Title: Serving Canadians through Government On-Line
1Serving Canadiansthrough Government On-Line
Helen McDonald
Donna
Wood Assistant Secretary
Director
GeneralChief Information Officer Branch
Public Access Programs Branch
Treasury Board Secretariat
Communication Canada Government of Canada
Government of
Canada
2Evolution of Canadas Government On-Line (GOL)
initiative
- 1999 Speech from the Throne The Government
will become a model user of information
technology and the Internet. By 2004, our goal
is to be known around the world as the government
most connected to its citizens, with Canadians
able to access all government information and
services on-line at the time and place of their
choosing. - Budget 2000 initial two-year funding for
launching GOL - Budget 2001 600 million over the next four
years to implement the government on-line
strategy by 2005
3Government of Canadas service vision
- The Service Vision
- Using information and communication technology to
- enhance Canadians access to
- improved citizen-centred, integrated services,
- anytime, anywhere
- and in the official language of their choice
- GOL Delivery Target
-
- Most frequently used services on-line by 2005
Service Improvement Target 10 increase in
citizen satisfaction by 2005
4Client centricity and a whole-of-government
approach
- Service delivery user-centric approach to
service delivery and multi- channel integration,
driven by client priorities, satisfaction,
efficiencies and feasibility - Common secure infrastructure electronic service
platform to enable integrated services and
support secure Internet, telephone and in-person
access - Policy build citizen confidence in e-services by
addressing privacy, security and information
management - Human resources cross-government approach to
develop the right skills for electronic and other
service delivery, focused on change management
and competencies - Communication encourage take-up, engage citizens
to shape service evolution, assure citizens of
commitment to channel choice, and reporting to
Parliament
underpin the service vision
5Strategic investments in GOL and Service Delivery
- Estimated 2 to 4 billion invested by departments
6Political engagement through Cabinet Ministers
- Cabinet Committees on the Economic Union (CCEU)
and on the Social Union (CCSU) approve the
overall objectives, funding and major policy
decisions - Treasury Board Ministers approve policies and
standards (information technology, information
management, service delivery) and are updated
periodically on progress - President of the Treasury Board is lead minister
for GOL and Service Strategy
7Organization at the departmental level
Secretary of the Treasury Board Comptroller
General of CanadaÂ
IM/IT Stewardship Functional leadership for GoC
IT community Government On-Line by 2005 GoC
Service Agenda
8Interdepartmental committees supporting GOL and
Service Strategy (as of fall 2002)
Deputy Minister Committee (GOL/Service Oversight)
Service, Information and Management Board
CIO Council (CIOC)
GOL Leads
Information ManagementChampions
Information TechnologyChampions
Architecture Review Board
Information Management Policies Committee
Service Transformation Committee
Service Delivery Champions
http//www.gol-ged.gc.ca/governance/gov-gouv_e.asp
9Federal on-line presence in February 2000
10Defining how to organize for users
Life Event? Client Group?
Subject?
11Focus testing with Canadians to determine right
approach
- Focus Test 1 - The Organizing Principles, March
2000 - 25 focus groups, 5-7 persons per group
- Moncton, Montréal, Toronto, Kelowna, Vancouver
- Youth, Adults with without Internet experience,
Seniors, and Business -
- Focus Test 2 - The Specific Clusters, May 2000
- 25 focus groups, 6-8 persons per group
- Halifax, Québec, London, Winnipeg, Calgary
- Youth, Adults, Seniors, 2 x Business, half of
whom triedto get government services more than
once in the past year
12provided more meaningful organizing principle
for
government information and services
13Common Look and Feel Standards
- Features
- consistent placement and content of bilingual
institutional signatures and the Canada
wordmark - consistent placement and content of the use of
official language buttons - consistent content and placement of a common menu
bar - promotional space to identify special events
- use of universal accessibility tags
- consistent placement of institutional menu bars
- standard use and placement of dates
- consistent placement and content of important
notices link
standardized federal web presence
14Result Redesigned Canada Site launched in 2001
15Ongoing testing with users
- Validation of organizing principle (Cluster
Blueprint) - One-on-one in-depth interviews (35)
- Focus groups (20) English Halifax, Toronto,
Calgary, Lethbridge (14 groups) French
Montréal, Rivière-du-Loup (6 groups) - Respondent Categories Youth (3 groups) Seniors
(3 groups) Business (4 groups) Disabled persons
(5 interviews 3 English, 2 French) Light
Internet users (5 groups) Heavy Internet users
(5 groups) - Total participation 274 participants - Mix of
men and women - Gateways and clusters conduct focus testing with
their own user groups
ensures continuous improvements
16The Canada Site today
17Canadians Gateway
18Business Gateway
19International Gateway
20In addition to supporting the development of the
Canada Site as our e-platform
- Investment in common tools and supports
- Common content management system to re-use
metadata tags - Common metrics software to allow benchmarking
- Consolidated user support
- Common marketing strategy
- Joint focus testing and public opinion research
- Rationale
- Facilitates coordination or corporate approach
- Economies of scale facilitates sustainability
investments made in common tools and support
21Investments to accelerate service delivery
- Initial investments focused on pathfinders and
pilots - Competitive processes run to select projects
