Special Report | Channel leaders: Firsthand experience
If the initial strategy for a particular government project doesn't work, Greg Pellegrino, global managing director for Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu's public sector, and his team will find an alternate strategy?often with a superior outcome.
Something few people know about Greg Pellegrino of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu is that when he was 18 years old, he was invited to train as a bicyclist for the U.S. Olympic Team.Because of his passion for the sport, it was no surprise that he volunteered some years later to lead a team of Deloitte employees who volunteered to repair broken bicycles for patients at Children's Hospital outside Washington."The bikes were beyond repair," Pellegrino said. He called a friend who owned a bike shop, and bought new bikes at a discount to replace the damaged ones. "By noon, we had a truck of brand new bicycles to donate."He applies the same kind of approach to his job as a global managing director for Deloitte's public sector. If the initial strategy for a particular government project doesn't work, he and his team will find an alternate strategy, often with a superior outcome.Deloitte's public sector group, which was established two years ago, accounts for 10 percent ($1.8 billion) of the company's $18.2 billion in annual revenue. While the federal market is growing at 8 percent, Deloitte's federal practice is growing at 33 percent.Pellegrino oversees Deloitte's work with the Homeland Security Department. The relationship began when the Transportation Security Administration tapped Deloitte to enhance the agency's communications and information-sharing capabilities.He has a special knack for building customer relationships, partly by sharing his own experiences gleaned from other public sector projects over the past 18 years."I believe my first-hand stories of what has worked and what hasn't worked are interesting to people," he said. "Over time, you develop a better appreciation for what the demands are on leaders who are in the government, and you are able to relate to them in a way that helps you become a trusted adviser."But his experience and empathy is matched by sound reasoning, said Peter Brown, who works alongside Pellegrino."He can take a complex problem, break it down into parts and take each piece of that puzzle and explain it in layman's terms," Brown said.Sometimes, Brown said, it's hard to keep pace with Pellegrino when he's going "a hundred miles an hour" on projects and managing multiple tasks at the same time.Pellegrino's advice to those who work with government is to listen closely and be prepared."Any time I go to visit with a government agency, I research its issues, study its speeches and prepare a briefing for my teams," he said.What does Pellegrino like about his job? "No two days are alike," he said. The ultimate irony, he said, is that some people regard the government as being overly complex, bureaucratic and slow."I can assure people that it is quite a different environment," he said. "We've seen decisions made at lightning speed in response to issues that have affected us following 9/11."
Greg Pellegrino, public sector global managing director, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu
Rick Steele