Tag Archives: innovation

Cabinet Office takes on open-source specialist

By Tony Collins

“Let’s not waste this great opportunity to make British government IT the most effective and least expensive service per head in Western Europe.”

 An open source advocate and critic of the high costs of government IT, Liam Maxwell, is joining the Cabinet Office for 11 months  to provide expertise on how civil servants can use innovative new technology to deliver better, cheaper solutions.

His secondment from Eton College where he is ICT head underlines the determination of Francis Maude, the Cabinet Office minister, to continue bringing in strong people to oversee major changes in the way government works.

What remains unclear, however, is how much influence the Cabinet Office will have on autonomous government departments and their permanent secretaries.

Although David Cameron has given his personal backing to the changes being sought by the Cabinet Office, the PM has  little or no direct control over what departments do or don’t do.

Simon Dickson at Puffbox points out that Liam Maxwell has said all the right things in the past. Maxwell co-wrote a 2008 paper for the Tories on ‘Open Source, Open Standards: Reforming IT procurement in Government’, and also a 2010 paper Better for Less‘ for the Network for the Post-Bureaucratic Age, which said:

“British Government IT is too expensive. Worse, it has been designed badly and built to last. IT must work together across government and deliver a meaningful return on investment. Government must stop believing it is special and use commodity IT services much more widely.

“As we saw with the Open Source policy, the wish is there. However, the one common thread of successive technology leadership in government is a failure to execute policy.

“There is at last a ministerial team in place that “gets it”. The austerity measures that all have to face should act as a powerful dynamic for change. Let’s not waste this great opportunity to make British government IT the most effective and least expensive service per head in Western Europe.” 

In a statement, the Cabinet office said that Maxwell will help to develop ideas for how technology can:

– increase the drive towards open standards and open source software

– help SMEs to enter the government marketplace

– maintain a horizon scan of future technologies and methods

– develop new, more flexible ways of delivery in government

Ian Watmore, the Government’s Chief Operating Officer said: “Liam’s insight and knowledge will make him a valuable source to the team over the coming year. He has a strong track record of delivering success in government ICT and he also brings significant experience of turning the theory into practice.”

Dickson said that Maxwell was a Windsor and Maidenhead councillor who drove the debate a year or so ago on councils switching to Open Document Format, part of OpenOffice.

The Guardian said Maxwell has been an adviser to the  Conservative party on government ICT.  At the Cabinet Office he will advise the Efficiency and Reform Group and Ian Watmore. He will begin the job in September and is taking a sabbatical from Eton.

Agile is brilliant says DWP’s head of major programmes

Steve Dover, head of major programmes at the Department for Work and Pensions, is qu0ted in Computer Weekly as saying of agile methods:

“It’s a brilliant, brilliant methodology … Get it right. Don’t pay it lip service.”

 Mark O’Neill, CIO at the Department for Communities and Local Government and leader of the government’s “skunkworks” team to promote innovation, is quoted as saying: “SIs [systems integrators – large IT companies] must recognise that the old world is dead and they have to change their model”.

But Malcom Whitehouse, DWP deputy CIO, implied there was some work only systems integrators could handle.

Agile can fix failed GovIT says lawyer.

Steve Dover on YouTube – the benefits of agile in GovIT [for the Institute for Government]

Cabinet Office turns to agile SMEs to reform Whitehall IT.

A thank you to IM&T and medical staff at Trafford General Hospital

By Tony Collins

My thanks to the IM&T and medical teams at Manchester-based Trafford General Hospital who made my visit last week so useful.

A special thanks to IM&T manager Steve Parsons and his assistants Laura Slatcher and Karen Ambrose for their patient and clear explanations. I am also grateful to Peter Large,  Director of Planning, Performance & Service Improvement; Simon Musgrave, Medical Director;  Julie Treadgold, Matron, and their teams.

It was enlightening to see how IT at Trafford General Hospital is changing the working lives of doctors and nurses – and making a difference for patients.

The technology and business media, when reporting on IT in the NHS, often mention the National Programme for IT – NPfIT –  and the tens of millions of patients who have GP-held electronic records, or who have received packs of marketing material on the Summary Care Records scheme. Thus the media coverage of NHS IT is often of the abstract and hazy world of contract negotiations and huge sums spent with major IT companies.

My visit to Trafford Healthcare NHS Trust was a reminder of how much some IM&T managers are achieving on small budgets, outside of central, politically-driven IT-led programmes.

At Trafford I saw what buy-in among doctors and nurses means in practice, such as the timely completion of electronic forms that make it easy to see, on large touch screens located in a room close to each ward, when a patient’s next medical check is due, when a VTE (Venous thromboembolism) check is overdue, when an A&E patient has been waiting too long to be seen or treated, and the reasons for the breaches.

So much essential information is available from the ward touch screens – such as graphs showing whether, say, medication is having the desired effect, over hours or days,  on a patient’s neutrophil blood cells; and it’s easy to see whether a patient has yet to have an x-ray reviewed by a specialist. Indeed a doctor with the relevant smartcard authorisation can call up their patients’ x-rays on the ward’s touch-screen.

Behind all these screens is the patient’s electronic record that includes archived, scanned notes, diagrams and charts. If the local GP has authorised it – and so far about half in Trafford’s catchment area have – A&E department hospital doctors will soon be able to access the GP-held patient record also.

Trafford’s hospital-wide technology is designed to be integrated with departmental systems by the in-house team. It is delivered by suppliers whose contracts are firmly under the control of the local Trust.  It’s technology outside of the NPfIT – and it works.

