INTERVIEW: T. Wood Parker, TRW's enterprising planner
Connecting state and local government leaders
T. Wood Parker joined TRW Inc. in January as vice president and general manager of the company's global information technology business in Reston, Va.
T. Wood Parker
In his new position he oversees TRW's $3 billion-a-year federal civilian business, as well as its state and local sectors and commercial programs in IT systems and services.
TRW has large contracts with cabinet departments, including Treasury and Health and Human Services, and Parker has a long history of working for and with government.
He is a retired Navy officer and served on the President's Commission on White House Fellowships and as president of the White House Fellows Association. He also is a member of the Planning Forum, a principal on the Council for Excellence in Government and a director of the Northern Virginia Habitat for Humanity.
Parker received a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Auburn University in Alabama and a master's in international relations from Miami University.
GCN senior editor William Jackson interviewed Parker.
GCN:What are some of TRW Inc.'s large government projects?
PARKER:
GCN:Agencywide information technology programs are difficult to bring off. Is it any different when an agency outsources them?
PARKER:
GCN:Do your government customers agree with you?
PARKER:
GCN:Is the federal market becoming more like the commercial market?
PARKER:
GCN:You stepped into your job about the same time as the Bush administration came in. Have there been noticeable changes under the new administration?
PARKER:
GCN:How important is security to your government customers?
PARKER:
GCN:The government routinely gets poor marks for security. Is technology adequate, or is this primarily a people problem?
PARKER:
GCN:What are the government's greatest IT needs now?
PARKER:
GCN:Will the economic downturn make government employment more attractive?
PARKER:
GCN:Have any agencies been successful in upgrading legacy systems? Are there any agencies that have changed the way they do business?
PARKER:
GCN:The IRS has been criticized for not being able to get its modernization program done. Is that an inherent risk for an agency that is making such large changes?
PARKER:
GCN:You do work at the state and local levels as well as the federal level. How would you compare those markets?
PARKER:
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