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Alle Mand p dk reb sejlene

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Innovative practices for enhancing eGovernment through ... mountain bikes, kite surfing. SMS, open source community (Linux), wikipaedias, blogging, games ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alle Mand p dk reb sejlene


1
Innovative practices for enhancing eGovernment
through Knowledge Managementthe user perspective
International Conference on eGovernment
enhancementvia knowledge management (EG²KM)
12-13 September 2006, Crown Princess Hotel, Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia Jeremy MillardDanish
Technological Institute
2
Overview
  • 1 Putting the user in the centre
  • Proactive and personalised services
  • 2 To e or not to e
  • Flexi-channelling and intermediaries
  • 3 User-driven innovation
  • Co-creation and networks of producers consumers
  • 4 Governing the societal interest
  • The future mandate competence of the public
    sector

3
Innovation through personalised and pro-active
services
  • User segmentation
  • Types and needs of user
  • User situation
  • User-government relations
  • Business processes, staff training, etc.
  • Types and uses of ICT
  • context location aware
  • intelligent complex decision making
  • predictive through automatic scenarios,
    simulations, impact assessments
  • The disappearing service
  • Public sector takes full responsibility to
    determine and deliver
  • So, user also needs to be able to turn-off move
    from invisible to visible
  • Typically services which government must supply,
    possesses the data, has high degree of
    integration, and are no legal barriers

4
Pro-active services
  • As back offices become more and more integrated
    and able to share data and resources amongst
    themselves, it is possible to offer services
    which require little or no initiative from, or
    action by, the user, thus saving the user time,
    expense and effort
  • For example family allowances in Ireland

5
Knowledge transfer to users
  • User takes control for service
  • For service initiation and use
  • User self-service
  • Typically services where government
  • is not legally obliged to initiate
  • does not already posses all the data
  • may be legal restrictions on data sharing
  • no legal or ethical barriers to users taking
    control
  • User becomes an agent of government
  • User as unpaid manager of own service supply
  • Services dis-intermediated onto the user (cuts
    out government as middle-man)
  • Good for government efficiency
  • But, digital divide issues ?

6
User self-service
  • Greater back-office integration and
    interoperability enables the user hier or himself
    to take more control, responsibility and
    initiative, so the user can determine, largely on
    an individual basis, precisely where, when and
    how the service is to be used
  • For example enrolment in higher education in
    Finland

7
The role of flexi-channellingCitizens contact
with government
Source eUSER 2006 Base adult population
  • In person remains most common, but large country
    differences
  • Mean contact with government only 1.6 times per
    year

8
Citizen users and multi-channel
  • eGovernment citizen users
  • 60-70 also use in-person, telephone, post (
    other electronic)
  • are not just Internet nerds but use
    government services more, other channels more
  • are flexi-channellers channel balancers
    switch between channels, make choices on most
    appropriate channel suited to citizen preference,
    service task

9
The role of intermediaries
10
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11
Source eUSER 2006 Base eGovernment users
  • 30-70 rule for eGovernment users
  • 30 assisted by social intermediary, 70 use
    entirely on own
  • 30 of assisted are totally assisted, 70
    partially assisted
  • Important differences between countries

12
Typical user profiles
  • Government
  • user
  • cf. all adults
  • higher education
  • higher income
  • not-employed, retired, invalid
  • over 65
  • eGovernment user
  • cf. gov users
  • country with high eGovernment roll-out
  • country with high Internet roll-out
  • well developed eSkills eAttitudes
  • in employment
  • aged 25-34
  • male
  • uses gov services more often
  • uses wider range of gov service types
  • uses wider range a different channels, not only
    ICT
  • Receiver of assistance
  • cf. eGov users
  • low eSkills/eAttitudes
  • manual or unskilled occupations
  • not working or retired
  • rare Internet user
  • country with not very advanced eGov roll-out
  • aged 50 plus
  • low eOrientation
  • female
  • below secondary level education
  • low income or in poverty
  • Internet access outside the home
  • Social
  • Intermediary
  • for eGov
  • cf. eGov users
  • early retired, invalid
  • quite high eSkills/ eAttitudes
  • Internet access in the home
  • unemployed
  • aged 35-64
  • country with not very advanced eGov roll-out

13
Civil servant intermediaries citizen-account
manager
  • Built on savings from down-sizing back-office
  • Re-deploying resources to up-sizing the
    front-office
  • The empowered front-line civil servant
    on-the-street
  • But not delivering services in same old way
    rather changing whole context and content of
    service deliver
  • Combining codified knowledge
  • highly intelligent back-office systems
  • With tacit and experiential knowledge
  • personal relationships between individual civil
    servants and individual users
  • user does not have to use ICT him/herself
  • Has huge implications for knowledge management in
    the public sector technical, organisational,
    legal, ethical
  • Also for (re)training and (re)skilling of staff,
    also for the quality of their work
  • Example civil servants digital suitcase in
    Berlin
  • Example the mobile civil servant in Seattle,
    USA

