Dr. Sheila R. Ronis
Sheila R. Ronis, Ph.D. is President of The University Group, Inc.,
a management
consulting firm and think tank specializing in strategic management,
visioning, leadership, national security, and public policy. She is also
an Adjunct Professor of Management at Walsh College where she retired as
Distinguished Professor of Management and Director of the Center for
Complex and Strategic Decisions.
In addition, Sheila is an Associate
National Security Advisor with the Argonne National Laboratory University of
Chicago. She serves as Chairman of the National Defense University
Foundation Board of Directors. Her B.S. is in Physics, Mathematics, and
Education. Her M.A. and Ph.D. are from The Ohio State University in
Large Complex Social System Behavior.
Sheila currently teaches a Strategic Visioning course in the
Intelligence Masters Program as an adjunct professor at the Universidad
Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid, and serves as an adjunct professor at the
University of Hull in the UK. She participates in the OECD Foresight
Community in Paris and has published two United States Government
foresight case studies for the OECD. Visionarios have been developed and
published with her colleague, Dr. Richard J. Chasdi for the U.S. Army.
She has also developed visionarios for the National GeoSpatial
Intelligence Agency, several academic conferences, The International
Journal of Intelligence, Security, and Public Affairs, in Europe, the
Government of Finland, The U.S. Government Accountability Office,
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, The International
Management Institute, Nahalal, Israel.
Recently, Sheila addressed the Royal United Services Institute of
Defense and Security Studies (RUSI) in London, UK. and was featured in
two webinars regarding the National Visioning Initiative for National
Security for the Commonwealth Smart Partner CPTM Think Tanking global
community in London. She is a very active member of the Federal
Foresight Community of Interest – Washington, D.C.
She served as guest speaker on the use of foresight methodologies
to improve public policy on September 12, 2014 at The Royal Society in
London, U.K.; she was invited by the Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin John
Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow, Kt., the former president of the Royal
Society and master of Trinity College, Cambridge. Sheila traced the
Center’s work on the Project for National Security Reform. It included
details on how the CCSD is experimenting with judgment and decision
sciences for a conceptual set of capabilities for the Executive Office
of the President of the United States. On 12 June 2013, she was
awarded the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s Outstanding Public
Service Award in a formal ceremony in Washington, D.C.
Sheila is the former chair of the Vision Working Group of the Project
on National Security Reform (PNSR) in Washington, D.C., which was tasked
by Congress to rewrite the National Security Act of 1947. As a
Distinguished Fellow at PNSR, she was responsible for the plan and
processes to develop The Center for Strategic Analysis and Assessment;
the place where the President of the United States will conduct “grand
strategy” on behalf of the nation working with LTG Brent Scowcroft and
Professor Leon Fuerth as Advisors.
On 30 July, 2010, she chaired a
conference at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, CSIS,
where she presented the findings of the PNSR Vision Working Group Report
and Scenarios which she edited, that outlines why foresight capabilities
are essential to the workings of the Executive Office of the President
of the United States. She was awarded a Fulbright Specialist
Scholarship and studied these issues in Singapore in August and October
2011.
On 24–25 August 2010, Sheila chaired the conference: “Economic
Security: Neglected Dimension of National Security” at the National
Defense University that explored a “grand strategy” for a healthy U.S.
economy. A publication based on that conference, edited by her was
published December 2011. She facilitated a workshop entitled
Energy as Grand Strategy on 7–8 May 2012 at the National Defense
University cosponsored by the Department of Energy’s Argonne National
Laboratory and the Center for Technology and National Security Policy.
On 8–9 November 2011, she chaired a symposium at the National
Defense University, Institute for National Strategic Studies, “Forging
an American Grand Strategy: Securing a Path Through a Complex Future,”
in Washington, D.C. A publication based on that conference, edited by
her was published in 2013.
In March 2006, she completed a study of the national security
implications of the erosion of the U.S. industrial base for the U.S.
House of Representatives Committee on Small Business. Her book,
Timelines into the Future: Strategic Visioning Methods for Government,
Industry and Other Organizations, was published by Hamilton Books in
June, 2007. Other significant papers include, “Transformational
Recapitalization: Rethinking USAF Aircraft Procurement Philosophies”
which was published in Defense AT&L in November 2004 and “Erosion of the
Industrial Base and its Issues of National Security: A Systems Approach
to Congressional Action” presented at the National Defense Industrial
Association conference in November 2005.
Sheila participates in many
programs at the Eisenhower School, formerly the Industrial College of
the Armed Forces (ICAF) at the National Defense University in
Washington, D.C. including their National Security Strategy Exercise.
In June 2005, she chaired at ICAF the Army’s Eisenhower National Security
Series Conference, “The State of the U.S. Industrial Base: National
Security Implications in a World of Globalization.” The Proceedings of
that conference, which she co-edited with Dr. Lynne Thompson were
published by the National Defense University Press in April 2006.
Sheila founded and directed the Institute for Business and Community
Services at The University of Detroit to assist the U.S. automobile
industry in becoming globally competitive by bringing systems and
strategic management principles to the industry. Joining the University
of Detroit from Ameritech Publishing, Inc., where she was a Strategic
Planner, she worked at AT&T and Michigan Bell before that, helping the
corporation during its divestiture years.
Prior to her Bell System
tenure, she directed a national energy program for the U.S. Energy
Research and Development Administration (ERDA – now the Department of
Energy), in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Washington, D.C. While an
administrative associate at The Ohio State University, she chaired the
Legislative Affairs Committee, acting as the legislative liaison between
the University Senate, the Ohio General Assembly, the Governor’s Office
and the Ohio Board of Regents. She began her career working at
North American Rockwell in Columbus, Ohio.