So while officials in Whitehall have spent years trying to make an overly ambitious NPfIT deliver, some trusts, Trafford among them, have been giving measurable and visible technological support to clinicians who have welcomed the changes because they have seen improvements in the safety monitoring and timely treatment of their patients.

We plan to report further on the improvements at Trafford and at other hospitals.

Alpha.gov.uk shows how agile can work in government

By Tony Collins

Harry Metcalfe, managing director of Dextrous Web, has written an excellent article on Alpha.gov.uk.

Alpha.gov.uk is a prototype, built in response to some of the challenges laid down in a report by Martha Lane Fox last year. The two main objectives of Alphagov are to:

– test, in public, a prototype of a new, single UK Government website

– design and build a UK Government website using open, agile, multi-disciplinary product development techniques and technologies, shaped by a preoccupation with user needs.

It’s clear from Metcalfe’s post that he  understands the unbending ways of government. He sees the opportunities too. He says:

“As a technical solution, this [Alphagov] is brilliant. If you’re going to have a single [web] platform, this is the right kind of platform to have, because it embraces change.

“If you want some new functionality, add an app for it. If you need a new department, add a new instance of the department app, add your content, and you’ll have 90% of what you need.

“If you want to run a consultation using someone’s third-party tool, just have them brand it appropriately and write an app that gives you as much integration as you want, or as the tool can support. But this kind of flexibility is powerful. In many respects it’s anathema to the way government works.

“For a start, it requires something government unwisely gave up on long ago: an in-house development team…”

Campaign4Change comment:

Alphagov is not yet handling transactions. Indeed there are no agile-developed systems that handle passport applications or tax self-assessment.

As Metcalfe says: “…transactions are complicated, messy beasts, unavoidably bound up with business processes and legislation; empires, politics and entrenched positions; long contracts and vast sums of money.. it’s not primarily a technological problem. It’s a process problem, and those are much harder to fix.”

It may be a matter of time, though, before agile becomes far more prevalent in public sector IT. Universal Credit is based on agile, in a programme run in part by the redoubtable Joe Harley, the UK Government’s CIO.

Harley told the Public Accounts Committee last month:

“In the waterfall it takes quite a while to do a design – maybe a year or two … By the time we come to execute, things have moved on.

“In the agile world, it is a way of providing rapid solutions very quickly. Normally, and in Universal Credit it is monthly, one designs, develops, implements and produces a product very early on in the cycle. It is particularly useful and appropriate when the users themselves – in the universal credit, citizens themselves – can participate in the creation of it. It is about user-centric, rapid deployment solutions. That is what we hope to achieve.”

Ian Watmore, Chief Operating Officer at the Cabinet Office, told the same committee that the government objective is for the first claims under Universal Credit to be paid by October 2013. He said: “I would have thought that if we achieve that, it will become the precedent and benchmark for Government projects.”

We hope Universal Credit is a timely success and that it becomes a benchmark for government projects. It’s easy to talk down the chances of agile in government on the basis that it ill suits the way government works. But Francis Maude, officials in the Cabinet Office, and Alphagov’s developers want to change the way government works.

To say that agile won’t work in government is like telling someone who’s obese that they need not eat less because history shows they won’t be able to.

Government must spend less. And agile is one way to cut spending. Alphagov is showing the way.

How Alpha.gov.uk came about:

Last year Martha Lane Fox published suggestions on reforming UK Government’s online. At the launch of her report (subtitled “revolution, not evolution”) she recommended:

“…Putting the needs of citizens ahead of those of departments”

She made a strong case for the UK Government to adopt a single web domain, analogous to the BBC’s use of BBC.co.uk, and recommended a radical change in how gov.uk sites are produced:

“Government should take advantage of the more open, agile and cheaper digital technologies to deliver simpler and more effective digital services to users.”

Links:

How Alphagov might change UK government for the better.

Institute for Government: what’s wrong with government IT?

Agile in government IT – don’t knock it.

10 things Alphagov gets right.

10 things Alphagov gets wrong.

Alpha.gov.uk

Grasping the CRC Sustainable Innovation Opportunity

By David Bicknell

I’ve just written a piece for the Guardian Professional Network’s Sustainable Business site, which discusses some recent work by Cambium in producing a report on how both suppliers and organisations can benefit from the Government’s CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme.

You can read the article here on the Guardian’s site. And you can find about more about the report from Cambium here.

Cambium report examines public sector attitudes to low carbon and sustainability, while targeting CRC innovation opportunities for suppliers

By David Bicknell

I attended the launch yesterday of a new report targetting the sustainable innovation opportunities offered by the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme.

The report, by sustainable innovation specialist Cambium, provides a  systematic analysis of the financial and reputational exposure of the 2,770 so called ‘participants’ in the CRC Scheme. This reputational aspect is important with the first performance league tables due out in six months time, in October.

The report, which was launched at Intellect in London with attendance from Intellect, hosting specialist Rackspace and the UK Centre for Economic and Environmental Development (UKCEED) is aimed primarily at suppliers of innovative technologies that can help the organisations affected by this legislation to reduce their likely tax bills, cut energy use and protect their reputations as well as be able to pomote themaselves as responsible businesses.

Cambium believes the report will be of use to trade bodies and CRC Participants, policymakers and public stakeholders, and investors.

The report features an index which examines public and private sector participants for a range of sustainability and energy reduction related indicators and categorises them as leaders, early majority, late majority or laggards within their sector, providing a measure of their likelihood to invest in and adopt energy saving or other innovative technologies, supporting sustainable economic growth. 

The Cambium study identifies and explores the significant differences between the public and privat sector attitudes to a “carbon” and “social awareness” indicator and makes recommendations for better targeting of the market opportunity by suppliers.

There is a release available giving more details here and you can get a copy of the report here