which best met criteria - Transactional services as well as information
services, gateways and clusters - Helped to gain momentum in getting a critical
mass of services on-line, and new portals
launched - Reaches large number of Canadians
- Achieves demonstrable results early
- Helped also to break new ground
- Facilitates cross-departmental or
inter-jurisdictional service integration - Addresses horizontal policy issues
- Innovative client service delivery approaches or
partnerships
22Investments to accelerate service delivery 2
- Over time focus shifted to
- Complete on-line delivery of most commonly used
services - Make progress towards more client-centred and
joined-up vision of service delivery - Explore options for further service integration
- Help gateways and clusters become platforms for
integrated service delivery - Provide common tools or services that would
benefit as many departments as possible - Selection criteria potential for service
integration, client impact, focus test results,
GoC priorities - Projects reviewed for results, good project
management
23Defining the most commonly used services
Horizontal services
Joined-up services
Gateways and Clusters
GOL 2005
24Services for Canadians by 2005
- 88 services including
- My Tax Account secure access to tax statements
and ability to update personal tax returns - Family Benefits streamlined provision of client
tax information to provinces/territories for
provincial income-tested programs - Real-time determination of eligibility for
veterans benefits and claims processing,
automatic enrollment for income-tested pension
benefits - Application for and repayment of student loans
25Services for Business by 2005
- 39 services including
- Filing of corporate tax, GST and record of
employment - Grants and contributions e.g. high-tech sector
and aboriginal businesses - Export assistance services and permits for
exports and imports of controlled goods - Income-based stabilization programs for farmers
26Services for International Clients by 2005
- 8 services including
- Applications for immigration and visitors
- Secure, two-way electronic filing for foreign
investment review - On-line delivery of international development
assistance
27Progression model developed to measure maturity
of services
- Transactional services
- Publish (1-3 passive/passive) information about
the service is available on-line - Interact (4-6 active/passive) clients can
communicate on-line with government - Transact (7-9 active/active) clients can
complete a transaction on-line (clients and
government can communicate with one another) - Information services
- Publish (1-3 push) basic information is
available on-line - Customize (4-6 push/pull) information is
deeper, increasingly client-centred holdings are
increasingly interactive - Provide client-defined access (7-9 pull)
clients can increasingly manipulate/synthesise
different information
28Annual departmental reporting
- To provide information to guide evolution and
progress - Began in 2000
- Departments and agencies asked to file reports on
milestones for putting key services on-line,
clients, benefits, risks - Similar template used in 2001 and 2002
- But filings now on-line
- Some topics changed increased focus on
- link to strategic plan, governance structure
- changes needed to legislation, regulations or
policy - changes needed to departmental IM/IT systems,
need for common infrastructure services - human resources and skills implications
- marketing plans
29Comprehensive measurement framework includes
Privacy
Critical mass of services
Convenience
Security
Accessibility
Take-up
Credibility
Service transformation
Efficiency
Citizen/client satisfaction
Innovation
new tool to measure client satisfaction (CMT)
30Next step moving to multi-channel service
delivery
- Fifty percent of Canadians use multiple channels
to obtain service, up from 26 in 2000 need to
respond - Need to address sustainability pressures
- Encourage use of on-line services
- Consolidate call centres, mail processing and
in-person centres, single window sites - Move to common infrastructure and business
processes - Opportunity to increase client satisfaction and
the relevance of federal government to Canadians
31to support service transformation over the
longer term
- We must leverage GOLs client-centric, whole of
government approach to service delivery across
all channels to fully realize the benefits for
service improvement and efficiency of delivery
Government On-Line is but a part of a much
broader issue the total transformation of how
governments organize to provide services and
informationto the users of their services as
well as for their own operationsthe fundamental
principleshould be a focus on the needs of
users Government On-Line Advisory Panel, 2002
32Defining the service vision to achieve service
transformation
- Service visions underway for 3 key clients groups
- Individuals
- Businesses
- International clients
- Visions supported by
- Client and service segmentation analysis
- Analysis of all components of delivery network
(call centres, in-person centres, mail, Internet) - Research on common enablers (marketing, HR,
technology) and best practices - Visions will be consolidated into government-wide
service strategy
33Opportunities for service transformation
- Businesses must submit payroll information to
multiple departments - We are developing a single point of filing for
business, which would be leveraged by multiple
departments enhancing efficiency and reducing
compliance burden - To open a restaurant requires a minimum of 20
permits or licences across 3 levels of government - We are piloting a single licence site with
provinces - There are over 270 grants and contributions
programs across 39 departments and agencies - We are mapping common program designs
34Service Strategy Enablers Components of our
common technology infrastructure
Service Consumers Individuals Businesses Trusted
3rd Parties GoC Dept. Empl.