14
Networks of producers
  • User-driven innovation users as co-creators
  • Not just government for the people but also
    government by the people
  • User-driven innovation is a big step on from
    user in the centre
  • The user becomes a (co) creator of his/her
    services
  • Changes the whole concept of service design and
    delivery and of the knowledge and intelligence
    needed
  • Blurring of designers and users
  • Already happens in private sector
  • mountain bikes, kite surfing
  • SMS, open source community (Linux), wikipaedias,
    blogging, games
  • Typically using social software and social
    network tools, coupled with professional devices
    now available in the shopping mall digital
    video-cameras, laptops, sensors, recording
    equipment and software to edit content, videos,
    photos and music, etc.

15
Networks of consumers
  • The demand side is also changing
  • These technologies also enable massive pooling
    for what are minority demands
  • 25 of Amazons turnover is from books NOT in the
    100,000 best sellers
  • 98 of Ecasts jukebox music website of 10,000
    titles are purchased at least once every 3 months
  • Big sellers continue, but total sales are
    increasing driven by minority tastes (which, in
    the physical world, rarely register any sales
  • Minority demand is becoming as important as
    majority demand
  • and its the same in services

16
Knowledge and ICT change the market
  • In at least 4 ways
  • 1 No need for physical stock
  • Even when physical, stock in not needed in one
    place close to consumers
  • JIT and ICT-controlled production (cf. Dell),
    tailored to precise needs of customers
  • Differences between products and services
    disappearing
  • 2 Distribution easier
  • Even for physical products when customers can
    select and purchase online
  • 3 Searching for precisely the right
    product/service is easy, or for precisely the
    right producers to create your product/service
  • 4 Producers and consumers can identify and
    exploit previously unknown and inaccessible
    knowledge, expertise and resources
  • will enable highly differentiated and
    personalised services

17
Social entrepreneurship
  • Substantial changes to the public sector value
    chain
  • New producer and consumer relationship
  • New definitions of public value
  • From formal institutions to informal (often ad
    hoc and temporary) networks
  • The democratisation of innovation
  • Traditional intermediaries being side-stepped or
    excluded (like libraries, music shops, doctors
    surgeries ??)
  • The police use citizens mobile phone photos of
    crime and traffic
  • Public broadcasters use citizen weblogs
  • Council maintenance uses citizen SMS messages to
    remove rubbish, makes repairs, etc.
  • Users no longer prepared to be passive recipients
    of public services
  • Diabetics in the UK health service
  • Citizen action groups measuring noise levels at
    Schipol Airport

18
The challenge of user-driven innovation
  • User also want recognition
  • e.g. in computer gaming, comes from community of
    gamers
  • In this de-professionalised world, what do the
    professionals think? Is their position
    undermined?
  • cf. the world of media, newspapers, radio, TV,
    etc
  • Problems of quality, standards and postcode
    lottery whose and who decides?

19
Future mandate and competence of the public sector
  • Threat or opportunity of outsourcing ?
  • Outsourcing can provide clear benefits
    (efficiency, additional resources, better
    quality, greater service personalisation)
  • Commoditisation and potential outsourcing
    threatens all types of processes
  • But public sector may lose knowledge, competence
    and control over basic processes
  • What should be outsourced and which retained
    in-house?
  • Retain in-house ? High level issues like basic
    policy/decision making power, overall control,
    monitoring, supervision (all subject to
    democratic supervision), with public interest and
    public good as driving principle
  • Commoditisation, outsourcing and privatisation
    could mean that the public sector as we know it
    today in Europe could disappear to a rump, or be
    passed to the whim and partiality of the
    voluntary and charitable sector

20
Governing the collective societal interest
  • What are the roles of public, private and civil
    sectors ??
  • Private sector strong in effective use of ICT
    for driving efficiency and effectiveness, cutting
    costs, increasing output, rationalising business
    processes, customer service, etc.
  • Civil sector less capable in ICT, but can couple
    social service ethos with local or specialised
    knowledge and resources
  • Public sector responsibility to develop
    services, not just to serve immediate user need,
    but also to implement wider (and longer term)
    societal policies, to set and maintain service
    standards regardless of location or group, and to
    ensure no-one is excluded
  • Should the public sector have a monopoly over
    public governance and services ?
  • What are indeed the latter ?
  • What about the new empowerment of localities,
    groups and communities ?
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