In Martha Lane Fox’s 2010 report, that, in effect, led to the creation of GDS and that set out its mission, there were a series of recommendations. These seem like a reasonable place to start in assessing GDS’ delivery track record. The recommendations were:
1. Directgov should be the default platform for information and transactional services, enabling all government transactions to be carried out via digital channels by 2015 … must focus on creating high-quality user-friendly transactions … scaling back on non-core activities.
2. Realign all Government Delivery under a single web domain name … accelerate the move to shared web services.
3. Learn from what has been proven to work well elsewhere on the web … focus on user-driven and transparent … implement a kill or cure policy to reduce poorly performing content.
4. Mandate the creation of APIs to allow 3rd parties to present content and transactions. Shift from "public services all in one place" to government services "wherever you are"
5. Establish digital SWAT teams … work on flagship channel shift transactions
Not surprisingly, I agreed entirely with this list at the time – nearly a decade before I’d produced the picture below to represent the e-Delivery team’s (eDt) e-government vision – eDt was a part of the Office of the e-Envoy when the late Andrew Pinder was in charge. I think it captures Martha’s recommendations in a page:
Now, nearly 7 years after Martha’s report, we have a new flagship website (whilst Martha’s report was strong on making use of the direct.gov brand name, given the investment in it over the previous 6 or so years, a decision was made to use a different brand – you’ll see that we had suggested that as a possible name in the 2001 picture above; it’s in the very top left).
Here are 3 pictures showing the journey we have made over the last 13 years:
1) Direct.gov’s home page in May 2004
2) The same site, in January 2007
Thirteen years of user needs, iteration, at least three different content management tools and, branding and size of search bar aside, do you notice any major difference? Nope, me either.
My guess is that the lessons that we learned from 2002-2010 have been learned again from 2010-2017. Sure, some new lessons will have been learned, but they will be largely the same – many of the new lessons will have been technology and methodology related I suspect.
It’s a mystery to me why, despite everything, it all looks the same and that, when poking behind the front page, all that’s revealed is more design changes – bigger fonts, simpler questions and cleaner lines. All stuff that could have been done on the old platform, leaving people to focus, not on technology and tools, but on content and the user.
Looking back at Martha’s recommendations:
(1) Single platform and transactions – is at least partly done, but transactions have advanced little in a decade.
(2) Single domain – looks initially to be a success (and one that I do not underestimate the huge effort it’s taken and that it continues to take), but there isn’t much else in the way of shared web services (I’ll be coming on to Verify and other common platform technologies soon).
(3) User driven and transparent / Kill or cure – I’m going to score as strong effort, but not nearly enough of an advance on what was done before. We have a huge amount of content piled on a single technology platform. Disentangling it and ensuring that there’s only one place to find the most relevant content on any given topic is not well advanced. If you’re a business, things are even more confusing. And if you’re a sole trader, for instance, who hops between individual and business content, you’re likely more confused than ever.
(4) APIs – beyond what was done years ago, I don’t see much new. I would love to be pointed at examples where I’m wrong here as I think this is a crucial part of the future mission and it would be good to see successes that I’ve missed.
(5) Flagship transactions – I’m not seeing them. The tax disc is a great example of a transaction that was started years ago and that has been successively iterated, and I don’t want to undersell the monumental shift that getting rid of the disc itself, but it’s an outlier. Where are the others, the ones that weren’t there before 2010?
critical recommendations in Martha’s report – the ones about flagship channel shift transactions, creating APIs (other than in HMRC, most of which was completed in 2000-2004) and "government services wherever you are" are still adrift.
Martha’s goal of "enabling all government transactions to be carried out via digital channels by 2015"
seems as far away as it was when, in 2001, the then Prime Minister, Tony Blair, exhorted us to put joined up, citizen-focused services online by the end of 2005.
And now we have a Transformation Strategy that promises it will all be done by 2020. I’m not seeing it. Not if we follow the current approach.