Overview

March 14

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Workforce challenges have been a topic on many minds since the world began to reopen in 2022. While the private sector bounced back quickly, the public sector is still acutely feeling the crunch—especially on notoriously under-resourced procurement teams. With higher demands for public services, job vacancies are felt harder than ever. 

In this webinar, we’ll dive into the critical shifts in the workforce over the past few years, the new values and expectations of a changing labor market, the role that modernizing technology and process plays and how public procurement leaders can bring it all together to support their teams. 

Join Government Technology and Euna Solutions on Thursday March 14, 2024, at 11 AM PT/2 PM ET to learn new approaches to supporting and developing the public procurement workforce.  

You’ll Learn: 

  • The current state of the workforce and what that means for public procurement 
  • Strategies for navigating technology and values friction 
  • Ways leaders can support, develop and empower their workforce 

Speakers

Mitchell Shim headshot

Mitchell Shim

Manager, Implementation – Procurement, Euna Solutions

As the Manager, Implementation - Procurement at Euna Solutions, Mitchell works closely with public procurement teams around the globe to help them reach their procurement goals as quickly as possible and master the Euna Procurement platform.

Sean McSpaden headshot

Sean McSpaden — Moderator

Senior Fellow, Center for Digital Government

Sean McSpaden is an executive level information technology professional with over 30 years of experience in the private, non-profit, and public sectors. His background includes the start-up and management of several small businesses and he has served on the Board of Directors or in Executive Director positions for several 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations. Sean’s public service experience includes progressively responsible positions as an IT analyst, and in statewide coordination, management and leadership positions within the Executive and Legislative branches of Oregon state government. From June 2008 to September 2013, served as the state of Oregon’s Deputy State Chief Information Officer.