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HMRC: Digital by Default The story so far and next steps

HMRC: Digital by Default The story so far and next steps. Jul ian Hatt – Head of Customer Engagement Carroll Barnett – Agent Account Manager. Running Order. Digital by Default – Recap Julian 10 mins HMRC’s Digital Exemplars – Sneak Preview! Julian 20 mins

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HMRC: Digital by Default The story so far and next steps

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  1. HMRC: Digital by DefaultThe story so far and next steps Julian Hatt – Head of Customer Engagement Carroll Barnett – Agent Account Manager

  2. Running Order • Digital by Default – Recap Julian 10 mins • HMRC’s Digital Exemplars – Sneak Preview! Julian 20 mins • ‘Hot Topics’ for Agents and HMRC Carroll 15 mins • Questions and (if you’re lucky!) Answers All 15 mins

  3. Facts ‘n’ Figures 82%

  4. Facts ‘n’ Figures 28%

  5. Facts ‘n’ Figures 650

  6. Digital by Default • Digital services are so straightforward and convenient that all those who can use them will use them, whilst those who can’t will not be excluded • ‘Revolution not Evolution’ (Martha Lane Fox’s 2010 report) • Substantial investment in HMRC’s digital services: +£200m in Budget 2013 • External pressure (Office for Tax Simplification, Administrative Burdens Advisory Board, business, tax profession) to make things quicker, easier and simpler for SMEs 6

  7. Digital Strategy

  8. Supporting our Customer Centric Strategy It drives revenue –digital by default services will allow us better to target interventions and manage risk on a transaction by transaction basis Shifting more contact to digital channels contributes significantly to each of HMRC’s strategic objectives. It’s cheaper – self serve allows us to theoretically shift to a ‘frictionless’ relationship, or at least towards cheaper channels. It’s better for customers – a true digital interaction is quicker, easier, and comparable with external experiences. Allows us to quickly target and segment – broadens our ability to deliver services by segment & influence behaviours (“nudge”) 8

  9. How are we doing it Focus is on user needs rather than traditional requirements Delivery is iterative (start small and grow) rather than agreeing all the detail upfront Regular user testing throughout to inform development and design Ongoing improvement and iteration of the service Delivered via more flexible design/delivery process – Agile

  10. How are we doing it User Needs Cost:Benefit Speed of Delivery 10

  11. The 4 Digital Exemplars 11

  12. Your Tax Account

  13. What are we doing Can access all the help they need via links to… …tailored education… …and interactive tools taking them straight to the relevant information for them Can see an overview of their HMRC “account”… Via their personalised homepage small business users … …with links straight to action they need to take… …help finding the right payment plan… Can get the answers to their questions quickly and easily …and a personalised tax calendar with digital alerts …as well as receiving tailored outbound communications from HMRC Can get direct access to all the online transactions relevant to them… …and receiving relevantkey messages from HMRC (and potentially other Government Departments) direct to their homepage …without having to wade through content that isn’t relevant to them 13

  14. Your Tax AccountSequencing 750 volunteers participating in a Private Beta trial from 10 February Feedback mechanism in place Customer support model will also be evaluated during the trial Public Beta expected to begin in April 2014 Dependent on results of private beta to test capacity and performance, etc. Phased ‘rollout’ – plans not yet finalised – lots of considerations Skin & Link’ Continual development of the service – new features and functions 14

  15. Digital Self Assessment

  16. Digital Self Assessment - Background Self Assessment is one of our flagship online services 80% of our customers choose to file online Only 25% of customer self assessment journey takes place online We send customers letters at every stage of the process Despite filing with us online… We use paper to tell customers the outcome of their filing! This is confusing and drives low-value contact at our contact centres 600k calls asking about repayments 183k letters asking about letters 28

  17. Agent Online Self-Serve [AOSS]

  18. Agents – Setting the scene At least 8m customers use an agent to represent them Customers choose an agent for a variety of reasons The majority use an agent for profit taxes Customers look to agents to ensure they pay the right tax at the right time

  19. Our aim Agents will be able to: Register with us digitally Notify us of clients digitally View clients’ data online Use digital services on behalf of clients More to come

  20. Agents on the digital agenda We have ambitious digital plans that mean we need to: Have a single view of agents and their clients – and recognise this relationship across tax regimes/services Reduce exposure to cyber crime by bogus agents Move agents away from using paper Enable an authorised agent to see and do digitally the same as their client

  21. Identity Assurance [IdA] • A pan-government project led by Cabinet Office • A model for trust and security • A process for providing individuals with credentials that allow them to prove that they are who they say they are (when online)

  22. People perform different roles • Individual managing their own tax affairs • Responsible officer managing tax affairs of a limited company or partnership • Employee managing the tax affairs of a business entity • Self-employed (sole trader) agent managing the tax affairs of a client • individual, limited company or partnership) • Employee in an agent organisation managing the tax affairs of a client entity • Friends and family (unpaid) • Others

  23. Authority Management Service • A service which allows people to interact with government services on behalf • of other people or organisations • IdA for Organisations and Agents • A process providing online credentials for all levels of responsibility to prove • permission is held to act on behalf of an organisation • Discovery phase has been completed

  24. ‘Discovery’ for IdA - Users told us • Solutions need to be easy and carry perceived benefits • Personal and work identities need to be separate • Large organisations will need scalable solutions • Credentials need to be tied to the firm – not to employees • Delegation needs to reflect the different roles and responsibilities within an • organisation • Do not create additional work for our customers

  25. Delivering the new services • Will depend upon Identity Assurance and Authority Management solutions for • citizens, businesses and agents • Authority management allows IDA credential holders to delegate permissions • We are working closely with GDS to design a joined-up service between new • digital services and IDA credentials. • Next step – pilot initial working product (alpha) • Aiming for private beta – Oct to Dec 2014

  26. Workstrands • Friends & family agents • delegation of authority to the friend or family member • Organisations & agents in business • more complex needs for delegating permissions in-house and to third parties • Third party software • most businesses and agents use in-house or third party products to • govern access to services & customer records • Existing agent / client relationships • we want to transfer these to the new services where we can • find the least burdensome way to do this • it will not be possible in all cases

  27. PAYE for Employees

  28. PAYE Online The first online service for 41 million individuals within PAYE 60 million calls, annually, to HMRC’s contact centres 13.9m PAYE-related 4-5m of these are to query tax code 16% of these relate to car / van, fuel and medical benefits Costing customers £5 per call and HMRC £6 per call (longer calls) A Private Beta underway with changes to car / van benefits and bank interest Shift balance of the relationship away from the employer and on to HMRC Currently forecasting that PAYE calls will reduce by 1.7m [12%] 52

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