Proxicom Turns Customized Internet Solutions Into Products
BR Proxicom Turns Customized Internet Solutions Into Products By Nick Wakeman Staff Writer When the U.S. Chief Financial Officers Council was looking for ways to improve government agencies' accounting systems, the group turned its attention to communications. "We knew one of the things we had to focus on was communications," said Hal Metcalf, acting director of the Veterans Affairs franchise fund program and a member of the CFO council's Joint
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Proxicom Turns Customized Internet Solutions Into Products
By Nick Wakeman
Staff Writer
When the U.S. Chief Financial Officers Council was looking for ways to improve government agencies' accounting systems, the group turned its attention to communications.
"We knew one of the things we had to focus on was communications," said Hal Metcalf, acting director of the Veterans Affairs franchise fund program and a member of the CFO council's Joint Systems Solutions Team. The council looked at a number of ways to improve communications before deciding that the Internet and its cousins, intranets and extranets, had "matured enough" to make a real difference, he said.
Proxicom photo Bruce Thompson,
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The council is composed of CFOs from federal agencies and the Office of Management and Budget who work together to improve the financial management of the government.
The CFO council established four forums, Metcalf said. They cover requirements for government accounting reports, travel systems, core financial systems and the Federal Financial Improvement Act of 1996, which mandated that the agencies improve their accounting systems.
Proxicom designed the product so that there could be a moderator for each forum, which Metcalf said is preferable to a bulletin board.
"This is much easier to manage than a bulletin board," Metcalf said. "Bulletin boards tend to be too free-flowing."
Another plus for the interactive forums over bulletin boards is that a reservoir of data is built that the administrators of the forum can use to look for trends and track comments, said Brian Rupert, director of product management for Proxicom.
Coincidentally, tracking trends is what gave birth to the idea for Proxicom to turn some of its customized Internet solutions into products, Thompson said.
forums over bulletin boards is that a reservoir of data is built that the administrators of the forum can use to look for trends and track comments. -Brian Rupert, Proxicom |
Proxicom's customers were looking to provide better customer service, and they wanted features such as administrative capabilities, interactivity and scalability, he said.
"We've utilized our services group as a lab," Rupert said. So when requests for features continue to pop up in Proxicom's services division, which represents about 80 percent of the company's revenues, they are flagged as potential products. In 1996, the company had revenues of about $8 million.
"We don't do product development for products' sake," Thompson said.
One trend the company is trying to exploit is the desire among companies, the government and other organizations to use the Internet as a way to bring together people with similar interests, he said. Proxicom calls it "community building."
For example, Women's Connection Online, McLean, Va., used the Proxicom forum products to create an online service focusing primarily on women's business issues, said Julia Wilkinson, community builder for Women's Connection.
"I think [online communities] are going to be a big wave," she said. Any group of people with similar interests are a potential market for an online community, Wilkinson said.
The community the CFO council is trying to build is one that includes financial officers for government agencies and the vendors that serve them, Metcalf said.
While the forums allow for the exchange of ideas, the council also can post documents online and then use the forums to gather comments, he said.
From vendor comments, the government has learned that the agencies are not very good at defining requirements for new accounting systems, Metcalf said. "There is a big disconnect," he said.
The forums can easily be used as a way to create dialogue between vendors and the government to help define requirements, he said.
"This can bridge the gap about requirements outside of a formal contracting environment," Metcalf said.
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