Government Blogs

A number of agencies are sitting on undiscovered treasure in the form of underutilized software and services for support and training. For government IT, navigating budget cuts in this economy may actually present opportunities to maximize the investments you’ve already made.

Here are some ideas to help you do more with less, including quite a few that leverage software many agencies already have. Or give us a call and let us help you discover hidden value within your existing IT resources.

Get the resources and support you need, as you keep your technology up to date and your payments predictable.


Lighten your load in the cloud

Offer services faster with cloud computing. With little or no infrastructure investment, you can quickly add powerful software and massive computing resources.

Government savings: Navigating budget cuts See how you can save on hardware, maintenance, IT management, and facilities costs, in addition to software licensing fees.

Get every bit out of your servers

Squeeze the most out of your hard-working servers. They can do more when you consolidate existing data center resources—using virtualization technology you may already have.

Government savings: Navigating budget cuts See how you can save on hardware, maintenance, IT management, and facilities costs.

Put desktops on a diet

Contain IT expenses with a diet of standardized desktops. Optimized configurations are easier to manage and maintain, freeing staff for heartier fare, such as creative application development.

Government savings: Navigating budget cuts See how you can save on maintenance, IT management, and help desk costs.

Work without walls

Telework solutions can help reduce travel costs, close gaps in a widespread workforce, and keep your employees, teams, and resources better connected. Virtual workspaces give your agency and staff off-site work options in the case of severe weather or other disruptions.

Government savings: Navigating budget cuts See how you can save on travel costs, commuting time, phone bills, and continuity of operations planning.