The Information Dominance Corps: What Does it Mean to Me?

Similar documents
POLICIES CONCERNING THE NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL

Subj: INFORMATION DOMINANCE CORPS COMMAND QUALIFICATION PROGRAM. Encl: (1) Sample Command Qualification Board Recommendation Letter

Strategic Plan Vision for a New Century

Executing our Maritime Strategy

Accountable Care: Clinical Integration is the Foundation

OPNAVINST N2/N6 19 Aug 2014

THE NAVY RESERVE. We cannot be the Navy we are today without our Reserve component. History of the Navy Reserve

navy strategy For AChIevIng InFormAtIon dominance navy strategy For AChIevIng InFormAtIon dominance Foreword

The U.S. Army has always placed tremendous emphasis on training and education.

Department of Defense INSTRUCTION. Secretary of Defense CorporateExecutive Fellows Program (SDCFP(SDEF)

New Leadership for Naval Education and Training Command

NMETC 10 year Strategic Plan

A Call to Action for the Navy Reserve

Cybersecurity United States National Security Strategy President Barack Obama

DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE

Subj: ELECTRONIC WARFARE DATA AND REPROGRAMMABLE LIBRARY SUPPORT PROGRAM

Class of 2018 Candidate Information Packet

Subj: OFFICE OF DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE MILITARY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM

UNITED STATES ARMY TRAINING AND DOCTRINE COMMAND. NCO 2020 Strategy. NCOs Operating in a Complex World

OPNAVINST E DNS-H 18 June 2012

We acquire the means to move forward...from the sea. The Naval Research, Development & Acquisition Team Strategic Plan

CAPT Sheila Patterson First Female Commanding Officer of NSWCDD,

Agenda. Background Navy Posture Survey Recommendations

2019 Westpac Research Fellowship. Funding Guidelines

DRAFT vea Target: 15 min, simultaneous translation Littoral OpTech East VADM Aucoin Keynote Address 1 Dec 2015 Grand Hotel Ichigaya

Westpac Research Fellowship Funding Guidelines

STATEMENT BY LIEUTENANT GENERAL RICHARD P. FORMICA, USA

Vice Admiral Gunn, Vice Admiral Route, Rear Admiral Harley, and Dr. McGrady - thank you

In recent years, the term talent

Program Director Dr. Leonard Friedman

Command and General Staff Officer Course (CGSOC) Common Core (CC)

Setting the standard in nuclear reactor research and regulation NAVAL REACTORS ENGINEER

SMSgt. Kevin Thomas, the Air

Navy Information Warfare Pavilion 19 February RADM Matthew Kohler, Naval Information Forces

challenge the force... change the game

STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE PETER B. TEETS, UNDERSECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE, SPACE

FIELD STUDIES ACTIVITIES:

Subj: MISSION, FUNCTIONS AND TASKS OF THE NAVAL WAR COLLEGE

Changing demands on the Armed Forces. Senior Officers and Strategic Leader Development MARK A. MC GUIRE. Concepts of Command

Air Education and Training Command. Strategic Plan

Subj: MISSION, FUNCTIONS, AND TASKS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY, ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND

REQUIREMENTS TO CAPABILITIES

STRATEGIC PLAN. Naval Surface Warfare Center Indian Head EOD Technology Division. Distribution A: Approved for public release; distribution unlimited.

GOOD MORNING I D LIKE TO UNDERSCORE THREE OF ITS KEY POINTS:

Professionalism and Leader Development

The 19th edition of the Army s capstone operational doctrine

ARMY G-8

Serving as specialists in cyber communications CRYPTOLOGY TECHNICIAN

America s Airmen are amazing. Even after more than two decades of nonstop. A Call to the Future. The New Air Force Strategic Framework

Remarks as delivered by Adm Mike Mullen Indonesian Command and Staff College 19 July 2006

Achieving Information Dominance: Unleashing the Ozone Widget Framework

Subj: APPLICATION PROCEDURES FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019 NAVY MEDICINE CAREER MILESTONE SCREENING BOARD

OPNAVINST A N2/N6 19 Dec Subj: NAVAL OCEANOGRAPHY POLICY, RELATIONSHIPS, AND RESPONSIBILITIES

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS 2000 NAVY PENTAGON WASHINGTON DC

Air Force Science & Technology Strategy ~~~ AJ~_...c:..\G.~~ Norton A. Schwartz General, USAF Chief of Staff. Secretary of the Air Force

... from the air, land, and sea and in every clime and place!

