Bray began the reform effort not by dictating the specific changes that needed to be made, but instead by highlighting a set of broader IT transformation goals with a series of principles that undergirded them. The goals included becoming more agile, which meant improving the organization’s ability to execute the FCC’s mission by being innovative and transparent; enhancing the organization’s resilience, which entailed increasing the scalability and stability of its IT system; and becoming more efficient, which required decreasing IT costs, particularly maintenance expenses. Bray likened this to replacing or repairing an aging roof: one does not wait for the roof to start leaking, but instead takes action to repair or replace it. The same maxim, he argued, should hold for the FCC’s aging legacy IT systems.
To aid the FCC’s progress toward these goals, Bray identified three principles. The first was becoming more “data-centric.” Previously the FCC had been application-centric, which resulted in the FCC’s data being stove-piped in different IT systems. A cloud-based common data platform across the organization, by contrast, would help to merge that data and in turn accelerate the development of business solutions. The second principle was “adapt first, buy second, and create third.” In the past, when the FCC had needed a new IT function, it had typically created it internally. Bray felt that adapting existing approaches, platforms, or tools would be more efficient than repeatedly reinventing the wheel. Finally, Bray advocated for a third principle of cloud-based security. With a comparatively small staff, the FCC, Bray believed, had a limited ability to protect itself against external attacks. A cloud-based approach, by contrast, would have built-in defenses.
Beyond promoting these high-level changes, Bray relied primarily on people within the FCC to recommend and choose the specific reforms and the paths to obtaining them. Specifically, he embedded within each FCC bureau or office “intrapreneurs,” each of whom would work with the bureau or office to understand the organization’s needs, confer with IT to created a shared reform plan, and then serve as a bridge between IT and each bureau as the plan was being implemented. He also advocated that employees throughout the enterprise act as “change agents” to identify areas where the FCC could improve its IT and to propose agile solutions to enact those improvements—akin to a “start-up pitch” within the organization. These “change agents” enabled Bray to function as an internal “venture capitalist” whose job was to assess and guide change. Whenever a change agent or an intrapreneur approached him with a proposed strategy, he asked for three reasons why the plan might work, three reasons why it might not succeed, and how the change agent would mitigate those risks. If the intrapreneur was able to answer all three questions, Bray was willing to “invest.”