UK Government Digital Service: Moving Beyond a Website
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Publication Date:
August 22, 2017
Source:
Harvard Kennedy School
In 2011, the UK founded a new government agency known as the “Government Digital Service” (or GDS). Facing significant budget challenges, several high profile IT failures, and growing demands to “modernize” government services, the government set a mission for GDS to champion a “digital culture” in government, ideally unleashing a wave of both cost savings and innovations. By 2012, GDS had identified billions of pounds of potential savings, centralized the government’s web presence into a single domain (called GOV.UK), and received wide acclaim from technology commentators. However, the leaders of GDS felt there was significantly more work to be done–not only modernizing government services, but also convincing civil service to focus more on implementation, user needs, and digital services. This case provides an overview of GDS’s work up to 2012, and considers the strategy and change management questions facing the agency as it seeks to expand. Case number 2106.0
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UK Government Digital Service: Moving Beyond a Website
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