
Technology Transformation in Connecticut State Government: Insights from CIO Mark Raymond

In an era where digital transformation is reshaping public expectations, state and local governments face the challenge of delivering efficient, accessible, and secure services while navigating complex technological landscapes. Recently, I had the pleasure of welcoming Mark Raymond, Chief Information Officer (CIO) for the State of Connecticut, on The Business of Government Hour. Mark shared his insights on how Connecticut is leveraging technology to enhance public service delivery. This essay synthesizes the key themes and insights from the conversation, emphasizing the strategic use of technology, the adoption of emerging technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), and the cultural and operational shifts driving Connecticut’s digital government agenda.
Strategic IT Optimization: Building a Foundation for Transformation
The Need for IT Optimization
Connecticut’s IT strategy, spearheaded by Raymond, is rooted in the vision of an “all-digital government”. The state recognized that its decentralized IT structure, with responsibilities spread across agencies, was ill-equipped to handle the rapid pace of technological change and rising public expectations. Raymond highlighted the limitations of this model, noting the reliance on “single points of success”—individuals whose expertise was critical but whose absence posed risks. To address this, Connecticut embarked on an IT optimization effort starting in 2019, fully implemented by 2022, consolidating IT resources to build deeper expertise and scalability.
Three Strategic Pillars
The FY25 IT Strategic Plan focuses on three pillars: creating a great place to work, becoming an IT provider of choice, and being viewed as experts in the field. Progress in these areas is evident:
- Great Place to Work: Raymond emphasized fostering a collaborative culture through a nine-month leadership development program for customer success managers (CSMs). These managers, previously IT technicians, now bridge technology and business outcomes, enhancing agency partnerships. Employee engagement initiatives, like “What Do You Think Wednesday” pulse checks, have driven three consecutive years of improved satisfaction scores, boosting morale and retention in a competitive IT labor market.
- IT Provider of Choice: By centralizing IT services, Connecticut has streamlined operations, offering shared services like data center management, cloud solutions, and enterprise security. The Connecticut Education Network (CEN), celebrating its 25th anniversary, exemplifies this model, providing cost-efficient, high-quality connectivity to schools, libraries, and municipalities, with added DDoS protection at no extra cost.
- Experts in the Field: The state is addressing skills gaps in areas like data analysis and integration through project-based training, such as the Department of Social Services’ Medicaid modernization effort, which builds data governance expertise. The creation of an AI Area of Practice further positions Connecticut as a leader in emerging technologies.
Challenges and Future Expansion
Despite progress, integrating agencies with unique funding models, like the Department of Transportation and Motor Vehicles, remains challenging due to restrictive “lockbox” policies. Raymond plans to continue demonstrating the benefits of IT optimization to these agencies, emphasizing scalability and resilience against increasing technological demands.
Digital Government: Enhancing Citizen Experience
Key Initiatives
Connecticut’s digital government initiatives prioritize accessibility, personalization, and convenience. Two standout programs illustrate this:
- Business One-Stop: This platform has increased online business filings and renewals to over 90% of transactions, reducing the need for in-person or mailed submissions. User feedback highlights significant time savings, with one business owner noting a process that once required four hours of legal assistance now takes under 30 minutes.
- Motor Vehicles Online Services: Four years ago, long wait times plagued the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). Today, online services dominate, eliminating lines and enabling quick appointments. This transformation has improved public perception of not just the DMV but all Connecticut digital services.
These initiatives align with three core principles: making services easy to find, personalized to user needs, and completable online. The MyCT app and rapid form digitization further enhance accessibility, reducing barriers for residents and businesses.
Digital Government Summit
The annual Digital Government Summit reinforces these efforts by aligning strategy with action. By engaging both business leaders and technologists, the summit showcases tangible successes and upcoming innovations. A key takeaway from the latest summit was the focus on digital equity, ensuring that technology access and skills are available to all residents. Raymond stressed that excluding populations from digital services forces reliance on costly, inconvenient channels like in-person visits or phone calls, underscoring the need for inclusive design.
Interplay with IT Optimization
Raymond noted that digital government and IT optimization are mutually reinforcing. Seamless citizen experiences depend on robust, integrated back-end systems. Without IT consolidation, the state could only “hide the seams” between agencies for so long before inefficiencies emerged. This synergy ensures sustainable transformation.
Cybersecurity: A Whole-of-State Approach
Collaborative Defense
With state and local governments facing near-constant cyberattacks, Connecticut has adopted a “whole-of-state” cybersecurity strategy, bolstered by an $11 million investment. Collaboration with municipalities, utilities, and private industry is central to this approach. Events like Cyber Nutmeg and Cyber Yankee facilitate knowledge sharing and hands-on training, preparing stakeholders for real-world threats. Monthly calls with state, federal, and local partners further strengthen relationships, ensuring rapid response capabilities.
