Arlington, Virginia Friday, April 14, 2000 Mr. Lawrence: Welcome to The Business of Government Hour, Conversations with Government Leaders. I'm Paul Lawrence, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and the co-chair of the PricewaterhouseCoopers Endowment for the Business of Government. The Endowment was created in 1998 to encourage discussion and research into new approaches to improving government effectiveness. Find out more about the Endowment by visiting us on the Web at www.endowment.pwcglobal.com. The Business of Government Hour focuses on outstanding government executives who are changing the way government does business. Our guests tonight, John Mitchell, acting director of the U.S. Mint. Welcome, John. Mr. Mitchell: Hi, Paul. Mr. Lawrence: And Colleen Vogel, staff director of Mint operations. Welcome, Colleen. Ms. Vogel: Hi, Paul. Mr. Lawrence: Well, why don't we begin by talking about the mint, because most of us at a certain age remember the Mint from the James Bond movie Goldfinger and Fort Knox, but I know there's much more. So perhaps you could tell us about other parts of the mint. Mr. Mitchell: I'd be happy to. I have the same memories of Fort Knox and Odd Job. As a matter of fact, Fort Knox as a Mint holds over $100 billion of the nation's assets that we protect as part of our protection business unit. In addition, we have circulating coin production that everyone is familiar with as pocket change. We're going to be minting a record 29 or 30 billion coins this year, including the new 50-state quarters program, and the Golden Dollar which everyone is very excited about. We have a very active IT side and collectibles side as well. We had over a billion dollars in revenues last year in various collectibles as well as the only investment product that we sell, the bullion coin, the American Eagle platinum, gold, and silver, and lots of other things as well. So we're a very active business. Mr. Lawrence: Well, maybe we can begin by talking about your careers and the various positions you'd had. Colleen, do you want to start? Ms. Vogel: Sure. I started my career as a GS-2 at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, and as I've grown in my career, I have seen the government grow as well in the way that it does business. In my various positions in accounting, procurement and human resources, I've watched our focus go from the business that we designed to one of customer service and benchmarking and utilizing best practices -- really trying to identify what it is that the customers need and delivering that rather than what we think they need. Mr. Mitchell: Similarly, as a grade 2 at the Export-Import Bank during college, that was my start of my federal career. I've worked at the Federal Reserve Board, other Treasury offices, a few years in the private sector. That has provided a great balance of the type of skills that you need to work not only in a public-sector agency, but one that has a private-sector focus and business attitude about it. Even some of the courses that I took for my undergraduate degree at Maryland many years ago, like cost accounting and others, that information was dormant for about 20 years, and then all of a sudden I come into a major manufacturing operation like the Mint and I'm now able to use a lot of the skills that went unused in other organizations. Mr. Lawrence: What drew you both to a career in public service? Mr. Mitchell: I think from my perspective it's twofold. The public service is very important to me. It's a passion of mine. It's important to me that whatever organization I'm part of delivers excellent products and services to the public. The Mint specifically has such a wonderful combination of public and private-sector characteristics it's an opportunity to really soar, to flex your wings and to take on a number of different opportunities and challenges that the Mint is pretty unique in being able to provide. Ms. Vogel: For me, too, a sense of serving the greater good, and putting all that coinage in the public's hand is important. Early on, job security and interesting work is what brought me into the government. Especially for me in procurement… there is a lot of interesting things to do in that field, and it continues to grow and become more important in the business cycle. It's also helped that the public service in general has changed and grown. And working at the mint, you operate using private-sector practices in a public forum. Mr. Lawrence: You've mentioned that a couple times, Colleen, that you operate in a private-sector setting, and I think most people think of the Mint as just another federal government agency, but it's really not. Perhaps you could talkabout that and some of the flexibility it allows you. Mr. Mitchell: That's exactly right. One of the things I want to say early on to turn your question a little bit initially, is that one of our opportunities but also one of our frustrations is that we've had the support of the administration and Congress to gain the flexibility to allow ourselves to operate more like a business. So we've been a good opportunity to model various business practices on behalf of the administration and Congress. We have taken to heart all of the President and Vice President's reinvention initiatives and have completed them all at the mint, and they're ongoing and thriving. One of our frustrations is that other people say, well, you're different and we can't do the same thing at our agency, and that most of what we do is very service and customer oriented and is easily translatable to other