Meeting the Challenge of a New Era

THE NEW IMPERATIVE: WHY HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS ARE SEEKING TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE AND HOW THEY CAN ACHIEVE IT

Guiding Principles for Relationships among Nursing and Support Services In the Clinical Setting

CHIEF OF AIR FORCE COMMANDER S INTENT. Our Air Force Potent, Competent, Effective and Essential

A Call to the Future

STATEMENT OF GENERAL BRYAN D. BROWN, U.S. ARMY COMMANDER UNITED STATES SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND BEFORE THE HOUSE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE

J. L. Jones General, U.S. Marine Corps Commandant of the Marine Corps

To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.

AUSA Army Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy Symposium and Exposition November 2018 Cobo Center, Detroit, MI. Panel Topic Descriptions

Subj: ROLE AND RESPONSIBILITIES RELATED TO MEDICAL DEPARTMENT SPECIALTY LEADERS

Patient Safety Competency An Imperative for the Nursing Profession ( and everyone else in health care)

Unclassified. Sailor 2025

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS 3000 MARINE CORPS PENTAGON WASHINGTON, DC

LESSON 4: MILITARY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

THE GROWING IMPORTANCE OF THE MARITIME (AS DELIVERED) 22 OCTOBER 2015 I. INTRO A. THANK YOU ALL FOR HAVING ME HERE TODAY, IT S A PRIVILEGE TO SPEAK

Professional Military Education Course Catalog

Westpac Future Leaders Scholarship.

It is now commonplace to hear or read about the urgent need for fresh thinking

Appendix II: U.S. Israel Science and Technology Collaboration 2028

Subj: APPLICATION PROCEDURES FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018 NAVY MEDICINE CAREER MILESTONE SCREENING BOARD

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY SUBMARINE FORCE ATLANTIC 1430 MITSCHER AVENUE NORFOLK, VA Subj: AWARDS SPONSORED BY THE NAVAL SUBMARINE LEAGUE

Department of Defense INSTRUCTION

Women s Leadership Symposium 19 June 2009

Prepared Remarks for the Honorable Richard V. Spencer Secretary of the Navy Defense Science Board Arlington, VA 01 November 2017

Exhibit R-2, RDT&E Budget Item Justification Date: February 2008 Appropriation/Budget Activity RDT&E, Dw BA 07

WEST POINT CYBER INITIATIVES

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY SUBMARINE FORCE ATLANTIC 7958 BLANDY ROAD NORFOLK, VA

17 December 2009 MEMORANDUM FOR THE INFORMATION DOMINANCE CORPS. Season s Greetings

Answering the Hottest Question in Army Education What Is Army University?

a. To provide information, policy, and procedural guidance for U.S. Navy personnel

Information Pack for. Director of Nursing

STATEMENT OF CAPTAIN ERIC C. PRICE, JAGC, U.S. NAVY BEFORE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT AD HOC COMMITTEE APRIL 12, 2016

Serving as an Army Civilian

Developing professional expertise for working age health

STATEMENT OF GORDON R. ENGLAND SECRETARY OF THE NAVY BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 10 JULY 2001

NURSING PROGRAM STANDARDS REVISED AND APPROVED BY THE FACULTY OF THE NURSING PROGRAM

Leaders to Serve the Nation

Assisting Universities in Developing Cyberinfrastructure Strategies. for Research and Education

Navy Leader Development Framework

Logbook Adm. Greenert and Gen. Amos: A New Naval Era Adm. Greenert and Gen. Welsh: Breaking the Kill Chain

This block in the Interactive DA Framework is all about joint concepts. The primary reference document for joint operations concepts (or JOpsC) in

DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS 2 NAVY ANNEX WASHINGTON, DC

***************************************************************** TQL

Subj: COMMANDER, NAVY RESERVE FORCE CIVILIAN PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM

Transcription:

