How and where people work is evolving and will likely continue to evolve. To build resilient state and local governments that can navigate this changing landscape, agencies need strategies that can help them:
Become an employer of choice
Remove barriers to smarter, more effective government
To compete with the private sector for top talent, the public sector needs tools that make secure and collaborative hybrid work simple and seamless. And to execute strategic goals more effectively, agencies need solutions that help teams produce more work with fewer resources.
Dive into the strategies, tools and services that can help Michigan agencies modernize processes to serve the public with confidence during a webinar hosted by Government Technology on March 30 at 1pm ET. During this webcast, our panel of experts will explore:
Strategies for freeing up resources and redeploying them to tackle modernization challenges
How to upgrade end-user technology to ensure employees stay secure and connected
Finding technology partners that understand the challenges governments face and can help innovate
Securing federal IT grant funding
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State and local governments are tasked with securely connecting one or multiple of five things to support mission-critical needs: People, locations, data, clouds and applications. With a renewed focus on government cybersecurity, agencies face increased pressure to keep those connections secure.
There’s growing attention to the physical security of government data centers and an increase in the adoption of cloud strategies that explore vendor-neutral data center options. And as governments look to future-proof their operations and keep pace with the ever-changing digital world, more agencies are leveraging networking and interconnection capabilities that can dynamically deliver services from multiple clouds or networks around the country. Having effective security across these clouds will be critical in enabling agency success.
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lorman
Terminations are the not-so-happy endings to construction contracts. A termination occurs when the owner decides to stop a project before it is complete. This is a right that lies solely with the owner unless otherwise specified in the contract - at best, a contractor can abandon a contract if the owner breaches it.
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Federal Publications Seminars
Join Clayton Utz of Australia and Steptoe & Johnson LLP of Washington DC for a 90 minute webcast geared to US companies wishing to perform work in Australia or for the Australian government, particularly in the aerospace, defense, engineering and government services areas.
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