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Fixing a Broken Government in the Information Age

Originally published May 13, 2009

Change is here and now with the historic election results. As President Obama and his team have reached the 100-day marker, it is clear we have challenges in making the transformation of governmentand its programs. One important area that Obama and team must address is the government’s information processes. These processes create information required by federal agencies to operate theirprograms and the processes that provide information to business, society and other government entities. Poor quality information processes create defective information that causes downstreamprocesses to fail, with high costs of recovering from the process failure and the ensuing “information scrap and rework.”

In all the discussions about the failure of the financial sector, I have not heard or read a discussion of one of the major root causes – lack of quality information that would have revealedwhere the financial sector’s real problems were, so they could have addressed them before the meltdown occurred. To be sure, executive “greed” was a major cause in the failure ofthe industry – that must be addressed as well. As a consultant, I have been brought into a number of financial institutions to help solve their information quality issues. Some of theseinstitutions had no idea how to value the loans in their bundled investment packages.

While consulting to one of the federal agencies, we discovered it had overpaid $1.7 billion to unqualified recipients and had underpaid qualified recipients by an additional $600 million – atotal of $2.3 billion misspent. That is equivalent of giving more than $1,000 to each of the estimated 2 million people in Washington for Obama’s inauguration. Beyond this, agencies havesquandered more than $1 billion on information systems that failed to meet requirements or got scrapped. Based on 20 years of working with business and government clients, I can say that mostorganizations squander from 20% to more than 30% of their operating revenue or budget in “information scrap and rework” – a pure waste of our taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars.Some federal agencies waste up to 40% of their operating budget in information scrap and rework. As we try to make government more effective and efficient, the best costs to cut are the costsassociated with the waste caused by broken program and information processes. We can solve this by error-proofing our program and information processes.

To be sure, many huge problems face us. We can solve them, but we must have accurate, complete and timely information to identify root causes and to improve business and information processes to putthe government back to work effectively.

After World War II, Japan, taught by America’s own quality gurus, W. Edwards Deming and Joseph M. Juran, created the first quality revolution. Japan had made quality a national agenda item ofits government, led by Kaoru Ishikawa, the great Japanese quality guru. Even as we speak, Korea and other Asian countries appear to be emerging as the next quality revolutionary force.

Will America Be Left Behind?

It is time for America to get on the new Total Information Quality ManagementRevolution to rid government and industry of the waste caused by broken information processes and the costs ofrecovery from the process failure and information scrap and rework. The same principles that led to the total quality management revolution in manufacturing are the same principles required to bringin the Total Information Quality Management (TIQM) revolution in the information age.

Here’s how we can do it:
  1. Appoint a TIQM czar to lead the federal government in bringing the principles of Total Information Quality Management to all government entities.

  2. Make TIQM an agenda item for every federal department and agency, and promote it to be on every business leadership agenda as well.

  3. Provide broad and deep training in Total Information Quality Management.

  4. Empower our civil servants to continually improve their information processes.

  5. Hold departments and agencies accountable for the quality of all information required to operate the programs effectively – not just the influential information provided to the public as required in the OMB Section 515 “Information Quality Act.”
If Japan could transform the industrial age by applying total quality management principles and processes to manufacturing quality, America can – and must – transform government andindustry in the information age by applying Total Information Quality Management to their information processes. Without sustainable information quality, America risks falling further behind. Everybillion dollars of waste eliminated shows up as half a billion dollars in surplus that can be spent to further improve government.


SOURCE: Fixing a Broken Government in the Information Age

  • Larry EnglishLarry English

    Larry, President and Principal of INFORMATION IMPACT International Inc., is one of the most highly respected authorities in the world on how to apply information quality management principles to Total Information Quality Management. He has provided consulting and education in more than 40 countries on six continents. 

    Larry was featured as one of the “21 Voices for the 21st Century” in the American Society for Quality’s Journal Quality Progress in its January 2000 issue. Heartbeat of America, hosted by William Shatner, awarded him the “Keeping America Strong” award in December 2008 honoring his work in helping organizations eliminate the high costs of business process failure that enable them to eliminate the high costs of business process failure caused by poor quality information. Larry was honored by the MIT Information Quality Program for a Decade of Outstanding Contributions to the field of Information Quality Management in July 2009. You may contact him by email at Larry.English@infoimpact.com.


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Comments

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Posted May 26, 2009 by Milan KUCERA milan.kucera@d2i.cz

I am not a resident of the "Larry's country". It is the first time I have heard from him a connection of "information" and "quality" and "revolution". It is clear that this economic crisis provides us with a clear feedback to our lack of interest at quality information we use from both business and personal perspectives.

Yes, it is time to "TIQM Revolution" changing our interest at quality information (improving our care for it) and improving business processes and prevent those from poor quality. It is a revolution at use of "desing in" principle.

The word "Global" is very important too. I am sure the IQ crisis and its elimination is not only the interest of the US governmant but it is the same to my country (The Czech Republic) and Europe.

The waste costs (their amount) increase the costs of products, services, and so on becuase scrap and rework is very often a "norm of doing business" and it is not for what customers are willing to pay.

Aren't we waking up too late?

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