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<PerformancePlanOrReport xmlns="urn:ISO:std:iso:17469:tech:xsd:PerformancePlanOrReport" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"

 xsi:schemaLocation="urn:ISO:std:iso:17469:tech:xsd:PerformancePlanOrReport http://stratml.us/references/PerformancePlanOrReport20160216.xsd" Type="Strategic_Plan"><Name>ARMY DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION STRATEGY</Name><Description>The Army Modernization Strategy identifies digital transformation as the means to modernize the Army to achieve Waypoint 2028 and Aimpoint 2035. Digital transformation represents a shift in operations and culture that fundamentally changes how an organization delivers value through the adoption of advanced technologies such as cloud, data and artificial intelligence (AI). Digital transformation is driven through innovation and new business and operating models, powered by a digital workforce that is agile, adaptive, and tech-savvy. Digital transformation is an enabler for Army readiness and reform and serves as a catalyst to revitalize and establish the Army’s digital workforce of the future.</Description><OtherInformation>The Army must keep pace with the rapid change in technology, adopt modern best practices, and avoid any delays from bureaucratic institutional processes. The Army must make bold investments in transformative digital technologies, reform its institutional processes, and build its workforce into one with the training and experience to execute in increasingly complex operational environments with the technological innovation that places the right data in decision makers’ hands quicker. </OtherInformation><StrategicPlanCore><Organization><Name>OFFICE OF THE ARMY CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER</Name><Acronym>ACIO</Acronym><Identifier>_b8d725bc-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><Description>The Office of the CIO is formalizing the ADTS to establish
the vision for how digital transformation can help achieve
the Waypoint 2028, indicate clear LOEs leading to this
objective, identify priorities for the Army to resource, and
outline an integrated master plan to synchronize and
better integrate all ongoing activities to achieve a digital-age Army.</Description><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>U.S. Army</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Christine E. Wormuth</Name><Description>Secretary of the Army</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Mission Areas</Name><Description>The scope of the ADTS covers all Title 10 mission areas as outlined in Army Regulation 5-1 [Warfighter Mission Area (WMA), the DoD portion of the Intelligence Mission Area (DIMA), the Enterprise Information Environment Mission Area (EIEMA), and the Business Mission Areas (BMA)], all Army Commands, DRUs, and ASCCs; all Army Components (the Regular Army, the Army National Guard of the United States, and the Army Reserve); all appropriation types; and both enterprise and tactical requirements supported by both the military and civilian workforce. </Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Warfighter Mission Area (WMA)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Intelligence Mission Area (DIMA)</Name><Description>DoD portion</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Enterprise Information Environment Mission Area (EIEMA)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Business Mission Areas (BMA)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Army Commands</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Direct Report Units (DRUs)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Army Service Component Commands (ASCCs)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Army Components</Name><Description>the Regular Army, the Army National Guard of the United States, and the Army Reserve</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Army National Guard of the United States</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Organization"><Name>Army Reserve</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Intelligence Community</Name><Description>The ADTS augments and aligns to other DoD and Intelligence Community strategic guidance such as USD(I&amp;S), Director National Intelligence (DNI) and Defense Business System strategies.</Description></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>USD(I&amp;S)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Person"><Name>Director National Intelligence (DNI)</Name><Description/></Stakeholder></Organization><Vision><Description>A digital Army of 2028 able to deliver overmatch through Joint Multi-Domain Operations (MDO) leveraging innovative and transformative technologies.</Description><Identifier>_b8d72850-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier></Vision><Mission><Description>Drive digital transformation, innovation and reform through strategy, policy, governance, oversight and rapid capabilities to establish an operational MDO force.</Description><Identifier>_b8d729a4-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier></Mission><Value><Name>Modernization</Name><Description>DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION ~ 
…investing in digital transformation and the modernization
of the Army’s underlying network and computer infrastructure
is essential to our success. Specifically, the cloud is the
foundation for this entire modernization effort. The
Army will develop cloud computing technologies, improve
data access and sharing environments, and streamline
software development tools and services. Together, these
technology investments will allow the Army to take advantage of
emerging machine learning and AI technologies to understand,
visualize, decide, and direct faster than our competitors. By
leveraging cloud open architecture, information can flow rapidly