federal agencies. In terms of other aspects of the mint, we think that what we do, and the flexibility that we've gained through legislation as well as by taking on other initiatives, allows us to maintain a very high level of the integrity that goes along with being a federal agency and fulfilling our mission as mandated by Congress, but also operating very much in a private-sector manner in terms of being profit and loss driven, very cost conscious, very customer focused. Something we'll be talking about a little bit later, basically reorganizing to be better aligned with our customers in our various business units. Mr. Lawrence: Colleen, how about some of the procurement changes that exist because you have more flexibility? Ms. Vogel: Again, a lot of the things that we've done. For instance the procurement executive over at Treasury, when we were describing some of the things that we had done, realized right away that a lot of them were things that other people in the department could do even with the regulations. Initially, we had done all of our streamlining and things from our own experience and knowledge when we first got the procurement waiver, but once we got through those initial shifts, we found that to change even further we really needed to get some help. So one of the key things that we did is we hired PricewaterhouseCoopers to come in and do a review and a benchmarking of our practices. Jay Tansing led that effort, and they found that a lot of the things we do are best practices in both public and private sector, and we didn't just benchmark private sector. There are a lot of practices out there in the public sector as well. They also come up with some new opportunities for us to make the procurement cycle go better. One of the main things we did was develop a procurement council of the key managers in procurement to identify the needs across the business. There were a lot of people just looking at their piece of the pie and we found that that wasn't particularly fruitful and we'd get a lot more accomplished. Along those same lines, we conducted a spend analysis that Dun & Bradstreet did for us. Personally I think that's the most significant thing that we've done recently, because it gives you a lot of information and it tells you where you're spending your money, how you're spending your money, with whom, and it gives you a lot of opportunities to continue to buy wiser. Of course, spend analysis is something anyone could do. You don't have to be waived from the federal regulations to do that. Again, with the procurement council, anyone could do that. We also established cross-functional teams like a lot of folks are doing, and we have a really significant push right now on performance-based service contracts… from small incentives for getting a job done early, to larger more complex measurements. Mr. Mitchell: One of the things that you hear Colleen addressing is that procurement is very much seen as a partner within the organization with the various business units and corporate CFO and CIO functions. Initially, when we got the waiver from the federal acquisition regulations most saw it as a business opportunity. Some saw it as an opportunity to avoid any sort of oversight. We quickly, with some very good support from senior leadership, dispelled that notion and that, in fact, we would have lean procedures, but ones that would, again, protect the government's interests and have a high level of credibility and integrity. After that, procurement has marketed themselves very successfully within the organization. They are now seen as a partner from the very beginning, not somebody that you bring in later or even late in the process, and an organization that will get the best products, the best services, the best suppliers, companies, et cetera, into our business units that will help our business units accomplish their work and realize opportunities. Mr. Lawrence: During this process was procurement elevated in its position in the organization? Mr. Mitchell: No. It stayed exactly where it was originally which was within the office of the chief financial officer. Thanks to folks like Colleen Vogel, Joan Ting and others in procurement, they took on the leadership themselves and have not only provided great service, but also marketed their service well. Mr. Lawrence: It's time for a break. We'll be right back with more of The Business of Government Hour in just a minute. (Intermission) Mr. Lawrence: Welcome back to The Business of Government Hour. I'm Paul Lawrence, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and tonight's conversation is with John Mitchell, acting director of the U.S. Mint, and Colleen Vogel, staff director of Mint operations. In the second segment, why don't we spend some time talking about your experiences at the Mint, what it was like when you arrived, and what were some of the changes you made? Mr. Mitchell: When we arrived at the mint, and this roughly goes back 6 or 7 years for myself and the former director, and for Colleen it goes back a few years prior to that. What we found was a very traditional stovepipe-oriented organization and one that did its job well in the old way of doing business, but hadn't been as responsive to the market and hadn’t realized opportunities that were there. For example, from its perspective, the Mint was customer-focused in that it provided the products to its customer within roughly 8 weeks or beyond for half of its products, and the other half of its products there was no tracking for it because it could take up to months. Now we've