Amid budget uncertainty, agency chief financial officers are using data analytics to determine where the agencies can most effectively streamline programs.
The Food and Drug Administration will begin a new hiring pilot this year in attempt to drastically cut down the time it takes to hire for mission critical positions.
Agencies largely did well on the 2017 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey. Here are some methods and lessons they've learned over the past several years to make noticeable improvements in employee engagement.
GSA's Jose Arrieta discusses some of the technology and programmatic considerations for his blockchain application.
Kirit Amin joins the ranks of CIOs leaving government after three years at the International Trade Commission.
Several agencies sit low on the 2017 Best Places to Work in the Federal Government rankings, but they improved employee engagement significantly over the previous year.
The 2017 Best Places to Work in the Federal Government Rankings show a few familiar faces at the top and bottom of the list, but a closer look at the results shows several agencies with momentum moving in their favor. Here are nine insights from this year's rankings.
The Food and Drug Administration, like many federal agencies, is working toward more efficient data optimization and a secure cloud strategy.
The Food Safety Modernization Act requires Food and Drug Administration inspectors to check out certain high-risk food factories at regular intervals.
The CIO Council’s first-ever governmentwide hiring fair had 30-plus agencies participate to fill cyber and IT positions.
Debbie Bucci, IT architect at HHS, joined Federal Drive to discuss some earlier concepts in the research and development of Blockchain technology for healthcare
The political popularity of a given administration seems to have low relation to FEVS scores.
With the departure of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, the Trump administration is starting to get that swiss cheese look again.
The changes are part of new guidelines the Health and Human Services Department issued after more than two years of public comment.
Five months after the DATA Act rollout, agencies are able to look back on lessons learned and what the future holds for standardized federal spending reports.