1 1Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Promoting Geospatial Insight to
Advance the Navy Shore Enterprise
Darrell R. Robertson GeoReadiness Program Manager
United States Navy
Ed RiegelmannChief Geospatial Officer
Critigen
2 2Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
United States Navy
GeoReadiness Program
Background
•To address the geospatial needs of the Navy shore installation
management community, the Navy created the GeoReadiness
program.
•The program, led by NAVFAC HQ on behalf of CNIC and OPNAV,
was established to maximize the use of maps, aerial imagery and
other geospatial data and technologies to provide situational
awareness and improve time to decision on the impact of shore
installation activities, incidents
and investments.
3 3Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Navy’s Shore Enterprise Facts & Figures
•11 Regions with 71 Installations and 915 Special Areas
•123 NOSCs (formerly Navy Reserve Centers)
•37,181 Buildings, 30,176 Non-building Structures
•414 Piers-Wharves, 117 Runways, 249 Hangars
•134 Child Development Centers, 80 Chapels, 83 Galleys
•1.87M Acres of Land and Facilities with a PRV > $199B
•969,154 Active Duty, Reserve and Civilian Navy Personnel,
Contractors and Family Members Who Work and Live on Navy
Installations. Also serving 575,000 Military Retirees.
4 4Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
U.S. Navy GeoReadiness IGI&S Enterprise
Forward, Engaged, Ready
GEOREADINESS
Providing Authoritative
Installation Geospatial
Information & Services
(IGI&S)
Ensuring Accurate,
Timely & Accessible
Shore Installation Maps
for Better Decisions
Geo-enabling the Navy
Shore Installation
Mission to Achieve:
• Readiness
• Performance
• Sustainability
Enabling and Validation
the Periodic Virtual
Inventory (PVI) Process
to Support FIAR
5 5Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Navy GeoReadiness Enterprise Architecture
Producers/Data Generators
GRC
AM
EV
PW
CI
DATA AND PORTAL HOSTING
“Publish web services” “Consume web services”
Consumer Requirements
BL/PL (Mission Support)
GRC (Products & Services)
CNIC (Infrastructure/Energy)
OPNAV (Data Calls)
OSD (DSL/Data Calls)
FLEET (Planning/Analysis)
Energy
Enter Data Once, Use it Many Times
6 6Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Navy GeoReadiness Explorer (GRX)
Discover More, Search Less
Access Shore Knowledge
GRX supports the Navy’s global
mission by providing a
seamless view of worldwide
Navy geospatial assets.
GRX provides map based
access to a variety of Navy
business systems and the ability
to overlay Navy data with other
web based map services.
Enabling single interface
access to a variety of data
increases situational awareness,
increases timeliness, and allows
Navy leadership to make more
informed decisions.
GRX is available today through
the NMCI network via the
NAVFAC Portal to everyone with
a CAC.
https://hub.navfac.navy.mil/go
/GeoReadiness
Easy Access to
Authoritative Data
7 7Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Navy Shore Installation Management
Support
Serving Multiple Missions with a Common Shared Information Infrastructure
Business functions consume or reference authoritative geospatial data – Improving Operational Readiness
Planning &
Facilities
Management
Range
Management
Public Works
Emergency Planning &
Response
Environmental
ManagementForce Protection
and SecurityEnergy Management
Integration with
DOD Enterprise
Systems
GeoReadiness Data Repository
Cloud
Real Estate &
Encroachment
Operational
Planning/Analysis
FIAR/PVI
8 8Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
GeoReadiness Program Strategy 2016-2020
GEOREADINESS MISSION
• GeoReadiness provides Navy shore
installation missions with geospatial
products and services that improve
situational awareness and strengthen
decision-making.
GEOREADINESS VISION
• Promoting geospatial insight to
advance the Navy Shore Enterprise.
9 9Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
GeoReadiness Program Goals 2016-2020
• Goal 1: Establish a Collaborative and
Services Oriented GeoReadiness Program
• Goal 2: Maintain Precise, Standardized and
Authoritative Geospatial Data
• Goal 3: Provide Geospatial Technology
Solutions to Navy Business Challenges
• Goal 4: Develop and Communicate Policy
and Guidance to Support and Promote
Geospatial Use
• Goal 5: Identify and Leverage Resources to
Meet Customer Geospatial Requirements
IMPROVE
DECISION
MAKING
INCREASE
COMMUNI-
CATION
VALIDATE
DATA
ACCURACY
MAINTAIN
AND GROW
GIS SYSTEM
10 10Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Goal 1: Establish A Collaborative and Services
Oriented GeoReadiness Program
MEASURING SUCCESS
GeoReadiness provides HQ, Regional and Installation customers with the
geospatial data, services, and tools necessary to exploit geospatial
information easily and immediately.