completely turned that around in terms of providing standard delivery in 3 weeks, 4 weeks, and many cases within a week, and next-day delivery as well. Number one, in terms of the circulating coin field and the numismatic or collectable side of our business, the Mint had succeeded in running things the way it had for decades, but really had not taken advantage of the opportunities that the market presented. Number two, the Mint had a customer focus that internally determined what the customer wanted versus talking to the customers to determine what products and services they would want. Ms. Vogel: I agree. When I first came 10 years ago, the Mint was the government that also happened to be in business, and I think we've shifted to a business that also happens to be the government. Specifically to procurement, small portions of our procurements when I first came to the Mint were exempt, but otherwise we were regulated. Then we received the procurement waiver in 1995 and we began the process of shifting all of our practices to be more streamlined. Mr. Lawrence: What do you think started all this change? Mr. Mitchell: Well, I think that going back 5 to 6 years, believe it not, the Mint never had a strategic plan. We're only 208 years old, so I guess it's understandable it took us a little long to get out of the chute. But we'd never had a strategic plan, and we crafted our very first one which, all things considered, was a very modest document, but it is what that document represented to the Mint. Number one, we designed that document in partnership with our union. We had union leadership sitting around the table with management from the Mint and we created a strategic plan from scratch. And we really focused on our vision, our mission, and our guiding principles as to what values we as an institution held, and then set on a course of accomplishing 12 to 14 projects. If you look at that plan now, it's not in a good format. It has no measurements. It very much is not aligned in terms of goals, objectives, strategies, performance measurements, et cetera. But it was a great beginning, and two other things to note about it. One is that it projected out a vision as to what we could become and the things we needed to do to get there, including legislation. It also established, as part of our culture, stretch goals, that it's okay to set the bar high, and if you fall short of that, then you still have made much more progress than you otherwise would have made with more modest goals. I think that document and how it was designed in partnership was a very significant turn for the Mint. Mr. Lawrence: Was it difficult to create, getting people and establishing the vision? I think one of the stories that we hear is that people don't have strategic plans because it's just too hard. Mr. Mitchell: Yes, it was. It was also an exciting time. I remember one of our union stewards at the time, a gentleman named Dale Nuanis from our Denver Mint, as we sat around the table in those initial years of our strategic plan creation and then modification, there were only maybe 30 or 40 of us off-site for 3 days putting together this plan. From a relationship perspective, one of the things that Dale mentioned was that as a union individual it was rewarding to him to look across the table and not see three and four-headed management dragons staring back at him; that we're all people, that we all have the same challenges. As the union listened to us as managers talking about all of our different perspectives on how to realize opportunities and how to vanquish a lot of challenges that we had. They also understood that we didn't speak in one voice, we weren't monolithic, that it was a very active discussion which began to build the trust within the organization to deal with issues and not be hung up with personalities. Mr. Lawrence: How about the adoption of the kinds of goals you talked about? It sounded like the bar was being raised on the staff. Mr. Mitchell: Well, that's right. What we basically said is, and it takes a while for everyone, ourselves included, to learn how to do this. What we said is, don't assume any of the restrictions that we currently operate under. If we could both resolve longstanding problems that we've had as well as realize a number of opportunities, what do we need to accomplish that. So when I mentioned earlier about how any agency can do what we've done, it's easier for someone to look at us now. We're self-funded. We have a procurement waiver. Nine of ten political positions were eliminated with the full support of the President and the Congress. We've created new programs. The 50-state quarter program and the Golden Dollar program are all new programs that we worked with the administration and Congress to create. All of those things are in place now that give us the foundation to work from, but we didn't have any of those in 93' and '94. And we basically made our business case to the Hill and to our administration to say, this is what we need to accomplish our objectives. So it's really taking the blinders off, thinking outside of the box, and using any creative techniques you can use to say what could we become, and what do our customers want from us that helps guide that vision as to where we think we should take the Mint. Ms. Vogel: I think a key to the success, too, is just the partnering with the union and bringing the employees in and not having management go off-site, create a plan and then bring it back. Each year we've gotten better and better at including more of the non-managerial people in the