Upcoming Events

Executive conference

Cloud Connect March 16-18

Comprehensive thought leadership for executives, IT professionals and developers. Topics include: the ROI, cost and economics of on-demand computing; Migration strategies to move from on-premise to cloud-based IT; Vertical cloud specialization, tailoring features and architectures to specific applications, industries, and customer ecosystems

More Events »

Subscribe to Newsletter

  • Keep up with all of the latest news and analysis on the fast-moving IT industry with Network Computing newsletters.
Sign Up
The Business of IT
F E A T U R E  
Sea Change

  September 18, 2003
  By David Joachim


TOC Issue TOC
Printer Print full article
Printer Print this page
Printer Download as PDF
E-Mail E-Mail this URL
Discuss Discuss this article
flame author Flame the author
 
  In this article
arrow
Introduction
arrow
Career Builder
arrow
Private Lessons
arrow
Bigger Plans
arrow
On Location, Series 4
arrow
Vital Stats
arrow
Army-Navy Game
arrow
Lt. Eric Morris
arrow
Capt. Fred S. Bertsch III (ret)
arrow
Chris Piereman

On Location: U.S. Naval Base, Norfolk Va.Under constant threat from an invisible enemy, the U.S. forces in the Middle East are relearning the rules of engagement almost daily. They face what has been described as the new enemy: stealthy, unpredictable and asynchronous, but every bit as deadly as the adversaries who preceded them.

Back home, four active and retired U.S. Navy personnel are engaged in an administrative battle to change the way sailors learn to handle these new threats, with training and collaborative learning delivered by computer on land and at sea. In just nine months and on a shoestring budget, these men have built one of the biggest knowledge management (KM) portals around.

Navy Knowledge Online (NKO), as the portal is called, is part of a broader effort, named Sea Warrior, to re-evaluate every job function in the Navy and quickly match sailors' credentials with the skills needed to fight a decentralized and mobile enemy, according to Rear Admiral Kevin Moran, who is in charge of enlisted naval training.

What's striking is not so much the size of the NKO portal--165,000 users and adding 1,000 more per day--but how hands-off the ever-authoritarian naval leadership has been in managing the collaboration network. Enlisted personnel are free to express their opinions and can even voice dissent.


Lt. Eric Morris, who along with retired Capt. Fred Bertsch sketched out the concept of NKO in February 2002 and now manages the portal's operations, likes to say that NKO "tilts the Navy's vertical structure just a little bit. It lets our leadership see what the sailors think."

It's precisely that concept that had forced Morris and Bertsch into the shadows of the Norfolk, Va., naval base. Their idea was and may still be a threat to some Navy brass. In this culture, the more budget dollars an admiral controls and the more data a unit CIO manages, the more powerful they are. Flatter and more open organizations don't work in their favor, some observers point out. Besides, in the private sector, knowledge management has been known to expose business units that are overmanaged. What if it revealed that the Navy could get by with fewer admirals and commanders?

Put Up or Shut Up

When Morris and Bertsch presented a white paper describing NKO less than a month after their initial brainstorming session, they were met with skepticism and even defiance. They were told that a project like that would require a decade of planning and billions of dollars.

No one would be cutting them a big check to launch a KM portal. Instead, they would have to find any funds they could and produce a prototype. "We decided we have to show them something," Bertsch says. "We have to show them what we mean, because if Jiffy Lube can do this, if the gas station down the street can do this, why can't the United States Navy do this?"

The result was an 18-minute CD-ROM that Morris presented to Admiral Vern Clark, the chief of naval operations, at the Pentagon. "At the end of the briefing, he said, 'That's exactly what I want. Go out and make it happen,'" Bertsch says.

It was a limited victory. The naval chief gave his blessing but no dollars. The training unit that Morris and Bertsch are assigned to, the Naval Personnel Development Command (NPDC), would have to fund the portal launch using existing budget lines. Morris and Bertsch scraped together $4.5 million from various training and education budgets over six months, during which time they prepared RFPs and reviewed vendor bids. They also assembled a small group that included Chris Piereman, a retired master chief electronic technician with the Navy and now a contractor, and Capt. James Kantner, a Navy reservist on active duty.

Perhaps the most notable, and surprising, selection was a little-known company called Appian Corp., which would act as the collaboration-software vendor and integrator. (A few Appian developers are always on site in Norfolk; two more are assigned to Saufley Field, the naval education and training center in Pensacola, Fla.; and one is assigned to the Center for Naval Intelligence in Damneck, Va.)

Appian beat out IBM by, among other things, agreeing to buy the hardware--a Sun Microsystems server to run the Oracle database and four Sun Fire 280R systems to run the application servers--on behalf of the Navy. Because there was no money left in this Navy unit's budget for hardware, Appian bundled that cost into the service agreement and will transfer ownership of the systems to the Navy after one year.


start top Introduction Career Builder 

Best of the Web

Data deduplication: Declawing the clones

Data deduplication is emerging as a critically important new arrow in the storage administrator's quiver to answer hard questions about the increasing problem in storage growth costs.

Quick Read

Compression, Encryption, Deduplication, and Replication: Strange Bedfellows

One of the great ironies of storage technology is the inverse relationship between efficiency and security: Adding performance or reducing storage requirements almost always results in reducing the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of a system.

Quick Read

WAN Optimization Whitelists and Blacklists

Optimization is a fantastic way of saving money and creating really happy customers at the same time, but it doesn't work flawlessly for all applications.

Quick Read

WAN Optimization as a Managed Service: It's Not About the Cost

This insight examines how organizations outsourcing their WAN optimization initiatives to a third-party go about achieving their goals for application performance, reducing operational costs, and streamlining enterprise infrastructure.

Quick Read

  Sponsored Links

Premium Content

Data Centers Gone Wild
February 22, 2010

NWC


Salary

Video