It has been three months since Matt Yannopoulos left the Department of Defence to lead IT at the Department of Immigration and Border Protection.

The former defence CTO fills the role left vacant by the retirement of Tony Kwan.
Yannopoulos told iTnews that his new home is very different to the huge sprawl of Defence.
“[Immigration] has a really enthusiastic and energetic culture," he said. "It is much more about applications delivery, and less about infrastructure. Defence was very much about the scale of the place, the network and the infrastructure.”
His time so far has been transition focussed, including a week learning the tricks of the trade from his predecessor and visits to offshore posts and immigration detention centres as part of “learning the immigration business”.
He has his eyes set on 2014 – which is going to “be a big year” – to really start making his mark on the organisation.
Stabilisation
The CIO views the next three years in terms of a step-by-step journey, culminating in the opportunity to make the most of the onshore cloud services on offer in Australia.
But all strong structures must be built on a sturdy footing, so the first stage to be completed in stabilisation.
Under Kwan, the department made the unusual decision of reversing its outsourced midrange computing arrangements and bringing this functional area back in house.
For many years the then Department of Immigration and Citizenship outsourced mid-range and other infrastructure needs from CSC. But Yannopoulos agrees with Kwan that it will be cheaper - to the tune of $7 million to $8 million each year - if they do it themselves.
“The contract had been in place for quite a few years,” he said, adding that a bit more flexibility and competitive tension in this area will serve the department well.
“Our ability to deal with that change within the parameters of the legacy contract would have been difficult I suspect.
“We have taken it over and we are now going through an improvement phase.”
However, once he has infrastructure up to his standard, Yannopoulos wouldn't rule out outsourcing all over again.
“In time we will go back to market and re-ask whether this is something best done by immigration staff or whether it is best sourced as-a-service,” he said.
“But in our business, a large provider doing everything is not something we’d go back to. The trend now is multi-vendor.”
Beyond 2014 - read on for Yannopoulos' plans...