Business lines leverage each other’s GIS expertise to expand knowledge,
reduce duplicative efforts, and produce successful GeoReadiness product
and service solutions to mission needs.
Military service, civil agencies and non-government organizations
collaborate to share geospatial data, solutions, and methods for mutual aid.
11 11Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Goal 2: Maintain Precise, Standardized and
Authoritative Geospatial Data
MEASURING SUCCESS
Precise and reliable geospatial information is continually maintained and
updated to reflect current conditions and requirements at Navy installations.
Geospatial features, attributes and metadata comply with the Navy
adaptation of the SDSFIE standards.
Navy business data are geo-enabled without duplication in geospatial
databases.
12 12Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Goal 3: Provide Geospatial Technology Solutions
to Navy Business Challenges
MEASURING SUCCESS
Innovative solutions provide rapid access to identify, collect, retrieve, fuse,
analyze and format geospatial and related attribute Information.
Applications and systems are reliable, adaptable, easy to use and require
minimal training.
Geospatial products and services have quantifiable cost and performance
measures to determine added mission value.
13 13Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Goal 4: Develop and Communicate Policy and
Guidance to Support and Promote Geospatial Use
MEASURING SUCCESS
GeoReadiness guidance and policy are developed, disseminated, and
enforced by leadership.
GeoReadiness strategies and programs are aligned with Navy goals,
strategies, architectures and measures.
GeoReadiness employs best business practices to continuously improve
customer support, reduce infrastructure costs, and apply the best available
information technology.
14 14Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Goal 5: Identify and Leverage Resources to Meet
Customer Geospatial Requirements
MEASURING SUCCESS
GeoReadiness is funded and staffed to organize, educate personnel,
develop internal capabilities, and provide GeoReadiness services to HQ,
Regional and Installation customers in perpetuity.
Geospatial data is collected once and shared thereafter, eliminating
unnecessary data collection and reducing overall costs.
Best of class GIS solutions are web-enabled, integrated with business
systems and shared across the enterprise, eliminating redundant
investments in duplicative solutions.
15 15Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Program Prioritization and Baselining
•Prioritize and Sequence/Phase GeoReadiness Activities
–Large projects to small work processes
–Implementation and sustainment activities
•Baseline Costs
–Utilize known/measured values (best), or base on estimates
•Articulate “Value” in an
Easy-to-understand Model
•Blend and Balance
Quantitative and Qualitative
Factors
16 16Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Establish Measuring Methods
•Capture and Track by Program Activity
–Quantitative (financial) analysis
–Qualitative (strategic impact, risk) value
•Blend Quantitative and Qualitative
Factors Into a Single
Benefit Factor Summary
•Use Visual Methods to
Communicate Value
17 17Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Establish Measuring Methods
•Capture and Track Quantitative Costs
–Implementation Cost (Actual $ or Estimated $)
•Annual Return on Investment Assumptions:
–Cost Savings (How Much $ was Saved?)
–Cost Avoidance (How Much $ Might it Have Cost?)
18 18Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Establish Measuring Methods
•Capture and Track Qualitative Costs
–Degree of Need – Breadth of applicability
–Strategic Value – Depth of impact
–Degree of Risk – Development, adoption, and sustainment risk
•The Benefit Factor Summary Blends
Quantitative and Qualitative Costs
Into a Single Rating for Each Activity
19 19Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Visualizing Value
IMP
LE
ME
NTA
TIO
N C
OS
T
$
$
BENEFIT FACTOR0 10
• Activities are
plotted based
on Cost versus
Benefit
20 20Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Challenges to Measuring Success:
Visualizing Value
IMP
LE
ME
NTA
TIO
N C
OS
T
$
$
BENEFIT FACTOR0 10
• Activities are
then rated,
ranked, and
scheduled
for funding and
execution
21 21Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Summary
• The GeoReadiness Program was established to build, sustain, and
advance the Navy Shore Enterprise.
• To develop a professional and reliable organization that provides a
premier level of service to Navy Shore Enterprise stakeholders
requires the development of quality measures that are used to
manage and improve GeoReadiness activities.
• Measuring GeoReadiness success should cover each of the
following five program focus areas: People, Data,
Processes, Systems and Applications, and
Funding.
• The results of these efforts will help inform
Navy leadership of the effectiveness and
contributions of the GeoReadiness Program
to support the Navy Shore Enterprise.
22 22Esri International User Conference | June 27 – July 1, 2016 | San Diego Convention Center
Questions?
Promoting Geospatial Insight to
Advance the Navy Shore Enterprise
Darrell RobertsonGeoReadiness Program Manager
United States Navy, NAVFAC AM4
(202) 685-9416
Ed RiegelmannChief Geospatial Officer
Critigen
(719) 337-2472