IBM Center for The Business of Government


The IBM Center for The Business of Government is a business think tank located in Washington, D.C., founded in 1998 and renamed by IBM in 2002. It produces and disseminates "thought leadership that focuses on public management issues facing government executives at all levels". The center seeks to connect public management research to practice in order to improve government effectiveness and performance. It does this by funding independent third-party research, publishing a bi-annual magazine, producing a weekly radio interview program, convening discussions with practitioners and academics, and hosting forums and various blogs and other online content.

History

The IBM Center for The Business of Government was originally formed in 1998 as the PriceWaterhouseCoopers Endowment for The Business of Government. In 2002, IBM acquired the management consulting arm of PriceWaterhouseCoopers, and the Center was renamed. Since 2012, the center is led by Executive Director Dan Chenok, a former career federal executive for information policy and technology at the Office of Management and Budget.

Mission

According to its mission statement, the center seeks to connect public management research to practice in order to improve government effectiveness and performance.
The center is one of several dozen good government organizations located in Washington, D.C. that provide context and offer insights and practical, actionable recommendations that address federal government mission and management challenges.
The IBM center includes in its name “Business of Government” to emphasize its focus on the management and operation—not the policies—of government. It seeks to “bridge the gap” between research and practice by helping to stimulate and accelerate the production of actionable research.

Research and publications

"Unlike traditional scholarly outlets, the IBM Center makes explicitly clear that its reports are to be ‘written for government executives and managers’ and that in making the decision to fund research proposals, it looks for very practical findings and recommendations—not just theory and concepts—in order to assist executives and managers to more effectively respond to mission and management challenges."
Since its inception, the center has published more than 250 research reports and books in areas such as public sector management and performance, technology and innovation, security and privacy, acquisition and procurement, and citizen engagement. Reports are commissioned through a competitive funding process which occurs twice a year, in the spring and fall. Funded researchers have included academics from top schools of public management and business, including Harvard University, the London School of Economics, Syracuse University and Johns Hopkins University.

Recent research interests

For more than a decade the weekly radio program The Business of Government Hour has interviewed government executives who are changing the way government does business. As a platform for government executives to discuss their careers, agencies and agency accomplishments, as well as their vision of government in the 21st century, the program provides a forum for government leaders to highlight key initiatives, management challenges and successes.
The Business of Government Hour has interviewed more than 300 government executives from deputy secretaries to C-Suite executives from a range of federal agencies, as well as state and local government executives. The show has interviewed such government executives and thought leaders as Admiral Thad Allen, Dr. Francis Collins, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Governor Tim Kaine, Dr. Raymond Orbach, Dr. Robert Braun, Dr. Kathleen Merrigan, General Michael Hayden, General James Clapper, Robert F. Hale, David Walker, Gene Dodaro, Michael Astrue, Ambassador Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, Craig Fugate, Alec Ross, Tom Allen, General Tony Zinni and Professor Joseph Nye.