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e-Government – the strategic Challenge Richard Barrington Director for Industry Office of the e-Envoy Vision Statement “To lead the UK in its drive to be the best place in the world for e-commerce” Our Vision • To make the UK one of the world’s leading knowledge economies • All government services to be offered online by 2005 • Everyone who wants it to have internet access by 2005 • All Business online and trading 2003 • Best Broadband Network of G8 by 2005 www.ukonline.gov.uk Partnership is Key Confident Business • 100% Capital allowances on ICT equipment • Corporation Tax start at 10% • Enterprise Incentive Scheme •Enterprise Loan Guarantee Scheme • £1bn target umbrella fund for enterprise growth • UK online for Business C. 600 Advisors Start-ups are critical to GDP Growth Confident People • 6000 Ukonline Centres Libraries Pubs Clubs etc • Free IT training for unemployed • Learn Direct & e-university • Unbundling the local loop, un-metered Access • Broadband Britain • 400,000 Vacancies • 500,000 Learning opportunities • 1,000,000 page impressions per month ChildcareLink - www.childcarelink.gov.uk • Early years and childcare information from 190 English and Scottish Authorities • Complete UK coverage anticipated by March 2002 • Backed up by free phone line • Available through UK Online Build Trust and Confidence • • • • • • • ‘Self’ Regulation of ISP’s ‘Kitemark for the WWW TrustUK Co-Regulation of T3P’s Tscheme Legislation Electronic Communications Act Legislation Regulation of Investigatory Powers Bill Standards Adoption BS 7799, Information Security Standards Adoption E-GIF WWW Consortia “Our goal is for the UK to have the most extensive and competitive broadband network in the G7 by 2005” Modernising Government • Better policy making • Responsive public services • Quality public services • Information age government • Valuing public service www.cabinet-office.gov.uk/moderngov/download/modgov.pdf e-government a strategic framework for public services in the Information Age www.iagchampions.gov.uk/iagc/strategy www.citu.gov.uk/itprojectsreview www.cabinet-office.gov.uk/innovation/2000/deliveryf www.e-envoy.gov.uk/2000/progress/anrep1 e-Government Citizens and businesses Government portal Intermediaries Government gateway www.govtalk.gov.uk Information and transaction services E-Democracy in action e-Government Citizens and businesses Access Services Infrastructure Information and transaction services Working with third parties Citizens and businesses Government portal Intermediaries Government gateway Information and transaction services Intermediaries Tax through a bank …working through government Defence E-commerce Service Mass Market needs new Thinking Private sector providers push government messages – but for their own reasons Managing internal change Citizens and businesses Short term – new channels add cost Longer term – reduce old channels? Front end Internal processes Implications for staff Internal• Skills processes • Location • Numbers Information and transaction services Focus on business process changes to improve efficiency The strategy agenda • E-business is core business • Customer focus requires services designed across organisational boundaries… • … and which are integrated with third party offerings • E-government is about managing change, not about IT • All of which require leadership and commitment from the top E-Business Strategies Key issues • Risk in e-government – Project risk • Can we build it on time, on spec, on budget? The biggest risk is doing nothing What service is required from us? How does it link to – Business risk • other services? The pain risk to is be less • Government does notofneed a monopoly than pain of regret supplier of its ownthe services • Government is not expert at customer segmentation The De Gaulle Theory of Politics • • • • Always maintain the initiative Always exploit the inevitable Always keep ‘in’ with the ‘outs’ Don’t get caught between a dog and a lampost e-world There is no ‘new economy’. There is one economy, all of it being transformed by information technology. What is happening is no dot com fad which will come and go – it is a profound economic revolution. Tony Blair 11 September 2000 [email protected] www.e-envoy.gov.uk