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Platforms for government
Platforms for government
26 April 2016
Sharing a common platform allows government agencies to stand on the shoulders of others,
inside government and elsewhere. CEO of the DTO Paul Shetler explains how platforms can
benefit government and provides an update on what the DTO is building.
Government provides a huge number of services, helping millions of people to get things
done. Often, the same functionality is repeated many times over across many different
government services, at multiple levels of government. For example, booking appointments,
making and receiving payments, or checking the status of an application. When common
features emerge, they can be extracted out and opened up, along with the user interface, back
office tools, infrastructure and data. This means that the rest of government can make use of
the functionality as building blocks for other services. We call these building blocks ‘common
platforms’.
By adopting platforms, duplication across government is reduced, making services more
efficient and quicker to build. When this happens, the people building services can be freed-up
to focus on how user needs can be best met, instead of reinventing the wheel.
Best of all, sharing a common platform allows government agencies to stand on the shoulders
of others, inside government and elsewhere. Everyone benefits from sharing and reuse of
research, design and technology efforts, and users get a consistent experience across different
services.
The Digital Transformation Office’s work is focussed around three themes: building capability,
developing policy and creating platforms. For each platform, we’re starting small, focussing on
users, and working hand-in-hand with the rest of government. Here’s a brief overview of the
five platforms that are on the way:
GOV.AU
GOV.AU is our platform to help government to deliver better services and information. When it
is built, GOV.AU will provide a common approach to design, technology and content so that
people have a simple, clear and consistent experience when they use government online.
We’ve delivered an
Alpha prototype (https://www.gov.au/alpha/) and are now building this in
Beta which we’ll release in August 2016.
Digital Marketplace (/our-work/marketplace/)
The Digital Marketplace will make it easier for digital suppliers to connect with government so
they can help us deliver brilliant digital services. We’ll simplify IT procurement and create a
catalogue where suppliers and buyers can engage. Expect to see an Alpha prototype of the
platform in late 2016, with a Beta expected early 2017.
Digital Identity (/what-we-do/platforms/govpass/)
We’re working to make it easier for people to prove they are who they say they are, when they
need to access government services. The DTO is working towards a common approach to
identity proofing and authentication so that people can prove their identity once and carry out
any number of cross-agency transactions thereafter.
Performance Dashboard (/our-work/performance/)
Information about the performance of government services will be published on a new
dashboard. By making this information easier to access, the dashboard will drive the
continuous improvement of government services for users and increase government
transparency. Next we will release an alpha of the dashboard, showcasing performance
information about a live government service.
cloud.gov.au (/our-work/cloud/)
cloud.gov.au will provide the infrastructure, monitoring, and delivery tools for teams in
government to release and operate user-facing web applications easier. It also makes it simpler
to adopt best practices in releasing software, and will simplify the security accreditation
process for new services. So far, we’ve tested the platform with teams in our delivery hubs, and
we’re now working on building a self-service interface.
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