between the enterprise and soldiers on the ground. This will
enable commanders to counter adversaries in the information
environment as effectively as they do in physical domains and
win in the cognitive space. ~ Source: Army Modernization Strategy, 2019</Description></Value><Value><Name>Digital Transformation</Name><Description>... digital transformation is aimed at developing an
organic digital workforce of the future that can continually
adapt and adopt new digital technologies, and is capable
of applying these technologies to mission needs. In order
to scale ongoing pilot efforts such as the Software Factory
(an Army organization that trains and enables soldiers to
produce modern software), the Army needs to change
how it recruits, trains, and retains its digital workforce
and reduce the gap between the organic and commercial
workforce. This requires partnerships with allied nations,
industry, and academia at scale as well as other tools to
enable the workforce to grow and develop leading edge
technologies.</Description></Value><Goal><Name>Digital Transformation</Name><Description>A digitally-enabled, data-driven Army propelled by digital transformation</Description><Identifier>_b8d72b7a-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army’s current digital initiatives are siloed across mission areas, inhibiting the interoperability needed
to support MDO and Joint All Domain Command and Control (JADC2). The Army must prioritize resources
for digital modernization over current year operational readiness. In addition, the Army should divest from
unsustainable legacy systems while simultaneously investing in priority modernization efforts like cloud
computing. Similarly, the Army should aim to balance resourcing IT service delivery and cybersecurity across
the enterprise while also prioritizing modernization of the unified network. Between 2021 and 2028, the goal
is to converge current digital initiatives that support readiness and modernization into a single integrated plan,
enable these initiatives at the enterprise-level so they are available to the total Army from the tactical edge to the
enterprise, and establish standardized service delivery processes, methods and tools, all fully leveraging cloud
as an enabler. This effort will enable an Army that seamlessly shares data and information for timely insights
to Warfighter, Commands, and enterprise functions, in direct support of Army readiness and modernization.
The following LOEs will drive both readiness and modernization objectives through the rapid adoption and
implementation of digital technologies.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Cloud</Name><Description>Accelerate cloud native adoption by unifying Army’s enterprise and tactical clouds</Description><Identifier>_b8d72ce2-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>A digitally-enabled, data-driven Army propelled by digital transformation
The Army’s current digital initiatives are siloed across mission areas, inhibiting the interoperability needed
to support MDO and Joint All Domain Command and Control (JADC2). The Army must prioritize resources
for digital modernization over current year operational readiness. In addition, the Army should divest from
unsustainable legacy systems while simultaneously investing in priority modernization efforts like cloud
computing. Similarly, the Army should aim to balance resourcing IT service delivery and cybersecurity across
the enterprise while also prioritizing modernization of the unified network. Between 2021 and 2028, the goal
is to converge current digital initiatives that support readiness and modernization into a single integrated plan,
enable these initiatives at the enterprise-level so they are available to the total Army from the tactical edge to the
enterprise, and establish standardized service delivery processes, methods and tools, all fully leveraging cloud
as an enabler. This effort will enable an Army that seamlessly shares data and information for timely insights
to Warfighter, Commands, and enterprise functions, in direct support of Army readiness and modernization.
The following LOEs will drive both readiness and modernization objectives through the rapid adoption and
implementation of digital technologies.
^^
The Army will adopt a “cloud smart” approach that
supports the migration of enduring applications in
existing Army Enterprise Data Centers (AEDC) and
Installation Processing Nodes (IPN) to Army’s cloud
(cArmy) to achieve cost savings, interoperability, and
information sharing across applications. The Army
will establish the cArmy hybrid global cloud that is
resilient, secure, and able to share computing and
storage resources seamlessly for enterprise and
tactical applications. All applications, as appropriate and
excluding any Operational Technology (OT) systems,
modernized to the cloud will adopt a DevSecOps
methodology, enhanced to include non-traditional,
but Army required security principles such as OPSEC
indicator identification and data aggregation concerns, to
shorten development lifecycles and build cybersecurity
early in the design process. Army will adopt common
cloud services to achieve standardization in cloud
architecture, security monitoring, and transparency
in cloud spending. The Army will prioritize use cases
to support Project Convergence and MDO including
tactical cloud pilots, threat capability red teams, and
prototyping efforts across the Army and as appropriate
with coalition and allied nation partners.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Data</Name><Description>Leverage data as a strategic asset to achieve interoperability and data for decision making</Description><Identifier>_b8d72e22-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The goal of this line of effort is to prioritize, mature, and
scale ongoing data management efforts in order to
leverage data for decision making across all echelons.
