In Pursuit with Mike Vichich — Government Technology & Public Sector Sales
Milton Dohoney, Ann Arbor City Administrator, shares 40 years of public service insight on how cities buy tech, what vendors get wrong, and how government really works. Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 00:21 Milton's 40-year career across five cities 01:34 Council-manager vs. strong mayor government 02:41 Writing "It Always Begins With Leadership" 04:06 The four layers of city law: charter, ordinances, resolutions & policy 06:09 Who's the "Supreme Court" for a city? 07:46 How charter amendments get proposed and approved 09:23 Administrative regulations and how policy gets changed 13:50 When well-intentioned rules create unintended consequences 15:27 How Milton shortened council meetings from 7 hours to 3 18:57 How cities buy technology: the ideal procurement process end to end 22:56 The role of finance in a tech purchase 23:38 When to bring in procurement (and when it's too early) 25:16 Co-op contracts and piggybacking on existing RFPs 28:21 Budget reality: what happens when you don't have the money 31:40 How grants factor into purchasing decisions 33:45 Vendor win rates and the myth of the predetermined bid 36:00 The #1 mistake vendors make: going straight to the city administrator 38:06 When it does make sense to reach out to the city administrator 41:31 When should a department actually pull in procurement? 42:57 Do your homework: why 50 of 60 vendor emails get deleted 45:43 Travel approval and bureaucratic sign-off chains 47:17 How Ann Arbor builds its brand without local TV 49:11 The city's relationship with the University of Michigan 52:32 Practical advice for vendors selling into local government 56:27 The RFP cutoff: when vendor engagement must stop 57:58 What happens when a vendor implementation fails 59:37 Where to find Milton's book
12 episodios
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