Government As the Integrator: Why, Why Not, and How?
• Presentation
Publisher
Software Engineering Institute
Topic or Tag
Abstract
The Lead System Integrator (LSI) approach to building and integrating
large, complex systems has resulted in the failure of numerous
high-visibility programs, leading Congress to pass legislation limiting
its use and giving renewed interest to the idea of government acting as
its own systems integrator, or Government as the Integrator (GATI).
The use of GATI promises a number of benefits over the use of an LSI,
including government control of the design of the system and software
architectures, better visibility into program status and progress, and
the development of technical expertise within the government acquisition
workforce. However, the steady growth of interest in GATI has come with
its own set of issues, most notably the results of downsizing and loss
of technical expertise within the defense acquisition workforce over the
past 20 years—and GATI efforts have not always gone well.
This
presentation identifies many of the factors that determine whether GATI
is more likely to be successful in certain domains and circumstances.
It then covers the issues that can impede the successful use of GATI and
offers specific guidance that has been used in GATI contexts to help
with contractual vehicles and language, architectural approaches to
facilitate GATI, and managing the technical staffing issues that
challenge most GATI efforts. Different organizational implementation
approaches and their advantages and disadvantages are presented and
analyzed.
Part of a Collection
Software Solutions Conference (SSC) 2015 Presentations
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