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New collaborative service delivery models are needed

The processes and technologies required to support collaboration are where ICT can provide the greatest value. So said Thomas Shirk, president of Global Public Services for System Application Programmes (SAP), outlining a variety of ways in which new delivery models are evolving.

Shirk highlighted several imperatives for successful transformation, including executive leadership and measurable outcomes and milestones. The big picture perspective has changed, he said stating that the days of a huge project implementation plan that would take five years to deliver results is no longer on.

“Nowadays, there has to be an overarching focus on the outcomes, role definition, the processes and the data to enable it. Operational cycles, political cycles and budgetary cycles all compete for resources, and it’s difficult to maintain a balance.”

The goal of the public service is to maximise public value, said Shirk. The challenge lies in defining value. “To define success you have to know what holds value for all parties involved. It is easy in business where revenue and profit are the driving forces, but that those forces don’t work in the government context,” he said.

“Public value is measured through the multiple facets of public Return on Investment (ROI),” said Shirk. “A model like this addresses political, financial and social levels of return. The norm in ICT to look at the financial benefits, is not relevant for government agencies. All the benefits of a delivery model need to be measurable and must be mapped back to the levels of ROI, especially when you are dealing with value chains such as education, health and transportation.”

One of the biggest problems in the public sector is the ability to adapt and be flexible in the systems, said Shirk. “Even after you are successful, it’s a big challenge to be able to make changes later.”

Shirk said it’s important to enable the people and the processes. There also needs to be a means to utilise components to build new and innovative processes. “This is where we see things evolving and platforms springing up between governments and agencies,” he said.

“A new model is needed.” said Shirk. “The model we see evolving will be one of collaborative outcomes. A model with the ability to take ICT and define processes that go across agency and within agency, and link public and private sectors will improve interoperability and service delivery.”

         

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