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Weekend Links: Environment Agency blog, weeknotes, interning at FCO and more

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If you find a link you think we’d like, message us @GDSTeam

Surveillance-Work

Take a look at the recently launched Environment Agency blog.

Learn about work experience opportunities at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office.

The National Archives just added more sections to their beta release.

We like the sound of the Inspiring Digital Enterprise Award for 16-25 year olds.

Keep up to date on all things GOV.UK in Inside GOV.UK weeknotes.

And finally, read about how the technology team dealt with migrating GOV.UK to a new infrastructure.

 


The Performance Platform: open for business

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The Performance Platform is a tool for government to answer the question ‘how are we doing?’. At present, the important facts are not accessible to the right people, at the right time, in the right way.

If you’re responsible for a government service, and you’d like to use the platform as a tool to help you, please do get in touch by leaving a comment below or by emailing performance@digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk

The problem

Government is a large organisation, and the distance between the user and the people with responsibility for public services can often feel enormous.

Currently, we usually measure the performance of projects and policies manually. This involves many members of staff compiling documents, spreadsheets and slide decks, circulating progress summaries by email, and supporting decisions.

Most of the data isn’t classified or commercially confidential. But, if you’re not on the right email lists, or in the right meetings, you don’t get to see that data. Requests for routine information can take days to reach the right people. Bad news can take even longer to travel.

When, at last, that information arrives – sometimes as a regular report of of sixty pages or more with a glittering selection of charts and tables – it may obscure rather than answer the question what is to be done?

Progress

The Performance Platform is an attempt to build an automated, accessible, and actionable tool to give service managers and other users the information they need to make public services better.

Last year, we built about a dozen dashboards to connect a variety of services to the Platform. This was an opportunity to experiment with different ways to tackle the problem. To connect a new service required technical expertise and quite a lot of time.

This year is different. We are busy building the architecture that will support hundreds of services, and which will allow departments and services to connect their services to the Platform themselves.

We will release full documentation, as well as new tools to automate much of the configuration of the dashboards soon.

We have begun to work with a range of commercial partners, like Equal Experts and Scraperwiki, who can help departments to connect their systems if they need technical help.

For a live service to pass the Digital Service Standard, it will need to be connected to the Performance Platform. We are working with service managers to ensure that this isn’t a tick-box requirement, but a useful tool for their work.

If you have suggestions about the functions or data that would be most helpful for you to see, or if you’d like to work with us to connect your service to the platform, please do get in touch using the email address above or by leaving a comment below.

Efficiency through transparency

There may be concerns few about presenting unvarnished facts about performance in public. I would urge courage – for three reasons:

  • if there is bad news it is better to know about it quickly, when it can still be addressed. If you’re responsible for a public service, the performance platform could be the most helpful tool you have for finding out headline facts quickly, without having to ask.
  • service performance will often be positive. Transparently presenting the facts is a great way of communicating the quality of public service management inside and outside the civil service.
  • in general, the performance of public services is a minority interest sport. The novelty of data transparency has now largely worn off. There is nothing sensational about seeing yesterday’s user satisfaction figures, or the weekly service completion rates.

Coming soon

This year we want to support service managers by making information on all major government services available through the Performance Platform on phones, tablets, through an open and documented API, and a presentation view for large monitors. Also, actively pushing information to service managers using alerts.

You’ll be able to compare between services, and perhaps even to forecast future trends. And you’ll be able to embed the data wherever you need to – like in this blog post for example.

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Getting approval for agile spending

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Today, GDS and HM Treasury publish new clarification of business case guidance. We needed to explain how government organisations get permission to spend money on agile work.

We consulted central government departments and the Major Projects Authority, who have been asking for this clarification for months. This will cut bureaucracy and encourage innovation, making digital transformation easier across government.

The guidance clarification applies to major projects. But, it is good practice for government organisations to also follow the same principles internally when dealing with smaller spend.

Agile spend approval

An overview

This publication clarifies that government organisations can spend up to £750k on discovery and alpha in most cases. Cabinet Office spend controls can approve this – no need for an HM Treasury business case.

The guidance clarification recommends that projects track progress against business cases using digital service demonstrations, agile burn charts and product backlogs rather than traditional lengthy IT documents.

The guidance clarification recommends streamlining business cases through:

  • more use of relatively light touch Programme Business Cases
  • using agile discovery to replace the Strategic Outline Case in most cases
  • avoiding the need for a separate Full Business Case stage where procurement uses a pre-competed arrangement such as the Digital Services Framework

What this means

For people not involved in government spending, this may seem a bit dry.

For agile and finance teams in government departments, this guidance clarification has produced incredible interest. I have had dozens of enquiries from people keen to see it published, and it produced a lively discussion at the Sprint 14 conference.

This could be the most exciting administrative change this year in supporting an agile culture in government.

