Information is the cornerstone of a democratic, effective, and accountable government.
Information management is fundamental to all aspects of government services, as it supports informed decision-making, efficient and effective service delivery, and is critical to achieving the goals of the government.
The critical role that information management plays in the GC is clearly reflected in the Government of Canada's Management Excellence Agenda.
The GC IM Strategy is a coordinated approach to ensuring the appropriate enterprise-level governance, direction, information structures, processes, tools, and skill sets are in place across the Government of Canada (GC) to support the effective management of information assets, in pursuit of the GC Management Excellence Agenda.
The origins of the GC IM Strategy date back to 2005 when the Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS) began a comprehensive transformation initiative to define and achieve an enterprise vision for information management in the GC. As a result of this work, which involved extensive community consultation and in-depth analysis of current issues, TBS published two documents in April 2006:
The GC IM Strategy establishes key enterprise IM objectives, defines specific priorities,and engages resources from across the GC IM Community to work collaboratively on strategic initiatives that address the identified IM problems and root causes, and contribute to the achievement of the GC IM Vision.
The sheer volume of information produced, and the increasing number of available channels for its creation and communication, challenge our capabilities to fully understand, leverage and effectively manage information assets.
At the same time, complex contemporary issues such as national security, environmental protection, and health care require that government establish programs that often cut across the mandates of several federal departments and agencies, and sometimes across jurisdictions. Concurrent with this growing need for horizontality, there are increasing demands by Canadian citizen's for an integrated, responsive government that can leverage information to make effective decisions that support the delivery of high value programs efficiently, transparently and accountably.
In summary, as the challenges to effectively manage government information are growing, so too are the requirements to better align information flow across and between departments, and respond to public demands that require enhanced stewardship of government information.
However, many of the current structures, processes and systems used to manage government information were originally established on a department-by-department basis, and are therefore neither aligned nor compatible. This significantly impacts the ability of government to generate accurate horizontal or government-wide views of government activities, and therefore harder for government to plan horizontally, report on performance, and make effective decisions with agility.
Without a coherent, explicit, enterprise-wide strategy to address these horizontal and government-wide issues, individual departments, agencies and the GC as a whole will face increasing difficulty meeting their commitments to Canadians.
In fact the GC IM Strategy has four strategic goals: Policy and Governance, People and Capacity, Enterprise Information Architecture and IM Tools and Applications. The intention is to facilitate significant improvement across government in all four areas thereby supporting achievement of the GC IM Vision.
The GC IM Strategy is being implemented via a number of strategic initiatives that align to the GC IM Strategy's six principles:
These strategic initiatives are horizontally planned, resourced and implemented via working groups that have been established to oversee their completion. For example;
There are many benefits to departments and agencies;
The GC IM Strategy is being implemented by the GC IM Community for the GC IM Community and the GC as a whole. The strategic initiatives that drive implementation of the GC IM Strategy are developed and recommended through the governance model described on the IMD governance webpage, as part of an annual planning exercise.
Using this enterprise governance, initiatives are identified, developed, proposed, approved and implemented by departmental participants. Departmental participation in these initiatives ensures the outputs are appropriately targeted and suitable for re-use.
All the key elements of the GC IM Strategy are aligned within the GC IM Strategy Outcomes Framework. This Framework provides a foundation for monitoring the Strategy and assessing how the outputs from individual strategic initiatives are contributing to the achievement of Strategy Outcomes and Goals, and making adjustments as required.
Ongoing performance assessment also identifies:
If you have any questions or comments please contact us at im-gi@tbs-sct.gc.ca