Virginia's new
high-tech czar
George
Newstrom brings plenty of experience and energy to a troubled
technology sector
by
Garry Kranz
Click
image to enlarge
|
In
January, George Newstrom was sitting in a Hong Kong
hotel room oblivious to the shifting political winds
in Virginia 8,000 miles away. The veteran high-technology
executive was nearing the end of a bright career. He
was ready to retire from huge Electronic Data Systems
Corp., where he had worked since 1974, and currently
headed its Asia Pacific operations. He teased colleagues
that by April, he'd have left his post in Hong Kong
for his second home in Scottsdale, Ariz. polishing his
14-handicap on sun-drenched desert courses.
Then
the telephone rang. The caller, John Milliken, head
of the transition team for newly elected Virginia Gov.
Mark L. Warner, got right to the point: Warner wanted
Newstrom to serve in his cabinet as secretary of technology.
Would Newstrom consider leaving Hong Kong and return
to Virginia immediately? Halfway around the world, with
visions of par-3s and par-2s dancing in his head, Newstrom
was nonplussed. "I didn't even know Mark Warner
had been elected," he said sheepishly.
It
didn't take long for Newstrom to shelve his golf clubs
in exchange for a spot on the Warner team. He and Warner
had known each other about 10 years, serving on various
boards and committees in Northern Virginia. The pair
embraced similar ideals on issues such as education
and high-tech business. Just 24 hours after leaving
the Far East for Richmond, the 55-year-old ex-Marine
was sworn into office as Virginia's second technology
czar. Immediately, he plunged into a whirlwind of visits
to state agencies, universities and businesses. Along
the way, Newstrom has had to confront head-on the dicey
issues surrounding Warner's attempt to make up a state
budget shortfall of $1.3 billion, an unwelcome leftover
from the cupboard of former Gov. James Gilmore. All
the while, he's been preaching a gospel of privatization
aimed at saving Virginia big bucks.
Known
as a demanding workaholic, Newstrom must oversee some
bedeviling tasks. Many of the state's wunderkind high-tech
firms are in the tank, a budget crisis is making it
harder for state universities to train the next crop
of information technology (IT) specialists and lack
of funding is sapping the activities of the Center for
Innovative Technology, the state's 18-year-old facilitator
for high technology.
Yet
many colleagues believe he has the patience and disposition
to solve thorny problems. Says Harris Miller, longtime
friend and president of Arlington-based Information
Technology Association of America: "George is indefatigable.
He's got that Marine background that believes all hills
can be taken; it's just a question of how long it will
take."
Sipping
a diet soda in an office at the University of Virginia
in Charlottesville during an interview with Virginia
Business, Newstrom looks the picture of serenity. His
genial manner and easy smile belie the quality that
colleagues say will serve him best in Warner's administration:
unrelenting drive. "George is extraordinarily competitive.
He locks on a target and it's difficult to get him off
course," says Robert Laurence, president of LYCEUM
Network Integration & Professional Services in Vienna,
and a frequent Newstrom golfing buddy.
Making
Virginia more competitive is at the heart of Newstrom's
plan to streamline government services, starting with
smarter purchasing and implementation of information
technology products. Newstrom talks frequently about
accountability and return on investment and the need
for state department heads to run their agencies like
private businesses, concerned about the bottom line.
This is why Warner chose Newstrom as successor to Donald
Upson, the first state Secretary of Technology in the
nation. "We ought to run Virginia so it's the most
efficient state in the country," says Newstrom.
His
first public comments on Virginia's technology-spending
habits painted a dismal picture of bureaucratic waste
and inefficiency. Just one week after assuming the reins,
Newstrom told a specially appointed commission headed
by former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder that Virginia agencies
spend anywhere from $800 million to $1.3 billion each
year on software, PCs and other technology-related services
and products. Such fragmented spending patterns lead
to agencies making duplicate purchases of IT products
and services. What's worse, Virginia could not account
for about $300 million in other assorted IT spending.
Rather
than piecemeal purchases of computer gear, Newstrom
wants to implement a statewide technology plan, including
centralized procurement practices with a clear paper
trail. The Virginia General Assembly recently gave Newstrom's
office greater oversight, requiring state agencies to
get his approval for IT projects costing more than $1
million.
One
Newstrom ploy is to have state agencies buy technology
products in bulk to receive volume discounts from vendors.