An additional goal of this line of effort is to use the
Enterprise Decision Analytics Framework/Enterprise
Architecture (EDAF/EA) to validate interoperability
across modernization programs that will support MDO
through data standards and integrated operational,
system, data, security, and technical architecture.
HQDA governance will leverage real-time data from
authoritative systems and dashboard capabilities
through Army enterprise data integration platform for
Army Senior Leader (ASL) decision making. System
owners that house authoritative data will establish
Application Programming Interfaces (API) for the curated
and validated data and register them in the Enterprise
Data Service Catalog (EDSC), as appropriate, for
consumption by other enterprise users including feeds to
Army enterprise data integration platform for DoD-level
decision making forums. Use cases to support Project
Convergence, JADC2, Army Prognostics and Predictive
Maintenance, Mission Partner Environment (MPE), and
Army modernization through the Common Operating
Environment (COE) will be prioritized. 
^^
Mission Areas and
Commands will establish Data Stewards responsible for
maintaining the quality of the data. The Army will unearth
potential savings and cost avoidance opportunities in
the current spending through net-new data analytics
insights. The Army will establish standard accredited
toolsets for AI, Robotic Process Automation (RPA) and
Machine Learning (ML), as well as an enterprise data
lake in Army’s cloud for us by all mission areas. The
Army will build an IT standards program that will assist
all mission areas with building capabilities according to
approved IT standards. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Cybersecurity</Name><Description>Elevate Army’s cybersecurity posture by defining Zero Trust principles for both
IT and OT assets</Description><Identifier>_b8d72f94-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>As adversaries continue to achieve greater sophistication
in their offensive cyber capabilities, the Army must be able
to protect its ever-increasing attack surface area of both
traditional IT and non-traditional OT assets connected
to the DoD Information Networks (DODIN) while still
adopting commercial technologies. To achieve this, the
Army will implement Zero Trust (ZT) principles for IT and
OT assets by completing a current state assessment of
ZT capabilities for all of its systems, rapidly addressing
gaps in capabilities, implementing policies to integrate
ZT into all aspects of Army processes including supply
chains, and continually evaluating and maturing ZT
across the Army. To enable Continuous Authority to
Operate, the Army will rearchitect its networks, systems,
and data to better take advantage of ZT principles and
development approaches such as DevSecOps.
^^
The
Army will fully implement Comply-to-Connect as part of
the ZT Architecture to ensure that any device connected
to the network is accredited and patched appropriately
through compliance policies, and continually monitored
to establish a trusted network. To establish seamless
user access through a single credential, collaboration
with allied nation partners, and to support financial
audit requirements through separation of duties, the
Army will implement a standardized enterprise Identity
Credentialing and Access Management (ICAM) system
to meet both enterprise and tactical/disconnected
requirements , as well as mission-based Need-to-Know
for all users. Finally, to proactively identify anomalous
behaviors on the network, the Army must invest in and
implement automated cybersecurity monitoring tools,
automated red teaming tools, and big data analytics
using AI.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Infrastructure &amp; Networks</Name><Description>Converge and modernize Army’s IT infrastructure and networks</Description><Identifier>_b8d73106-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>This line of effort will result in the Army removing barriers to
efficiently deliver data, applications, and services that are
needed to achieve multi-theater, multi-domain operations
while at the same time establishing a predictable and
resourced lifecycle tech refresh model for the networks.
Today the Army’s IT infrastructure and networks are not
interoperable, not fully utilized, and require investments
for tech refresh. In addition, because the organization
networks (ORGNet) across the Army have not been
converged, the Army is unable to manage the network as
a unified network through standardized monitoring and
Defensive Cyber Operations (DCO) tools. The Army will
converge its 42 separate organization networks, rationalize
and consolidate the network management tools supporting
these networks, consolidate them into a single Active
Directory, and optimize the unified network for MDO. The
unified network will come under the oversight of U.S.
Army Cyber Command (ARCYBER) for DCO enabling
enable the Army to see, monitor and secure all assets (IT
and OT) connected to the network.
^^
Through the Unified
Network Operations (UNO) modernization effort, the
Army will integrate the Integrated Tactical Network (ITN)
and Integrated Enterprise Network (IEN) and leverage
commercial technologies for transport, including 5G
networking and Software Defined Networking (SDN).