strategic planning process so that it kind of institutionalizes the culture that management has identified for us. Mr. Lawrence: Earlier you talked about minting a huge number of coins, and I understand you have a half-a-billion dollar capital investment program underway at the Mint to improve the manufacturing plants. Could you tell us about that? Mr. Mitchell: I'd be happy to. One of the key business drivers we were able to identify to Congress, and in fact the chairmen of our appropriations committees, House and Senate, were fully supportive of this idea. Prior to our public enterprise fund which is how we generate the revenues to recover our expenses and otherwise turn the profits over to the Treasury general fund. Prior to that we were under an appropriation in four other funding sources. What we identified to those chairmen is that we had a business need to become self-funded. One of the key reasons for that was our capital budget and the need for it. Mr. Lawrence: Let's stop, and we'll come back after the break. (Intermission) Mr. Lawrence: Welcome back to The Business of Government Hour. I'm Paul Lawrence, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and tonight's conversation is with John Mitchell, acting director of the U.S. Mint, and Colleen Vogel, staff director for Mint operations. John, before we went to commercial, you were talking about the capital investment program. Let me let you finish. Mr. Mitchell: Briefly, Paul, what we did prior to our public enterprise fund is; we could only spend something like $5 million a year because, in the appropriations process as we're all well aware, there are a lot of competing priorities. We had equipment that was 25 to 30 years old. We have a very aggressive capital budget that we're 3 years into our 5–year half-billion-dollar capital campaign that is bringing in new high-speed coining presses and annealing furnaces. We're making some building improvements, but the vast majority of that is equipment oriented. We've got state-of-the-art robotics in our San Francisco Mint in terms of packaging our products, and so it's been a good opportunity to catch up. That half-billion-dollar program represents about 4 percent or so of our revenues, and that's very much in line with industry averages of about 3 or 3 1/2 percent. After this 5 years, it'll settle back into an average of maybe $40 million or so per year. But it's been a very necessary investment as well as recovery from years of neglected capital. Mr. Lawrence: Let me shift to talking about the employees of the Mint, because you mentioned in terms of your work with the unions as well. I understand the Mint has earned three national labor/management awards, and every manager and union steward has received some front-line leadership training. How did it come about? How did it begin, and what changes has it brought about? Mr. Mitchell: You're exactly right. We're very proud of the recognition that we've gotten from the Vice President from the President's labor partnership council. It started with the fact that we were the first Treasury Bureau, and perhaps one of the first few in government to sign an agency-wide partnership agreement with our union back in 1994 and we took a very open approach. We included the union in a lot of discussions early on, and so it was partly that change, but also the building of relationships and trust. That greases so much of the operations of a business, for a group of people to trust each other and to deal with only the issues and not get hung up on personalities. So that was very important. We also had an environment prior to '94, where to say we had strained labor-management relations would not be an exaggeration; our Denver Mint was picketed by its employees… informational pickets since these are government employees. The Denver facility, at the time, had a little over 400 employees, and we had over 200 grievances and other labor complaints. We were not going from a quiet operation into an even stronger one. We were going into a labor relationship in turmoil to what is a recognized and very strong partnership. Mr. Lawrence: What do you think the lessons learned are from turning about that kind of relationship? Mr. Mitchell: I think inclusion is very important. Building relationships so that people understand who sits across the table and alongside them. Also, I keep getting back to the business and the customer, we exist to serve the public, and focusing on what it is that we do at the Mint and what our customer wants from us, doesn't just need from us, but what also wants from us, how and how often and time frames and all sorts of other measurements of customer satisfaction; what we as a business need to do and be held accountable for in running a successful business. The combination of building relationships and trust, getting to know each other so that we work better together as a team and having a team focus, and then having the organization focus on itself as a business that is in existence to serve the public and our customers. I think all of those things woven together is the reason that we've been able to be so successful. Mr. Lawrence: What else are you doing differently with the employees at the Mint? Let's go through the life cycle. I notice you're actively recruiting, and I understand you have some very interesting training and development programs going on. Perhaps you could tell us about those as well. Ms. Vogel: We do. We have an individual development plan program for our employees that's very robust and it offers on-the-job training, tuition