He's ordered IT administrators to examine how to tie
the state's disparate computer networks together. Such
steps could yield annual cost savings between 15 and
20 percent. "We have to be able to implement large
purchasing programs better than we have before. Lay
them out, plan them effectively, manage the implementation,
ensure there are no cost overruns, make sure (systems
and networks) are put in on time and that they run properly,"
Newstrom says.
Getting
state bureaucrats to think like private business owners
could be both Newstrom's biggest accomplishment and
his most nettlesome challenge. Other Virginia governors
have dabbled with privatizing public-sector services.
Gov. George Allen, for example, fitfully tried to outsource
management of many services from running prisons to
the highway department. Even Newstrom admits to being
"naive" about whether government agencies
can - or will - readily adopt private business tenets.
But he won't understand why if it isn't done. "I
may be oversimplifying the answer, but I'm not sure
that it's different even though we're in a bureaucracy,"
he says. "I don't think a lot of our agencies and
departments have specific goals and objectives. They've
been doing their jobs for a long time, but they don't
know what the measurement of success is. We're developing
a plan with actionable tasks, goals and objectives."
Such
idealism could be a pragmatic pipe dream. "As we've
learned over the years at both the federal and state
levels, these economies are tougher to achieve in reality
than on paper," says Larry Sabato, a professor
of government and foreign affairs at the University
of Virginia. "Old ways die hard, changes turn out
to be more expensive than expected and the impact is
often limited. But we'll see. Newstrom is very much
in the Warner mold: a hard-driving businessman in a
temporary government role. Some sparks might fly, and
that might be to the good."
Others
see Newstrom as the perfect blend of chutzpah and persuasion,
capable of transforming a staid state government into
a model of efficiency and cost savings. Former colleagues
recall Newstrom's withering attention to detail: it
could be intimidating, especially if projects missed
deadline or were executed without care. Although he
could excoriate laggards, Newstrom at the same time
was personable and approachable. "The people who
understand what the goal is and work hard will do well
with George. Those who don't
well, they won't
be around long enough to have to worry about it,"
says Randy Dove, a fellow EDS executive.
Newstrom
acquired his tough-love style from the Marine Corps
and by working for EDS, run for years by hard-charging
maverick H. Ross Perot. The Plano, Texas-based firm
was a pioneer in convincing the federal government to
jump into the new world of IT back in the 1960s and
1970s. With Perot as a guide, Newstrom was to play an
instrumental role at EDS. "George understands the
culture of government, so I think that probably puts
him in better stead than somebody who doesn't have that
experience," says Dove.
Revamping state computer purchasing isn't Newstrom's
only major task. He wants Virginia to be an even bigger
player in the global market for goods and services.
That goal can only met by expanding the beachhead won
by his predecessor, Upson. While Virginia earned recognition
for its greatly expanded high tech sectors, especially
in Northern Virginia during the 1990s, it has since
stumbled as telecommunications firms and Internet-based
companies have gone belly up. Newstrom has to ensure
that Warner's policies promote rebuilding.
Another
challenge is the intense rivalry among the state's regions
as they squabble over high-tech investments. Also at
issue is how well state colleges and universities are
meeting their mission of growing a computer-savvy labor
force. Newstrom thinks they can do better, and has urged
them to find common ground.
Newstrom's
biggest problem of all is the same one Warner faces:
a dearth of state funds to accomplish his goals. That's
one of the reasons for Newstrom's recent whistle-stop
tour of the state. Newstrom has been meeting with university
provosts to reassure them that more money will come
their way once it's available.
Newstrom also must allay fears that budget cuts of nearly
30 percent at Virginia's Center for Innovative Technology
will torpedo technology-based economic growth. Created
by the Virginia General Assembly in 1984 to enhance
research activities at the state's universities, CIT
has seen funding slashed from $12.5 million to $9.2
million in the current biennial budget.
This
has hurt some CIT initiatives, including one that provides
money to help start-ups defray operating costs. State
legislators have openly wondered about just how much
impact CIT has on Virginia's economic growth. "We
need to take the funding that CIT does have and focus
it like a laser beam. We can't do a plethora of activities,"
Newstrom says.
Four
years may not be sufficient time for Newstrom to complete
his agenda, especially given the uncertainty of the
economy and Virginia's traditionally cautious approach
to change. Newstrom has the vigor and the experience
for the job. But his decision to serve the state rather
than retire to golf may bring on bigger sand traps than
he ever imagined.
Return
to Virginia Business - June 2002
|