Tools and Accountability
Dashboards and quarterly reviews empower agencies to manage their threat landscapes. Tools like cybersecurity awareness training, supply chain risk assessments, and rapid patching protocols ensure accountability. Raymond dispelled the notion that consolidation absolves agencies of cybersecurity responsibilities, describing it as a “team sport” requiring collective vigilance. These efforts have reduced risky behaviors and enhanced data protection, critical for safeguarding sensitive resident information.
Lessons from Simulations
Recent simulations and real-world events have reinforced the inevitability of increased technology use and corresponding risks. Connecticut is leveraging machine learning to detect anomalous electronic behavior, shifting from reactive to proactive defense. Continuous vulnerability scanning and updated business continuity plans ensure resilience, enabling critical services to persist during disruptions.
Artificial Intelligence: Low-Risk, High-Impact Applications
Implementation Strategy
Connecticut approaches AI cautiously, adopting a “low and slow” strategy to minimize risks. Low-risk applications include:
- Cybersecurity: AI-driven tools enhance threat detection, operating at speeds beyond human capability.
- Legislative Summarization: AI summarizes complex bills, orienting readers to key concepts.
- Grammar Checking and Question Clarification: AI improves communication clarity and connects citizen inquiries to relevant data.
- Meeting Transcriptions: AI accelerates transcription, supporting public transparency without replacing human roles.
Balancing Innovation and Ethics
To address privacy and bias concerns, Connecticut maintains “humans in the loop,” ensuring AI outputs are reviewed. The state’s appeals systems, designed for human error correction, are extended to AI processes. The AI Area of Practice, with over 60 participants from diverse disciplines, fosters knowledge sharing and curates public-sector-specific training. Collaboration with industry partners ensures secure, vetted solutions.
Policy Development
Raymond works closely with the Connecticut General Assembly to craft AI policies emphasizing transparency, privacy, and security. Proposed measures include mandatory disclosure of AI use in high-risk scenarios, opt-out options, and human review of AI decisions. Recognizing that traditional regulation lags behind technological change, Raymond advocates for principle-based policies, supported by standards bodies to keep pace with innovation.
Workforce Development: Building Future-Ready Skills
Addressing Skills Gaps
Skills shortages in data analysis, integration, and enterprise architecture are persistent challenges. Connecticut’s Chief Data Officer oversees a state data plan and open data portal, but progress is slow due to resource constraints. Large-scale projects, like Medicaid modernization, serve as training grounds, embedding data governance skills. The AI working group further prepares the workforce for emerging technologies through collaborative learning.
Customer Success Managers
The CSM program transforms IT staff into strategic partners, equipping them with skills to understand agency business needs and drive outcomes. By teaching open-ended questioning and storytelling, the program enhances communication and impact. Continuous improvement in agency satisfaction scores reflects the program’s success.
Employee Engagement
Pulse checks and recognition programs sustain morale in a competitive labor market. By acting on employee feedback and involving staff in solutions, Connecticut builds trust and engagement. The “What Do You Think Wednesday” initiative, blending serious and lighthearted questions, fosters open dialogue, reducing skepticism and enhancing retention.
Future Trends: Personalized, Consent-Driven Services
Looking ahead, Raymond envisions a government that personalizes services while prioritizing privacy. Emerging technologies will enable residents to customize interactions, such as setting reminder preferences or accessing consolidated notices through a single portal. Consent-driven data assembly ensures agencies can deliver tailored services without compromising privacy. This vision empowers individuals, enhancing trust and control over government interactions.
Maintaining Public Trust Through Innovation
Raymond’s advice to government IT leaders is to “lean into challenges” with vision and collaboration. By embodying cultural behaviors like “Be One Team,” “Own the Outcome,” and “Make It Better,” leaders can drive innovation while maintaining accountability. Aligning IT strategies with legislative, budgetary, and executive priorities ensures agility, while transparent, principle-based policies safeguard public trust.
Conclusion
Mark Raymond’s leadership illustrates how Connecticut is navigating the complexities of digital transformation in state government. Through IT optimization, digital service enhancements, robust cybersecurity, cautious AI adoption, and workforce development, the state is building a resilient, citizen-centric technology ecosystem. By balancing innovation with ethical considerations and fostering collaboration across sectors, state and local governments strive to meet modern expectations while upholding public trust. As Raymond aptly stated, daring to be one team and owning outcomes is the path to making government better.