1 / 10

Challenges and Lessons Learned in e-Government Service Delivery

Challenges and Lessons Learned in e-Government Service Delivery. Gregory Power Manager, Canadian Outsourcing Practice Unisys Canada. Introduction and Agenda. Background and Context for e-Government Challenges and Lessons Learned Business case and early lifecycle

kanoa
Download Presentation

Challenges and Lessons Learned in e-Government Service Delivery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Challenges and Lessons Learned in e-Government Service Delivery Gregory Power Manager, Canadian Outsourcing Practice Unisys Canada

  2. Introduction and Agenda • Background and Context for e-Government • Challenges and Lessons Learned • Business case and early lifecycle • Service development and implementation • Operating e-Government services • Being a Government service provider • Conclusions July 15, 2006

  3. Background and Context for e-Government July 15, 2006

  4. Operational Experience and Services July 15, 2006

  5. Lessons Learned: Early Lifecycle • Business Cases • Not all e-Government services have revenue streams • Take a program (rather than project) approach wherever possible • Cost model is critical for transaction based business cases • Consider marketing responsibilities • Contractual Structure • Government priorities change - the contract needs to accommodate this • Consider contractual landscape – Government and partner organizations July 15, 2006

  6. Lessons Learned: Service Development and Implementation • Developing Services - Focus on the User Experience • Use focus groups of likely users and listen to them • Align the service to the user’s need, not the internal departmental view of the service • Technology Considerations • Use of open standards and align technology to the direction of Government • Keep all data in Canada • Implementation Planning and Operations Model • Stakeholder identification and involvement (Government, partners, external parties) • Plan for the operational service - document responsibilities July 15, 2006

  7. Lessons Learned: Ongoing Operations • Budget For Maintenance and Ongoing Change and Include in Contract • Self-service User Surveys • Configuration Management • Management Reporting • Continual Process Improvement / ITIL Alignment • Cost Modeling • Communications and Relationships July 15, 2006

  8. Lessons Learned – Being a Service Provider to Government • Invest in Service Management and Relationships • Consistent Staffing to Build Relationships • Communicate Your Value Proposition • Be a Partner Wherever Possible • Joint Successes for Long Term Joint Benefit July 15, 2006

  9. Conclusions • Service Management, Relationships and Trust • Creativity and Flexibility • Planned Investment For Long-term Engagements • Awareness Of The Operational Environment – e-Government is Different than e-Business July 15, 2006

  10. Challenges and Lessons Learned in e-Government Service Delivery Gregory Power Manager, Canadian Outsourcing Practice Unisys Canada greg.power@unisys.com 902.421.2284

More Related