Leveraging these commercial technologies will enable
high-speed, highly-available connections to the cloud and
DODIN at lower costs. The Army will use ZT principles for
the unified network and prioritize the network modernization
for Secret Internet Protocol Router Network (SIPRNET)
and secret releasable (SECREL) transport. Through Data
Center Optimization, the Army will consolidate its enterprise
and tactical compute and storage at its 12 AEDCs, 284 IPNs
and other infrastructure to decrease current infrastructure
by 50% in order to establish an integrated hybrid cloud
capacity to maximize commercial cloud services while
retaining capacity at AEDCs for resilience. In support of
Army Installation Strategy (AIS), the Army will establish
key standard operating architectures, models, and tools for
IT and OT devices connected to the Installation Campus
Area Network (ICAN) consistent with the mission of the
installation tenant.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Business Systems</Name><Description>Converge and modernize Enterprise Business Systems</Description><Identifier>_b8d7326e-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.5</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The end state of Enterprise Business Systems (EBS)
modernization is a sustainment warfighting function that
is a competitive advantage, fostering dominance in MDO
with enabling technology and business processes. The
Army’s EBS – which serve as the business operations
and management backbone for the Army – should aim to
provide the Warfighter with the most modern capabilities
available to execute sustainment or fiscal management
operations, be interoperable with sustainment functions
resident in current and future Warfighting Mission Area
systems, and be compliant with the Global Force
Management Data Initiative. To improve tactical, strategic,
and audit readiness, the Army must modernize its EBS
through Enterprise Business Systems – Convergence
(EBS-C) and enable auditability to maintain transparency,
traceability, and accountability.
^^
The Army will re-engineer its
business processes to align with commercial best practices,
threat mitigation best practices, and, where feasible, take
advantage of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) software
capabilities. The Army will also establish an open technical
architecture and open Application Programming Interfaces
(APIs) for integration and interoperability in order to
minimize vendor lock in and retain flexibility to adopt newer
technologies in future. The Army will rationalize its Defense
Business Systems (DBS) portfolio to eliminate legacy
applications that are no longer effective or duplicative of
existing capabilities. Applications to be subsumed by the
modernized system must be placed in “break-fix” mode with
critical security patching only while the modernized system
is developed. The modernized cloud-native system will be
developed using DevSecOps methodology, and enhanced
to include non-traditional, but Army required security
principles, to deliver incremental capability in deployable
releases at least once every six months. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>IT Services</Name><Description>Drive mission-centric IT service delivery by defining standardized IT services</Description><Identifier>_b8d733f4-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 1.6</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Since delivery of IT services is executed in siloed
operations, the Army’s technical debt and costs increase
because different organizations and missions use
variations of the same services, tools, and contracts to
support similar services. To remedy this, the Army must
standardize its IT service delivery by developing a new
modernized enterprise service catalog that offers service
levels consistent with the mission of the installation or
unit. Army Commands and units will not be allowed to
acquire “above baseline” services either as reimbursable
or direct support. To support consistent and high quality
service delivery, the Army will implement tools such
as enterprise cloud-based IT Service Management
(ITSM) that is accessible by all Commands, to enable
U.S. Amy Network Enterprise Technology Command
(NETCOM) to see, monitor and secure all assets on the
unified network, and deliver end user support services
integrated with IT Asset Management and IT Operations
Management. The Army will standardize offerings of
common open source analytics tools like Anaconda and
R.
^^
Through ZT principles, the Army will provide greater
support for Bring Your Own Approved Devices (BYOAD)
and over time, divest from procuring governmentfurnished equipment (GFE) mobile devices and even
laptops where feasible, in conjunction with expanded
and robust Vendor Threat Mitigation programs across
the Army. This will be accomplished by implementing
Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) to enable users to
securely access their desktop images from anywhere
in the world remotely. The Army will also divest legacy
unclassified Video Teleconferencing (VTC) and analog
telephones with the enterprise implementation of a
voice modernization strategy in conjunction with Army
365 collaboration capabilities. Legacy collaboration
capabilities such as MilSuite, Army Knowledge Online
(AKO) and Command level SharePoint instances will be
divested to maximize the investment in Army 365. This
will enable the Army to drive down technical debt and
maximize its resources to more cost effectively meet
mission needs. The Army will also reassess and validate
services provided to Combatant Commands (COCOMs)
as their Combatant Command Support Agency (CCSA)
to ensure standardization and interoperability.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Investments</Name><Description>Optimized and mission-aligned digital investments providing greater value to the Army</Description><Identifier>_b8d73c3c-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>Operational excellence is an imperative for the Army in light of the tight fiscal reality in Program Objective
Memorandum (POM) 2023-2027 and beyond. With the evolution of technology, commercial organizations are
finding lower cost, more efficient, and innovative ways to run and invest in their enterprises. The Army seeks
to maintain pace with the evolving advancement of technologies, but this requires a re-evaluation of priorities,
resourcing, and investments. Current challenges include limited visibility into Army IT portfolios, inflexible and
waterfall IT acquisition processes, and ineffective IT investment accountability and oversight. These challenges
prevent the Army from ensuring its resources and spending are best aligned to save costs, improve operations,
and ultimately harvest these savings to modernize the Army through digital transformation.