The Information Dominance Corps: What Does it Mean to Me? June 14, 2010 Folks, I m writing to you on this topic to address a question I am consistently asked by members of the Corps on my various road trips. The question usually takes one of these forms: What does the establishment of the IDC mean to me? What impact will the IDC have on my career? What must I do to be successful in my community and in the IDC? While I can t put myself directly in your shoes, I can share with you my personal thoughts, as well as those collected from other Navy and IDC leaders, on what these changes may mean for you and your career. CNO s Guidance In starting this conversation I think it is best to go back to the foundation of our transformational efforts the words of the CNO, Admiral Gary Roughead. Admiral Roughead is the driving force behind the transformation and exciting advances the Navy is making across its information disciplines and information-based warfighting capabilities. He has made some key decisions which have enabled the Navy to move out boldly and decisively on a variety of fronts. Half measures are not his style. Therefore, let s recap what the CNO has stated about the Navy s transformation and the importance of the Information Dominance Corps in that regard: 1

Adapting to Change Ultimately, what the IDC means to you will depend largely on who you are, what you want to make out of your career, and how well you re able to deal with the one prevailing constant you will experience for the remainder of your career: change. For everyone, but particularly for professionals in the information disciplines, the information age is about change. The agility with which you anticipate or respond to that change, and fundamentally, your ability to exploit the new opportunities created by that change, will determine your personal success. In short, the impacts of Information Age transformation are being felt across society. Although transformation brings inevitable uncertainty and disruption, it also offers tremendous opportunities. For those willing to step away from the familiar, the comfortable and the known, there are opportunities for success and professional self-fulfillment. Transformation Imperative The CNO revealed his thinking when he directed the establishment of N2/N6, the Information Dominance Corps, and the recommissioning of the U.S. Tenth Fleet. ADM Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has also spoken on these issues: Thinking on this subject is not restricted to the defense and intelligence communities. Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor said, The intellectual equipment needed for the future is an ability to define problems, quickly assimilate relevant data, conceptualize and reorganize information, make deductive and inductive leaps with it, ask hard questions, discuss findings with colleagues, work collaboratively to find solutions, then convince others. 2 It is clear that the IDC is central to executing the transformation of the Navy from a 20 th century, industrial era, institution, to the premier information age warfighting force, in any and all domains.

Within the IDC, each community possesses unique skills, specialties and sub-specialties. It is the CNO s intent (and our collective task) to improve both depth of skills and professional expertise resident in each community as well as the appreciation for each member of the capabilities resident in the other communities. Individually, each community within the IDC possesses a wealth of talented, experienced professionals. What the concept of the IDC brings is this belief in the need to deepen individual skills, but also, at appropriate times in ones career, to expand beyond individual specializations and skills, and to seek innovative partnerships and cooperation across the Navy s information disciplines. This innovative approach is best defined in The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman. In it he tells how the big innovative breakthroughs of the future will not be achieved through creating new mainstream disciplines, but by innovatively melding heretofore unrelated disciplines to create new, highly specialized skills. Critical Attributes I believe there is a set of fundamental attributes that members of the Information Dominance Corps should possess, they include: If you possess all, or even most, of these attributes, you will be successful in the Information Dominance Corps. Among the best comments I ve ever read regarding focusing on one s work was made by Admiral Hyman Rickover when he stated: When doing a job, any job, one must feel that he owns it, and act as though he will remain in the job forever. He must look after his work just as conscientiously, as though it were his own business and his own money. If he feels he is only a temporary custodian, or that the job is just a stepping stone to a higher position, his actions will not take into account the long-term interests of the organization. Admiral Rickover s words reveal an approach that is extremely relevant and important to all of today s Navy Information professionals, regardless of community. Focusing your attention on your current job, and taking ownership of the long-term outcome of your efforts, is vital to sustained success of people and the organizations they serve. Indeed, I believe that with a single-minded focus on excellence in your current assignment, your future will take care of itself. Professional Competence Dedication Sense of Urgency Leadership Vision The Highest Ethical Standards Attention to Detail Humility Physical Fitness 3