Service Providers GoC Dept (public internal
services) Trusted 3rd Parties (external services)
S e c u r e C h a n n e l
Presentation Services
Program Services
Application Services
Access Devices
Access Networks
Access Networks
Services
Services
Services
Application Bridges
Front End Providers
Security Services
Services
Information Services
Services
Network Services
Services
Network Infrastructure
Operations
Support
Platform, Hosting and Service Location
Infrastructure
Management
35 Why a common infrastructure?
- Assures citizens that their information and
transactions with government are protected - Assures citizens of the authenticity and
integrity of government sites and databases - Protects against network intrusions
- Provides on-demand, broadband network services to
departments and agencies - Provides directory services and secure messaging
- Provides identification and authentication of
individuals and businesses with which government
conducts business - Provides brokerage services and connectors to
departmental enterprise-wide and administrative
systems
36epass on-line authentication service
- What is it?
- a unique electronic credential
- allows on-line access to government programs and
services that require enhanced security measures,
including secure electronic signatures - Citizens
- Address Change On-line
- My Tax Account
- Business
- Record of Employment
37Updating policies for an e-environment
- Privacy Impact Assessment ensures privacy
considerations are taken into account in the
design/re-design of service delivery - Management of Government Information ensures
that information assets are effectively and
efficiently managed throughout their life-cycles - Government Security Policy includes new IT
Security Standards
38Improved Stewardship of IT assets will help
achieve
- IM/IT Stewardship
- Initiatives optimized for whole of GoC
contribution to user-centred services - Fewer systems but used by more programs
- IT infrastructure investments tied more directly
to core business and service transformation
5.1B in 2001-02 Breakdown of spending by
category in 2001-02
efficiencies to be used for internal
transformation
39Communications and Marketing of on-line services
- Common approach to ensure consistent messaging
around service delivery and key issues (e.g.
privacy and security) - Sustained multi-media advertising campaigns (TV,
radio, transit, print, internal) attract users to
on-line channel 30 increase in visitors - Information kits to engage Members of Parliament
in promoting on-line services to Canadians
to reach key audiences
40Public Reporting
- Annual Public Reporting of GOL plans and progress
by departments and government-wide
(www.gol-ged.gc.ca) - First report against performance measurement
framework expected in late Fall - Departments encouraged to set and report publicly
on service performance and client satisfaction
ensures transparency and accountability
41Reporting on Service Standards A Best Practice
http//www.ccra-adrc.gc.ca/agency/standards/menu-e
.html
42Engaging Canadians on Service Strategy
- Internet-based user panel
- 4,500 people
- Traditional Survey and Focus Groups
- Citizens First
- Business First
- GOL Advisory Panel representatives from the
private, academic and voluntary sectors
through Public Opinion Research
43e-Consultation portal one stop access to all of
GoC
- Growing expectation for on-line consultation in
Government - Single window to information on GoC consultation
public consultation activities
44People and skills for Government On-Line
- Strategies for change in human resources
- support development of communities of practice
for IT, IM and Service Delivery - focus on capacity-building, recruitment,
retention and reskilling - develop and share community initiatives,
management and work practices - e-learning resources
- shared work descriptions and competency profiles
- organizational modelling
- GOL is key to modernizing public service,
attracting the best and brightest
45The way forward
- Service visions for Canadians (HRDC-led),
Business (IC-led), International (DFAIT-led) - Client needs, expectations and channel
preferences, and best practices in multi-channel
delivery - Opportunities for consolidation of service
delivery networks call centres, mail
processing, in-person - Sustainability modelling for the common
infrastructure - Legislative and governance requirements for
integrated service offerings - Modelling impacts of service delivery changes on
employees and skills required
46For more information
www.gol-ged.gc.ca
www.cio-dpi.gc.ca