In her career of more than four decades, Sheila has worked with many
organizations; public, private, large, small, profit, and nonprofit.
These include: General Motors Corporation, Ford Motor Company, the
Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, the U.S. House of
Representatives, the Federal Laboratory Consortium For Technology
Transfer, U.S. Institute of Peace, USAID, Ameritech, USCAR, the
Interstate Commerce Commission, the Institute for National Strategic
Studies at the National Defense University, the National Science
Foundation, The National Academies of Sciences, UNICEF, the Government
of Finland, The Universidad Ray Juan Carlos, Hull University, the School
of International Futures, Nanyang Technological University in Singapore,
the Galilee International Management Institute in Nahalal, Israel, the
Project on Forward Engagement with Professor Leon Fuerth, the Office of
the Director of National Intelligence, OECD, the Federal Foresight
Community of Interest, GAO, and The State Council of The People’s
Republic of China.
Sheila began working with the U.S. automotive industry in 1985. This
included Ford Motor Company as well as several automotive suppliers. In
1988, she worked with the Cadillac organization at General Motors to fix
the Allanté, two years after start of production. She then became
involved in the Cadillac 2000 project on behalf of the Chief Engineer of
Cadillac, Robert L. Dorn.
In 1993, she helped to revamp the
General Motors corporate intelligence function. From 1994 to 1996, The
University Group, Inc. became a captive supplier to General Motors
working on a number of corporate functions. Since that time, she
has continued to work with GM on a number of projects. In 2000, she
was asked to assist the Ford Motor Company in improving its
corporate intelligence function, and strategic visioning processes.
Sheila began working in the national security community during the
divestiture years of the Bell System that included her participation in
the decisions related to the security of the nation’s telecommunications
infrastructure. For nearly three decades, she has been working
directly with the U.S. Department of Defense and the national security
community. Her first major assignment was teaching “grand” strategy as
it is viewed in global business to the Management Faculty at the U.S.
Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
She was also involved in the
development of the first Strategic Leadership Symposium at the Army War
College under the command of Major General Paul G. Cerjan. In 1993,
Sheila began her work with the National Defense University (NDU) in
Washington, D.C. She has played a role in bringing industrial knowledge
of the transportation industry to the Industrial College of the Armed
Forces (ICAF), now the Eisenhower School and NDU.
In 1996, Sheila was asked to deliver a paper on “National Security
and the Theories of Dr. Deming” by the W. Edwards Deming Institute. The
paper was read by General John M. Shalikashvili, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and was widely distributed throughout the Pentagon as an
example of applying strategic systems thinking to matters of national
security.
At DoD, Sheila has worked with the Air Force Special
Operations Forces at Robins Air Force Base and Wright Patterson Air
Force Base, and the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command
(TACOM). She was asked to write a white paper about the need to define
and retain Department of Defense core competencies and what happens when
outsourcing occurs.
At the Pentagon, she has worked in support of
projects at the Office for the Secretary of Defense on visioning for the
Department, and supported the work of the Defense Reform Task Force for
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen. Her work for the Secretary of
Defense included a written operational definition of the Revolution in
Business Affairs that was used to support the Revolution in Military
Affairs for the Quadrennial Defense Review in 1997. In addition, she was
a team leader as a part of the “red team” that critiqued the Joint
Vision 2010 work for the Joint Staff, J-7. She also supported the work
of the Hart-Rudman Commission on U.S. National Security for the 21st
Century.
Sheila has also worked on behalf of the economic and transportation
elements of national security supporting the original work to create
USCAR, the United States Consortium for Automotive Research, and one of
its major initiatives, the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles.
In addition, she helped the Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology
Transfer (FLC) with a master plan and vision for the future. Her work
with FLC included a paper on how national laboratories and scientific
researchers can comply with the Government Performance Results Act
(GPRA).
Known as a systems security strategist, Sheila has authored over 200
papers. Her paper delivered at the Pentagon entitled,
Economic Security
is National Security: A Discussion of Issues Surrounding the Global U.S.
Corporation suggested a way to re-think industrial base policy. Her
paper presented at the U.S. Army War College,
Visioning for the 21st
Century: A Process for National Security outlined the way in which an
interagency activity might produce a more holistic national security
strategy for the United States.
Sheila’s paper on “Shaping in the 21st
Century” delivered at the Army’s conference at the Walker Institute of
International Studies examined the new roles that the Department of
Defense would need to play in the Post Cold War era. She supported
the work of the Department of Commerce Office of Strategic Industries
and Economic Security with a study of the U.S. Army’s Theater Support
Vessel released in December 2003 and a study on the Air Force C-17
completed in 2006.
Sheila also has published the scenario
Crisis on Asimov in
Automotive Industries Magazine, and the Financial Times Automotive
World, in London that is a strategic futurist’s look at transportation
in the world of 2085 that uses a Department of Defense visioning
process. In addition, she worked with the late Dr. W. Edwards
Deming including coauthoring the paper “Preparing Cadillac for the 21st
Century: Systems and Strategic Thinking.”
She is the former Vice
Chairman of The Ohio State University Alumni Association. She is a
former board member and life member of The Economic Club of Detroit.
She is a life member of the National Defense Industrial Association
(NDIA), the World Future Society, and the Association of the U.S. Army.
She is also a life member of the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society and a
Senior Fellow of the Inter-University Symposium for Armed Forces and
Society.
Sheila is a frequent guest on the NBC affiliate in Detroit
and several other Detroit area TV and radio news programs. In September
2008, she was voted the number 1 Woman to Watch by Crain’s Detroit
Business. She has published in National Defense.