reimbursement, various job assignments. I'm like the poster child for various job assignments being the procurement director and then doing a rotation through human resources, and now as the staff director. We've also instituted many flexibility that are just friendly towards our employees like our flexible work schedules, public transportation incentives, telecommuting, things like that that make it just a little easier on the employee and also are good recruiting tools. Mr. Mitchell: I think, Paul, a couple of things. One is Colleen was responsible for creating an employee advocate position down in our human resources office; somebody that's responsible for coordinating with new employees as they come on board and then working with them for their first months to make sure everything is going well. While that isn't a revolutionary concept by any stretch, it's something we hadn't been doing, and our employees appreciate. Even our new headquarters location on 801 9th Street in Northwest, our building is a beautiful building that is very much designed around the openness and the environment. Our employees can see an icon as to what the Mint is all about and how valued the employees and their contribution are, and therefore a building that has been designed around those principles with a number of amenities. I hasten to add at a price that's at least $5 below market value. So we did a great job, Colleen and her staff, in negotiating a great deal. Mr. Lawrence: Well, Colleen, let me ask you something you mentioned about changing jobs. Our surveys of federal employees is by and large they almost hate changing jobs and yet you've been able to do that. How did you do that? Ms. Vogel: Well, the need was there. The thing about the Mint that I think is unique is that typically in government, it's been my experience, that you get into a series and then that is where you are and there's no moving around. The Mint is different in that when the need is there and if they can match up the right skills with the need… for instance, it didn't seem reasonable to some people that I would move from procurement to human resources, but I did have a degree in human resources and I had some experience. And so it just flowed like that. It was short-term. It was really a matter of hiring someone else to fill the job permanently, but at the same time being able to take an opportunity to let someone else come in who really wasn't too familiar with the day-to-day operations and then find opportunities to help them make change in their organization. Mr. Mitchell: If I could, we have two points then at this point, the strategic plan and IDPs. We, in our strategic plan in '94 and '95 wrote in deliberately that every employee at the Mint that was entitled to have an individual development plan and that we would support that plan. We also added that they had to take the initiative to create it because initially we were talking about doing them for each employee and then we decided, no, they need to take the initiative to seize that opportunity. What we also said is that we're going to create an environment where these opportunities can be realized and people can go outside of their current job field and that the key to that success is tying it into the strategic plan and the business interests of the agency. Because we have so many varied operations within the mint, there really is quite an open field for people to provide or identify those sorts of opportunities for them. They work with their supervisor and they work with others to both have on-the-job training, off-site classes, on-site training, as well, and gravitate into other fields. What we want is for employees to feel that they're contributing, know that they're the reason for our success, and we want to keep them as long as we can. But if they also want to go outside of the Mint down the road and they can gain a lot of marketable skills at the mint, and we have very marketable skills at the mint, then that's great. Then that's a success for us. They helped us for a period of time. We had folks that helped create our Web for example that after 3 or 4 years of developing themselves in that arena have taken jobs with million-dollar stock options and other things that we can't quite compete with in the public sector, but that's great. It's a success for them and for us. Mr. Lawrence: You raise two questions I'm interested in asking about. First, one of the things, the stories created about the federal work force, is that it tends to be older. A lot of employees are near retirement, and are very resistant to the kind of changes you're describing. So, I wonder is the Mint not typical in that sense? Mr. Mitchell: I think we were very typical. What we tried to do early on is, a number of folks in leadership positions both formal and informal decided that there was this great opportunity, that the Mint was an incredible sleeping giant. Then what we did was, we found folks throughout the organization, including individuals like Colleen and people from all the different functional areas at every level of the organization. By including the union leadership and union stewards, that bought into it our values, our principles… realizing opportunities, having a fun place to work, allowing people to develop and really blossom, I think that's what's really driven us. As part of our business, all the things we do with a profit-and-loss focus in terms of our financial management, having an enterprise resource planning system, a Web site that's very profitable and puts us in the top 20 national E-retailers. A