The goal is to optimize the Army’s resources and enable confident investment decisions that are data-driven and
objective while at the same time ensuring direct alignment of these investments to Army priorities. With agile
institutional processes for acquisition, PPBE, and portfolio management, the Army can ensure better alignment
of digital resources to current and future digital requirements. The following LOEs will reform the enterprise and
drive the ability to optimize investments.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Resources &amp; Investments</Name><Description>Optimize resource allocation and investment decisions by increasing
visibility into portfolios</Description><Identifier>_b8d73de0-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 2.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army must maximize the value derived from its
digital transformation investments, which begins with
transparency into all phases of the Army’s PPBE
process from planning through execution. The Army’s
PPBE process can be improved to gain better visibility
over $15 billion annual digital spend allowing for better
understanding of how this portfolio integrates to provide
best value to meet the Army’s priorities. To address this
challenge, the Army must fundamentally reassess how
the digital budget is addressed in the PPBE process.
The Army will scale the TBM methodology across
all portfolios and achieve granular insights into each
investment through the PPBE process. This includes
the coding of cyber capabilities in each investment to
meet the requirements of reporting through the Principal
Cyber Advisor to Congress. The Army will also mature
Army digital resourcing visibility piloted in FY21 to a
construct that enables the Army to validate, rationalize,
and synchronize digital resource requirements, and
prioritize digital investments to ensure that fully informed
resource decisions are being made. The Army will
continue to aggressively divest legacy systems through
rigorous prioritization of the digital portfolios in each
mission area. The Army will explore if the current mission
area construct is optimal in the context of MDO and if
changes are needed to enable greater synchronization
and integration of the portfolios to breakdown silos
between mission area portfolios. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Requirements &amp; Purchases</Name><Description>Increase Army’s purchasing power by consolidating enterprise digital requirements</Description><Identifier>_b8d73fb6-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 2.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army’s purchasing power is currently underutilized
because of the decentralized approach to procuring
IT software, hardware, and services. Industry data
shows significant cost savings through strategic
sourcing efforts that the Army must fully implement.
The Army will achieve this by establishing a category
management approach that is complemented by
strategic sourcing. These initiatives will increase Army’s
purchasing power, reducing costs and allowing the
Army to redirect savings to other mission priorities.
The Army will scale the category management efforts
established in FY21 to find additional opportunities for
consolidation of requirements across the Commands.
Category management will also be utilized to establish
standard levels of service for IT support. Granular data
on contract execution will be sourced through Computer
Hardware, Enterprise Software, and Solutions (CHESS)
contracts to provide additional insights into spending and
identify opportunities for category management, as well
as benchmark outcomes against industry standards.
The Army will establish Enterprise License Agreements
(ELA) with strategic vendors to both achieve cost savings
and reduce procurement manpower through a single
contract, as well as drive accountability for the use of
licenses by the Commands. The Army must aim to fully
determine the usage of procured software and whether
the Army is overpaying vendors for unused licenses.
The Army will implement a Software Asset Management
(SAM) tool to inventory all software on Army enterprise
and tactical networks, achieve efficiencies through
license distribution, and identify opportunities for new
ELAs based on usage patterns. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Audits</Name><Description>Drive audit readiness and remediation</Description><Identifier>_b8d74286-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 2.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army should achieve a clean Working Capital
Fund (WCF) and General Fund (GF) audit opinions. To
accomplish that objective, the Army must remediate all
Notice of Findings and Recommendations (NFR) related
to IT General Controls (ITGC) which represent a large
percentage of all unremediated NFRs to date. Currently,
the Army leads the DoD services in progress made to
remediate the findings through Corrective Action Plans
(CAPs). The Army must prioritize financial auditability
requirements through ITGC in new capabilities such as
EBS-C to ensure financial data is processed, stored,
and shared completely and accurately. The Army will
implement the tools needed to address access control
and segregation of duties through an ICAM system since
the greatest number of NFRs relate to this requirement.
