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Plenary: The Government's agenda for IT
1. Charity Finance Directorsâ Group Bill McCluggage Deputy Government Chief Information Officer & Director of ICT Strategy & Policy Cabinet Office NOT A STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT POLICY
2. Governmentâs agenda for IT:how will this impact the voluntary sector? NOT A STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT POLICY
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4. people coming together to solve problems and improve life for themselves and their communitiesâ....where people in their everyday lives, their homes their neighbourhoods, their workplace, donât always turn to officials, local authorities or central government for answers to the problems they face, but instead feel both free and powerful enough to help themselves and their own communities.â Prime Minister, 19 July 2010
7. Opening up public services: enabling charities, social enterprises, private companies and employee-owned co-operatives to compete to offer people high quality services
18. Government Policy âWe will promote small business procurement, in particular by introducing an aspiration that 25% of government contracts should be awarded to small and medium-sized businesses and publishing government tenders in full online and free of charge.â Quoted from the Coalition Strategy for Government
19. Government Policy âWe will create a level playing field for open-source software and enable large ICT projects to be split into smaller ÂŁ100m components.â Coalition Programme for Government
20. Government Policy âWe will take steps to open up government procurement and reduce costs; and we will publish government ICT contracts online.â Coalition Programme for Government
21. "The days of the mega IT contracts are over, we will need you to rethink the way you approach projects, making them smaller, off the shelf and open source where possible.â Francis Maude MP, Minister for the Cabinet Office, 2nd December 2010
23. Gartner Global ICT Spending Analysis (average) by ICT Element 2003 -2009 indicates where money is typically spent in ICT So UK Gov ICT Spend? Data Centres ÂŁ3.2 bn Desktop ÂŁ1.85 bn Data Network ÂŁ1.69 bn Voice Network ÂŁ1.01 bn Help Desk ÂŁ1.18 bn Application Dev ÂŁ3.04 bn Application Support ÂŁ3.04 bn Finance, Man, Admin ÂŁ1.85 bn ÂŁ16.9bn Source Gartner analysis January 2010
33. We want to maximise the amount of consolidation to help the Public Sector achieve savings.End point Significant Central Government DC reduction by 2020, and a reduction of 80% across the wider Public Sector. âDelivering Public Sector ICT services from the optimum number of high performing, energy-efficient, resilient, cost-effective and standards based data centresâ 22
34. Cloud environments Public Cloud: Services and infrastructure provided off-site over the Internet Private Cloud: Services and infrastructure maintained on a private network Hybrid Cloud: A variety of public and private options. Each aspect of the business uses the most efficient environment
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36. G-Cloud, isnât one thing: It has five âworldsâ: Hosting, Testing, Sharing, Web, SME. Departments want and need different things so G-Cloud needs to offer them flexibility to make the offer compelling⊠âTesting worldâ I donât want to buy computers to test new systems, can I rent them from you? DirectGov âHosting worldâ âShared worldâ My computer systems are fine, I just want to close my data centres and use yours. ERP â HR/ Finance Gateway & ID Shared App BusinessLink Apps Give me economies of scale, security and growth, reduce my capex need What can be shared, should be shared. Common shared systems for all too use. âSME worldâ data.gov I want to use your G-Cloud to offer services to my non Government customers. UK tax growth, innovation âWeb worldâ Online/web services to employees/ citizens and business
41. No Technology stack lock-inGovernment Applications Store âeBayâ Shared Hosting Testing Web SME App App App Data Storage App Processing Capacity App App Security, Resilience, Support Any âapplicationâ from any supplier can be deployed on a common infrastructure using any back end technology stack (the lines) Software design, development , testing and integration tools/ components A choice of âtechnology stackâ vendors The infrastructure provider handles security and scalability. Think of it as the electricity grid. They don't decide what you do with it It is pay for use, there is no lock-in to long term software licence contacts It potentially provides a development and delivery vehicle for SMEâs to all their products globally, generating UK tax income and innovation
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43. Opening up public services: enabling charities, social enterprises, private companies and employee-owned co-operatives to compete to offer people high quality services
49. Social action using social media Digitally enabled citizen/govt engagement & collaboration (social media, e-petitions & etc) Open and accessible forums Increased efficiency Greater transparency will build citizen trust Policy developed in consultation with citizens
Five Worlds â start at Testing World and explain.
The Government is also committed to growing the economy for a diverse range of businesses, voluntary bodies and other social providers. It will promote a public service economy based on open ICT markets with increased participation of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and mutuals driving growth and creating jobs.The Government is already reducing the barriers that prevent SME participation in its ICT, for example through accelerated and less burdensome procurement regimes. It will create a competitive and open ICT market where SMEs will be given a fair chance to compete for opportunities. To do this, where possible, the Government will move away from large and expensive ICT contracts, with a presumption that no contract will be greater than ÂŁ100 million.It will also open its data and application interfaces in ways which encourage businesses and social providers to serve new market opportunities.