Training and Education For all members of the Information Dominance Corps, I believe the objective of the creation of the IDC (and certainly the intent of its present leaders) was to elevate the proficiency and professionalism of the entire corps through increased training and educational opportunities and more effective career and community management. Our intent is to not only increase the depth of your professional skills early in your career, but to broaden the perspective of all new members of the Corps by giving all entry level personnel a baseline understanding of each of the Navy s information-centric disciplines. As individuals gain more seniority, our intent is to continue to deepen your core skills, while adding more training and experience that encompasses crosscommunity issues. Once you become senior, we intend to provide considerable career opportunities and advanced training to help our next generation of leaders excel in positions of great national and Navy importance. Finally, your aperture is about to open dramatically, and encompass knowledge and understanding of a range of disciplines, many of which you have thought little about, if at all, before now. Your broadened knowledge base and skill sets will allow you to become more well rounded officers, enlisted and civilians who in turn can contribute to and lead a broader range of Navy missions. Your increased expertise will place you in even greater demand, both within the Navy and for joint duty. These greater opportunities will provide a more diverse choice of jobs and duty stations, more opportunities to challenge yourself, and employ the greater range of capability and tools with which you ll be equipped to do your job. All of which will far surpass those available to your predecessors. If given the opportunity, I would gladly trade where I am today in my career, for the opportunity to start over and be a part of the Information Dominance Corps of the next thirty years. I believe the future will be that exciting and the opportunities that promising. What to Expect in Broad Terms What to Expect in More Specific Terms Before I go into specifics on what each member can expect, I want to share what this transformation means for all of you. First, you can expect new career paths that will take you outside of your core specialty. Second, you can expect a new perspective as those in information-centric disciplines become viewed not as enablers, but as warfare specialists, executing and leading the fight. Third, you ll no longer be part of just a small, narrowly defined community. Instead, you ll be part of a larger Corps, made up of highly skilled, agile, creative, adaptive information professionals, delivering a core warfighting capability to the Joint Force. Now, let me zoom into what the IDC may mean to the various elements of the Corps. Civilians Training. Assignment-specific, introductory, on-the-job training, rounded out by intermediate training in community-specific disciplines. A syllabus of entry-level core training, common across the IDC, may be available for self-paced instruction via NKO. Advanced community-focused training, JPME, the Information Dominance Senior Leadership Symposium, and postgraduate seminars are also options are the mid-career to senior level. 4

Education. Opportunities for undergraduate and graduate-level education in military or civilian institutions. The range of options will include fullyfunded programs at select institutions, tuition assistance, with part-time and full-time attendance options. Assignments. Assignments in Navy commands and staffs with some opportunities for rotational assignments in other Service and Joint commands and other government agencies. Training. Entry-level, community-specific, specialized training followed by completion of a PQS comprised of both core modules common across the IDC and community-specific modules, during the member s first tour. Education. Opportunities for graduate-level education in military or civilian institutions. Assignments. Navy operational followed by joint or Navy staff assignments. Expectations. A career-long progression from mastery of entry-level, community-specific skill-sets, to mastery of enterprise-wide management skills and an in-depth understanding of IDC community capabilities and issues. Expectations. Mastery of entry-level, communityspecific skill-sets and working level, practical understanding of what the other IDC communities bring to the table. Enlisted Mid-Grade Officers Training. Entry-level, core community-specific training ( A School) followed, in some cases by specialized intermediate-level training ( C school). Completion of a PQS, comprised of both core modules common across the IDC and community-specific modules, will be required during the member s first tour. Education. Opportunities for undergraduate and graduate-level education in military and civilian institutions. Assignments. Navy operational followed by joint or Navy staff assignments. Training. Intermediate, Navy or joint, communityspecific training. Education. Graduate-level education at a service war college. Research fellowships. Assignments. Emphasis on joint, operational, and those assignments that enable exposure to cross-idc issues. Expectations. Expanding grasp of IDC issues and capabilities and their relevance to the joint fight. Senior Officers Expectations. Mastery of entry-level, communityspecific skill-sets and working level, practical understanding of what the other IDC communities bring to the table. Training. Advanced training, JPME Phase II, Information Dominance Senior Leadership Symposium, postgraduate seminars. Junior Officers 5

Education. Graduate-level education at a senior service war college or civilian institution, post-graduate fellowship or degree programs. Assignments. Continued emphasis on joint and operational milestone assignments, potentially followed by assignment to IDC nominative billets. Expectations. Deep understanding of cross-idc issues and an ability to serve as the face of the IDC in any billet assigned. Conclusion Finally, above you ll see a quote from Thomas Carlyle, Scottish writer and historian. He sums up, in simple terms, what our approach should be as members of the IDC. The CNO has provided us clear direction and a clear vision of where he what he wants us to be the most prominent and dominant Service in the information disciplines. If we focus on delivering information dominance over our adversaries and decision superiority for our commanders and our operating forces then I believe we ll not only make progress as a Corps, we will also achieve our professional objectives as well. Very Respectfully, 6