Financial system owners will prioritize integration of their
systems to ICAM and establish the required policies
and procedures to address both access controls and
segregation of duties. The Army will prioritize the
implementation of CAPs for Internal Use Software (IUS)
by capturing the costs associated with development,
fielding and operation, and maintenance at granular
levels in the acquisition process leveraging the TBM
framework. These efforts will increase business resiliency
and technology security for the digital Army while at
the same time supporting Army’s goal of achieving a
Congressionally-mandated clean audit opinion for the
Department.</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Finances</Name><Description>Increase IT investment accountability by establishing robust financial analytics and governance</Description><Identifier>_b8d74420-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 2.4</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army must employ strong fiscal stewardship of
its IT and Cyber Activities budget to improve business
outcomes and increase mission value. The Army will
pursue full traceability and oversight of the execution
of the digital resources by Commands by improving
data access and quality from contracting and acquisition
systems. The IT Investment Accountability (ITIA) effort
will increase the ability of the Army to see, assess,
redirect, and control IT resources. The Army Digital
Oversight Council (ADOC) was established in FY21
to help synchronization, to inform Army requirements
and resourcing prioritization, and to help technical
integration of digital transformation efforts across
the Army. The Army will fully leverage the ADOC as
a governance forum to manage the digital equities
in the PPBE process, including escalation of issues
to the IT Oversight Council (ITOC) as needed for
decision making by Army Senior Leaders. The Army
will continue to expand and scale the use of analytics
to identify potential risks and issues in execution of the
digital investments. The Army will also reassess and
establish new metrics and measures through the current
IT Investment Accountability Reform to ensure that the
digital investments are meeting mission outcomes.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal><Goal><Name>Workforce &amp; Partners</Name><Description>A tech savvy, operationally effective digital workforce partnered with a robust
network of allies, industry, and academia</Description><Identifier>_b8d745e2-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Allies</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Industry</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><Stakeholder StakeholderTypeType="Generic_Group"><Name>Academia</Name><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>People drive success. The Army’s people and its relationships with allied partners are vital to achieving the
goal to dominate in MDO. In today’s digital transformation revolution, simply having the newest technology
is not sufficient – the Army needs the right digital skills to optimize, adapt, and fully apply the technology
through innovation. Similarly, simply having strong partner relationships is not enough – the Army needs proper
channels, networks, and systems in place to effectively collaborate and communicate. The Army workforce must
understand, develop, apply, and enable digital priorities as well as external opportunities to improve collaboration
with allies, academia, and industry.
The goal is to embrace the recognition that people drive Army’s success on and off the battlefield. Robust
recruiting and selection, training programs, digital career models, and partnerships with academia and industry
will build a digital ready, adaptive, and innovative workforce, with the full range of required digital skills. In addition,
sustained communications and interoperability with allied nations will ensure the Army optimizes its ability to
collaborate in all domains. The following LOEs will drive the Army’s ability to achieve its desired end state as a
digital workforce with a network of valuable partners.</OtherInformation><Objective><Name>Skillsets</Name><Description>Build and deploy an organic digital workforce with mission critical skillsets by establishing partnerships with industry and academia</Description><Identifier>_b8d74786-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 3.1</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army workforce must acquire the necessary skillsets
to effectively embrace and apply digital technology.
The Army has initiated a number of pathfinders and
initiatives to address how the Army will hire, retain,
train, and deploy the digital workforce of the future.
The Army must scale and expand the scope of each
pathfinder. The Army will establish a single integrated
total Army approach to establish the digital workforce of
the future through innovative talent models. The Army
will continue to expand and scale pioneering talent
management models like the Software Factory. In job
postings for technical roles, the Army should include
specific skills that applicants will need. 
^^
The Army will also
adopt modern techniques like code reviews to ensure
that candidates are properly qualified for their roles. The
Army will implement new authorities available such as
the Cyber Excepted Service (CES) to hire and retain the
best cyber talent on par with the commercial industry.
