian Government, accessed May 24, 2019. View in article

    20. P&S Market Research, “Government cloud market to reach $49.2 billion by 2023,” March 26, 2018. View in article

    21. Daniel Thomas, Channeling the cloud: A candid survey of federal leaders on the state of cloud transformation in 2017,” Government Business Council and Deloitte, December 2017. View in article

    22. Tom Krazit, “Plenty of growth in store for cloud computing, according to Gartner, will hit $186B in 2018,” GeekWire, April 12, 2018. View in article

    23. Anthony Spadafora, “UK government spending £1bn on cloud transition,” Techradar, March 19, 2019. View in article

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Topics in this article

Public Sector , Government , Risk management

Deloitte Consulting

The public sector is transforming itself with cloud, allowing government and public sector organizations to deliver:

    •  Faster services for users and constituents 
    •  Improved experiences for citizens 
    •  Constant innovation to keep pace with technology 
    •  Better mission outcomes  

Deloitte's consulting practice is recognized as an industry leader in the consulting space, ranked No. 1 globally by IDC, Gartner, and ALM Intelligence while also being named a leader in US systems integrators serving the government by IDC and Global Cloud Consulting by ALM Intelligence. Deloitte Consulting offers industry-leading experience and capabilities in technology and cloud consulting and a proven track record with government and public sector organizations.

Learn more
Get in touch
Contact
  • ​Doug Bourgeois
  • Services Cloud leader, Managing director
  • Deloitte Consulting LLP
  • dbourgeois@deloitte.com
  • +1 571 247 6361

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Joe Mariani

Joe Mariani

Senior research manager, Center for Government Insights | Deloitte Consulting LLP

Joe Mariani is a senior research manager with Deloitte’s Center for Government Insights. His research focuses on innovation and technology adoption for both national security organizations and commercial businesses. His previous work includes experience as a consultant to the defense and intelligence industries, high school science teacher, and Marine Corps intelligence officer.

  • jmariani@deloitte.com
  • +1 312 486 2150
Doug Bourgeois

Doug Bourgeois

Doug Bourgeois is a managing director in the Federal Technology Strategy & Architecture practice, focusing on cloud computing and shared services. Bourgeois has a long history in both areas. He previously led multiple cloud and secure mobility projects at VMware, where he served as vice president of end user computing and previously as chief cloud executive for public sector. Prior to that role, Bourgeois served as the executive director of the US Department of Interior’s National Business Center, a Federal Shared Services provider.

  • dbourgeois@deloitte.com
  • +1 571 247 6361
Jon Taillon

Jon Taillon

Jon Taillon is a principal with Deloitte Consulting and serves as the technology lead for the National Security practice. Taillon specializes in providing strategic services to CIOs of federal government agencies within the security and intelligence communities. His focus areas include building applications and analytics, the business of IT, the adoption of emerging technologies, the management of complex IT organizations, and the implementation of IT management best practices.

  • jtaillon@deloitte.com
Kerry Appleton-Norman

Kerry Appleton-Norman

Kerry Appleton-Norman is a partner in Deloitte’s Technology Consulting business, where she leads Deloitte Cloud in the public sector. Appleton-Norman works with public sector clients to define cloud strategy and deliver great agility and costs competitiveness through cloud transformation. She has built her reputation by leading and shaping complex technology enabled transformation across the public sector.

  • kappletonnorman@deloitte.co.uk

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