lot of stuff we do is cutting edge and therefore our existing work force has changed, but we've also recruited a lot of folks into our organization that are part of a new level of enthusiasm for what we do. Ms. Vogel: I've also seen, though, that a lot of our employees that have been around for a while, I watched them become rejuvenated also because there was an influx of change and excitement. So those people were driving things. But then also the people that have been there for a while jumped on the wagon and took over as well. Mr. Mitchell: A very quick note. By and large we have done this with most of the folks that were there when we came on board. There have been some including in leadership positions that just did not want to go that route. So the influx of new talent, but also the re-energizing of existing talent is what's accounted for our success. Mr. Lawrence: We'll be right back with more of The Business of Government Hour. (Intermission) Mr. Lawrence: Welcome back to The Business of Government Hour. I'm Paul Lawrence, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and tonight's conversation is with John Mitchell, acting director of the U.S. Mint, and Colleen Vogel, staff director of Mint operations. Let me just continue on the last theme because we talked about the change of the present employees, but how about recruiting new employees? It's very difficult for government to do, I understand. You even mentioned it, John, there are no stock options. You have to really want to come to work for the government. So how is the Mint getting new people? Mr. Mitchell: That's exactly right. What we have is a situation that we can talk about the fact that we are a very fun place to work, people coming to work with us either with existing skills or wanting to develop new ones, that we have an incredibly supportive training program and culture that developing new talents is a good thing and something that we welcome and encourage. Also, the environment that we have is very innovative and risk oriented, obviously measured risks, but nonetheless we encourage risk-taking in our organization. A lot of features that anyone could employ, we do at the mint, and we've also got products that are in everyone's pockets right now. Everyone is very conscious of the quarters, of the Golden Dollar. They've seen our various promotions. They know that for example Kermit is our spokes-frog for our 50 State Quarters program, and they've seen the new ads with a hipper George Washington out there that's promoting our dollar coin. So, there is a buzz about the Mint that we've been able to create. And beyond that, we want them to know that the reason this buzz has been created is because of our employees. By coming and joining us they can both use and develop skills that are very marketable, that they can either stay at the Mint, which would be great for us, or then move on to something else. That's also great because while they're with us they'll have fun with their work, they'll know they're contributing, and they'll leave with very marketable skills. Ms. Vogel: Like we were talking about earlier, the flexibility between going from job to job. If you've identified as John said through your IDP that you have interests in other areas, we really are very open to letting you take temporary assignments in those other areas. There's a lot of trust in our organization, so with a sense of trust that your job will still be there for you when you're ready to go back. I've heard from our presidential management interns, and when they are helping us recruit new PMIs, they frequently talk about the Mint as a breeding ground for knowledge and expanding yourself and for entering various areas that are of interest to you. If you can identify, for the Mint, something that will help them and help you, the Mint generally approves those plans. So the new people coming into the organization find that they're not put in a job and then just left there to do just that one thing, that if they can think of it, they can probably do it. Mr. Lawrence: Speaking of marketable skills, technology is becoming an increasingly important part of all government agencies, and I understand the Mint was one of the first to install enterprise resource planning, or ERP computer systems, and this has been a big step. I wonder if you could tell us, what is ERP and why has it been so important to the mint. Mr. Mitchell: I think to say that we had a nonintegrated, Byzantine type of automated systems before our ERP would not be an exaggeration. It was pretty horrible. In fact, it was part of the reason that we could not get a clean opinion back in '94 on our financial statements. We went to an ERP because of the power of the information systems, basically going from the Dark Ages to the 21st century, if you will, because it tightly integrated manufacturing, financial, sales and distribution, and database mining and warehousing capabilities, and we need all of those. We are a manufacturer, we distribute products. We need to have strong financials. We need to work with our customers and serve them best at the lowest cost. So all of those things together were important to us, or are important to us, and we basically implemented the entire suite of systems, a Peoplesoft ERP solution, plus three other systems in 12 months and went live in October of '98. Mr. Lawrence: When we talk about bringing ERP to government, we often hear it won't work. This has been widely used in the private sector, but yet it won't work in government, and yet it seems to have worked. Mr. Mitchell: It works very well. As we usually do at the mint, we saw it not only as a challenge, because it was a very significant challenge especially because it was our 100 percent Y2K solution, so the risks were large with the implementation. In addition, what we saw with it was a tremendous opportunity for both people in functional areas as well as our information technology area to get into state-of-the-art systems that all of us could then benefit from. The very robust data and reporting that it captures, helps us to run our business and to look down the road and see the future instead of looking at reports that are months old. That’s basically managing by rear-view mirror. Everyone, any federal agency, can implement the ERP. Certainly the financial side of it, but tying it into certain service measurements matches up to what any federal agency does. If you happen to have a particularly unique product or service like we do at the Mint with coins and coin-related products, then for us the manufacturing piece, and we realize we're one of the few manufacturers in federal government, then for us there was an added benefit as well. It was taking a very bad situation, going out into the market and seeing what the best solutions were and then getting a commitment to implement it within the mint, and also seeing it as a great opportunity. Mr. Lawrence: You call your call ERP coins consolidated information systems. I read in an earlier interview you said without coins we would not have been able to have been the successful E-commerce site that we now are. What does that mean? Mr. Mitchell: That’s exactly right as well. What that means is that coins have all of the data out there… from the point that a huge roll of strip that manufacture coins from comes in the front door to where that goes out the door, whether it's bagged coin to the Federal Reserve or packaged coin to a collector. We know where that is and can track that through the entire system as well as what the costs and the revenues related to it are. So on top of that, we have overlaid a Web system that takes advantage of that rich database and now gives us the opportunity and our customers an opportunity, to interact directly with us and place an order for example that goes immediately into the system without any human interaction. Without our very robust ERP, we could not have the kind of Web that we have currently. Mr. Lawrence: You seem very comfortable with E-commerce, and I'm wondering what challenges does E-commerce present to the public sector. Mr. Mitchell: I think E-commerce is just an incredible field of opportunities from E-procurement, and Colleen has got that lead on that for the Mint, and the supplier relationships, the opportunity to purchase goods and services that everyone in the federal government needs at the best quality and the lowest prices. I think it's a tremendous opportunity. For us with the additional customer component and the collector of our coins and coin products, it's a great opportunity to very much realize our customer's relationship management, permission marketing and all of the other things that from an E-retail side we traditionally can realize an opportunity from. Mr. Lawrence: Colleen, how about the challenges of E-procurement? Ms. Vogel: The challenges are pretty great, actually, because it's so new. It's new really in the private sector also. The good thing is that someone coming to the mint, they're not going to be behind the power curve. Coming to the Mint in procurement you will get on the ground floor of something that is important throughout the purchasing community. We are looking at reverse auctioning, we're looking at buying our products directly from the manufacturers without even going through procurement at all just based on the need as identified through coins. We're very excited about it, though. We're going to do it, it's very interesting, but it is all very new. So we're excited, but we've got a lot ahead of us. Mr. Mitchell: I also think, Paul, very briefly, that there's a culture that also goes along with the Web that is very closely matched to the Mint culture. That is, we move very fast and we're very customer-focused. There's an immediacy within our operations, and that very much typifies the Web. So both within the Mint in terms of how we work it as well as how our customers view us as well as recruiting individuals, the Web is emblematic, basically, of the new Mint. Mr. Lawrence: We're almost out of time, but how about a couple of the key challenges in the future for the mint? Mr. Mitchell: It's hard to summarize, but number one will be growing this entrepreneurship that we've been for the last 5 or 6 years and maturing it into an organization that's thriving and risk oriented, but also more stable. Then we've also got some other opportunities with our customers and with manufacturing and the Web and the whole E-field that I think we're very excited about seeing what those opportunities bring to us. Mr. Lawrence: I'm afraid we're out of time. I want to thank you very much, John and Colleen, for spending time with us today. We've really enjoyed the conversation. This has been The Business of Government Hour, Conversations with Government Leaders. I'm Paul Lawrence, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers and the co-chair of the PricewaterhouseCoopers Endowment for the Business of Government. To learn more about the Endowment's program and research into new approaches to improving government effectiveness, visit us on the Web www.endowment.pwcglobal.com. See you next week.