The Army will continue to develop and implement new
concepts and prototypes for acquiring, developing,
certifying, and deploying critical skills in AI, data
science, cyber, and emerging technology areas. The
Army will seek opportunities through its partnerships
with academia and industry for rotational programs that
enable the Army workforce to gain skills from the partner
organization, while also enabling partner organizations
to rotate through the Army and coach the workforce.
^^
The Army will also better target its recruitment of top
talent from its partner organizations. These partnerships
will enable the Army to develop a more fully capable
workforce that can execute its digital priorities. The Army
will also explore and implement innovative employment
models for the total workforce, targeted recruitment, and
other talent management approaches to bringing top
talent into the Army. </OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Innovation &amp; Learning</Name><Description>Identify and cultivate the skills needed by the Army of 2028 by fostering digital innovation and continuous learning</Description><Identifier>_b8d7493e-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 3.2</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The Army must identify and cultivate necessary skills by
fostering innovation and continuous learning in order for
the workforce to keep pace with changing technology. The
Army must establish training for both civilians and military
beyond traditional IT and include how digital technologies
can be adopted, implemented, and adapted across the
Army thereby leading to heavy contractor reliance. The
Army must establish robust recruitment and selection,
training programs, development opportunities, new
workforce models, and strategies to attract, develop, and
retain top talent. These efforts will improve the agility
and readiness of the digital workforce. The Army will
continue to scale the Quantum Leap initiative to reskill
and upskill the digital workforce by assessing their skills
and abilities and establishing career paths and associated
training for career progression. In order to retain the
workforce, the Army will establish initiatives to provide
hands-on digital experience to the workforce through
hackathons, low code/no code programming, and Robotic
Process Automation (RPA). 
^^
The Army will develop a
comprehensive Integrated Development Environment
to ensure unit-developed solutions are consistent with
Army development, data, security, and other standards
and are sustainable and expansible as necessary. As
the Army develops robust talent, it will carefully track
the skills its workforce has developed so it can match
them to the best possible roles. New incentives, such as
rewards and recognition programs, will be established to
motivate the workforce to identify innovation opportunities
and for excellence in service delivery. The Army will seek
new authorities to more fully employ the digital talent
across the active, reserve, and civilian components of the
workforce to support any project in the Army at the time
of need. New collaboration platforms for crowdsourcing
will enable the remote workforce in concert with these
new authorities to execute digital projects across the
Army based on their skillsets so they are not limited
to opportunities within their unit. The Army will utilize
communities of interest to connect its digital workforce
and facilitate technical discussions</OtherInformation></Objective><Objective><Name>Communication &amp; Interoperability</Name><Description>Facilitate collaboration with allied partners by strengthening communication and interoperability of data, software, and systems</Description><Identifier>_b8d74c68-3951-11ed-91eb-c2f40183ea00</Identifier><SequenceIndicator>LOE 3.3</SequenceIndicator><Stakeholder><Name/><Description/></Stakeholder><OtherInformation>The success of Joint All Domain Operations depends
on the Army’s ability to collaborate and coordinate
with its allied nation partners. The Army needs to
continually improve communication and collaboration
with its allied partners, especially with the Five Eye
partners and NATO allies. The Army can achieve this
by prioritizing the implementation of a modern cloudbased Mission Partner Environment (MPE). MPE will
provide the necessary integration, through modern
virtual technologies, to enable the interoperability of
multinational operations and information sharing across
multiple classification levels and protected through a
robust ICAM system, with a robust, mission-based
Need-to-Know requirement. 
^^
The Army will also continue
to support and work with international standards
bodies to establish joint interoperability standards and
architecture for JADC2. The Army will reenergize its
partnerships with allied nations to leverage and share
lessons learned on their digital transformation efforts.
The Army will continue to expand and scale tours of
duty for personnel from allied nations to the Army and
vice-versa.</OtherInformation></Objective></Goal></StrategicPlanCore><AdministrativeInformation><StartDate>2021-10-12</StartDate><EndDate>2027-12-31</EndDate><PublicationDate>2022-09-20</PublicationDate><Source>https://api.army.mil/e2/c/downloads/2021/10/20/3b64248b/army-digital-transformation-strategy.pdf</Source><Submitter><GivenName>Owen</GivenName><Surname>Ambur</Surname><PhoneNumber/><EmailAddress>Owen.Ambur@verizon.net</EmailAddress></Submitter></AdministrativeInformation></PerformancePlanOrReport>