FEB. 16, 2024

AIRC Fellows Cuff and MacGregor Join DCTC Leadership Team

Two Fellows with the Acquisition Innovation Research Center (AIRC) have joined the leadership team of the Defense Civilian Training Corps (DCTC), a congressionally mandated talent development program for college students that provides a multidisciplinary curriculum with summer internship projects at Department of Defense (DoD) organizations. The goal of DCTC is to prepare scholars for civilian careers in the DoD and form the next generation of national security leaders.

Ms. Tory Cuff and Mr. Matt MacGregor will work alongside colleagues Ms. Karen DaPonte Thornton and Mr. John Willison in managing the DCTC pilot program AIRC is guiding at four universities: North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, Purdue University, the University of Arizona, and Virginia Tech.

Cuff has expertise involving the Commission on Planning, Programming, Budgeting, and Execution; workforce initiatives; and acquisition management policies and practices. She was the senior advisor for agile acquisition for the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment (OUSD(A&S)), where she led the Single Appropriation Pilot for Software and Digital Technology. She played a leading role in building the Air Force’s Kessel Run software factory, where she pioneered ways to deliver software to classified networks.

“As a former DoD scholarship recipient, I am truly passionate about helping others navigate and join the DoD acquisition workforce,” Cuff said. “DCTC offers an incredible opportunity to not only strengthen the talent pipeline but to give them a head start. I am excited to contribute to this pilot, from supporting the curriculum to engaging with scholars, to being an advocate and proponent of the defense workforce writ large. My experience as a government civilian and at a start-up focused on the government space gives me perspective and awareness of the larger defense ecosystem. I truly believe the workforce is the difference, and that is and should be our top investment.”

MacGregor was a Principal Acquisition Expert at MITRE where he supported the OUSD(A&S) on advancing software acquisition reform and helping various program offices craft innovative acquisition strategies. He spent 21 years as a military and civil service program manager, including as the F-35 deputy program manager. His last five years in government before joining MITRE were at the Pentagon, where he served in multiple headquarters acquisition roles.

“My overall focus at the AIRC is on modernizing defense acquisition for the 21st century, specifically incorporating digital engineering practices and AI technologies to solve operational problems,” MacGregor said. “Focusing on policy and practices alone is not sufficient though, reform must also include people. My role with AIRC and supporting DCTC will allow me to leverage my experience via the integrated curriculum, immersion experiences, and student engagement to prepare DCTC scholars for a meaningful career as DoD acquisition professionals armed with the knowledge to tackle the most pressing national security challenges.”

Thornton celebrated the addition of Cuff and MacGregor as the DCTC pilot program proceeds through its second semester with its inaugural cohort and begins recruiting for an expanded second cohort for 2024-25. DCTC will also be a featured topic at the 2024 AIRC Research Review.

“When Tory and Matt became AIRC Fellows last year, my thought was ‘this is a great get for AIRC’ because they bring so much experience and such impressive connections within the defense acquisition field,” Thornton said. “But for Tory and Matt to commit their full passion, creative mindset, and management expertise to DCTC is simply extraordinary. This gives our team such a boost of can-do confidence! With Tory and Matt, there is no limit to how we can scale DCTC and make our impact last.”

Learn more about DCTC at dctc.mil, read the DCTC blog, follow DCTC on LinkedIn, and follow AIRC on LinkedIn for regular updates on innovation in defense acquisition.