Swan(sea) Song – personal research during my six years at Swansea ... and bey...
URISA's GIS Management Institute to Advance GIS Operations
1. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Esri Annual User Conference
San Diego, California - July 24, 2012
Greg Babinski, MA, GISP
Finance & Marketing Manager
King County GIS Center
Seattle, WA
URISA President
Summit Chief Editor
2. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Origins and why focus on GIS management?
What is the business need?
What will the GMI do?
What will the GMI do in cooperation with others?
Why URISA?
Who will use the GMI and why?
How will the GMI operate?
Questions and suggestions?
3. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Originated with basic questions:
What causes variation in municipal GIS operations?
Why do some GIS operations fail?
Each municipality is unique
City and county business focus often varies
Population
Nature and level of economic development
GIS development history and funding
GIS operational budget and staffing
GIS strategic plan
Municipality’s institutional expectations
GIS operational vision – or lack of vision?
4. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Originated with basic questions:
What causes variation in municipal GIS operations?
Why do some GIS operations fail?
Outcome: URISA’s GIS Capability Maturity Model
Maturity for the model indicates progression of an organization
towards GIS capability that maximizes:
Potential for the use of state of the art GIS technology
Commonly recognized quality data
Organizational best practices appropriate for municipal business use
The Municipal GIS Capability Maturity Model assumes two broad
areas of GIS operational development:
Enabling capability
Execution process ability
See: URISA Proposes a Local Government GIS Capability Maturity Model:
http://www.esri.com/news/arcnews/winter1011articles/urisa-
proposes.html
5. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Originated with basic questions:
Is there a GIS profession?
2010 -URISA Commits to Develop Tier 9: The Geospatial
Management Competency Model
URISA GMCM Core Team:
David DiBiase
Patrick Kennelly
Greg Babinski
Coordination with USDOLETA
URISA’s GMCM delivered to
DOLETA June 8, 2012
http://www.urisa.org/gmcm_review
6. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Originated with basic questions:
Is there a GIS profession?
What is the GIS Profession’s Moral Imperative?
Does GIS provide value to society?
Is There a GIS Profession?
ArcNews, Summer 2012: Strengthening the GIS Profession, by
David DiBiase
What is the Moral Imperative of the GIS Profession?
The GIS profession uses geographic theory, spatial analysis, and
geospatial technology to help society manage the Earth’s finite space,
with its natural resources and communities, on a just and sustainable
basis for the benefit of humanity.
Does GIS Provide Value to Society?
ArcNews, Summer 2012: King County Documents ROI of GIS
(minimum $776 million net benefit over 18 years, $87 million
in 2010)
http://www.esri.com/news/arcnews/index.html
7. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
What is the Business Need?
GIS operations are maturing – or they should be
GIS operations manage large capital investments
GIS operations require large operating budgets
GIS is a proven technology for effective municipal
administration (standard of care)
GIS operations deliver huge returns on investment
Local agency leaders and managers must deploy GIS for
cost-effective government services (and to comply with the
standard of care)
Geospatial technology is complex, continues to evolve, and
continues to provide new opportunities
The management of municipal GIS operations is complex,
evolving, and requires a scientific, professional approach
8. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
What is the Business Need?
Is GIS management distinct from other types of municipal
management?
The management of GIS requires knowledge skills and abilities that set it apart from and
above many other management domains, due to its complexity, importance for effective
services, and integrative role in local government enterprise operations.
Proposals that GIS operations should be under the supervision of licensed engineers or
surveyors are not supported by the breadth of knowledge domains required for GIS
management.
Management Areas
Knowledge Domains GIS Survey Engineering IT Project Mgt Geography
GIS Technology X O O
Survey O X O O
Engineering O X O
General IT X X O
PM X O X
Geography X X
Cartography X O X
GIS Science X O
Databases X X
Programming X X
Geospatial Law X
Contracting X O O X X
Governance X X O
9. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
What is the Business Need?
The Ah-ha Moment:
GIS operational process maturity (aka the GIS
Capability Maturity Model)
and…
GIS management capability (aka the Geospatial
Management Competency Model)
Can both best be defined against…
A body of geospatial management best practices and
standards, or the GIS Management Body of Knowledge
10. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
What will the URISA GIS Management Institute
do?
Develop the URISA GIS Management Body of Knowledge
(GMBOK)
Maintain the URISA Geospatial Management Competency
Model (GMCM)
Maintain the URISA GIS Capability Maturity Model
(GCMM)
Accredit the capability and maturity of county, city, and
regional GIS operations against the GCMM
Accredit GIS Management educational programs for
alignment with the URISA GMBOK and GMCM
11. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
What will the GMI do with in cooperation with
others?
Include an advisory council from other geospatial
management professional stakeholders
Include international stakeholders
Advance the future certification of GIS Managers by
developing a GIS Managers designation of the GISP in
partnership with GISCI
12. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Why URISA?
URISA developed and launched GISCI
URISA developed and manages GISCorps
URISA has 50 years of study, experience & intellectual
capital related to GIS development and management
URISA has a portfolio of publications and educational
offerings, including the ULA, that can be aligned to
support GIS management
URISA has a history of 31 years of ESIG awards that
form an initial resource for recognizing GIS
management best practices
URISA has designated the development of the GIS
Management Institute as a priority initiative
13. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Who will use the GMI, and why?
Babinski’s Theory of GIS Management: As GIS Operational Maturity Improves, ROI Increases
14. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Who will use the GMI, and why?
GIS Managers – to assess their competency against the GMCM and
GMBOK and plan their professional development
Organizations with GIS Operations – to assess their capability and
process maturity against peer agencies and by becoming GMI
accredited against the GMBOK via the GCMM
Geospatial professionals – to assess and align their own practices
against the GMBOK
GIS management educational programs – to assess and refine their
curriculum by becoming GMI accredited against the GMBOK, GMCM
& GCMM
GIS management consultants – to assess and refine their practices
against the GMBOK, GMCM & GCMM
In the future, GIS managers will use GMI products and services to
prepare for achieving a GISP manager designation through GISCI
15. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
How will the GMI Operate?
URISA
Education
ULA & UMA
GMBOK:
GIS Management
Body of Knowledge
GMCM: GCMM: GIS
Geospatial Capability
Management Maturity
Competency Model Municipal
GISCI Model GIS GIS
Management Operations
GIS Managers Educational
Certification Future: GCMM
Program Accreditation
Component Accreditation ROI Services
Other
Accreditation
Benchmarking
16. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
How will the GMI Operate?
An operational program of URISA
Possible 501(c)(6) status
Under the management of a geospatial
management professional
Broad geospatial advisory council
After initial development, sustained via GMBOK
subscriptions & GMI accreditation fees
URISA priority initiative
17. URISA’s GIS Management Institute
Questions, Comments, Suggestions?
Q: Why an ‘Institute’?
A: An authoritative organization, based on research, for the
promotion of best practices in geospatial management.
Q: Why ‘accreditation’?
A: GMI accreditation recognizes the standards and practices of
organizations, while GISCI certification recognizes the skills of
individuals
18. Greg Babinski, MA, GISP
URISA President
SUMMIT Chief Editor
Finance & Marketing Manager
King County GIS Center
201 South Jackson Street, Suite 706
Seattle, WA 98104
206-263-3753
greg.babinski@kingcounty.gov
www.kingcounty.gov/gis