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Digital Inclusion Strategy launches today

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Last December, we published action 15 of the Government Digital Strategy to show the government’s commitment to digital inclusion. Today, as the Director responsible for this area of work, I wanted to mark the launch of the Digital Inclusion Strategy as part of that commitment to reduce the number of people and organisations offline.

We’ve also brought together 40 organisations from public, private and voluntary sectors to sign up to a new UK Digital Inclusion Charter. Partners like AgeUK, Asda, EE and the Society of Chief Librarians will work together in new ways to tackle digital exclusion by creating actions that can be scaled up nationally.

This is a really exciting time for us because it’s the first time the government will be bringing together such a wide number of partners to tackle digital exclusion. We want to scale up good ideas, stop duplication and make it easier for people to work together. We will work over the next two years to reduce the number of people without basic digital skills and capabilities by a quarter.

Actions to tackle digital exclusion

The government will work with the digital skills charity Go ON UK and UK Digital Inclusion Charter signatories to address the barriers that have stopped people going online by delivering a set of ten actions:

1. Make digital inclusion part of wider government policy, programmes and digital services

2. Establish a quality cross-government digital capability programme

3. Give all civil servants the digital capabilities to use and improve government services

4. Agree a common definition of digital skills and capabilities

5. Boost Go ON UK’s Partnership Programme across the country

6. Improve and extend partnership working

7. Create a shared language for digital inclusion

8. Bring digital capability support into one place

9. Deliver a digital inclusion programme to support small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and voluntary, community and social enterprises (VCSEs)

10. Use data to measure performance and improve what we do

How we developed the strategy

The strategy’s been developed around the needs of those offline; people who do not have the capability to use the internet. We did this by running a consultation exercise with the public on a checklist for digital inclusion throughout January, to understand what works.  We also worked closely with government departments and our digital inclusion stakeholder group to get ideas on what kind of action will help us deliver success.

Measuring success

To help us measure our success, we will use the new  digital inclusion scale to track national progress on reducing the digital exclusion of individuals across the population.  This scale has been developed using the GDS’ Digital Landscape Research and data from the BBC and Office of National Statistics (ONS). We will continue to use data published annually by the BBC, ONS and our own cross-government research to make sure we are on track.

Digital Inclusion scale

For organisations we will use another scale, the UK business digital index, developed by Lloyds Banking Group for SMEs and VCSEs; benchmarking their digital capabilities in order to assess what support they’ll need. Lloyds will review and publish the UK business digital index every year.

Using both these scales will help us know where we’ve made a big difference and where we might need to change what we do. We will report on our progress against the actions through the Government Digital Strategy quarterly progress reports.

I would like to thank everyone who contributed to the development of the strategy, particularly Graham Walker, Tristan Wilkinson and Clive Richardson from Go ON UK, all the UK Digital Inclusion Charter signatories and the Digital Inclusion leads in Departments.

If you are part of an organisation that is interested in getting further involved or interested in signing up to the charter contact the digital inclusion team at digital-inclusion@digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk.

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GOV.UK hosting – simpler, clearer, faster

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Recently the Government Digital Service’s infrastructure team moved GOV.UK to a new hosting platform.

Find out what happened …

Follow the infrastructure team on Twitter:

Sam Sharpe: @SamJSharpe

Bob Walker: @rjw1

Anna Shipman: @annashipman

Brad Wright: @bradwright

Carl Massa: @massacarl

Albert Massa (Operations Manager for GOV.UK): @awmassa

Don’t forget to sign up for email alerts.


Transcript

On 25 March the infrastructure team moved GOV.UK to a new hosting platform

Carl Massa, Infrastructure lead, Government Digital Service:

We migrated the entire GOV.UK platform; while it was live and running, we built another platform beside it and switched over seamlessly. There was zero impact on the public and publishers were only out of commission for about two and a half hours. We should be going out to market every year or two years, make sure we’re taking advantage of new technologies, ensuring we’re getting the best value for the taxpayer. It gave us the opportunity to make things simpler, clearer and faster for the way we work on the inside.

Carl:
“When was the last time?”
Sam Sharpe:
“Three hours ago. Last time was probably when I deployed Puppet.”

It took 2 months to prepare

Carl:
What you saw that evening was just the last stop in a really long race. The preparation began about two months before. There was a lot of planning that went into it and a lot of hard work. We were able to take live GOV.UK traffic and push it into this new stack, and get a feel for how it would operate.

And 2 hours 28 minutes to complete

Bob Walker:
“Production is green.” “According to our monitoring, everything is now healthy in production.”
Sam:
“What is the time now, gentlemen?”
Bob:
“Half-eight.”
Sam:
[laughs].

Carl:
We were done in about two hours and twenty eight minutes. So yeah, it was incredible.

And we couldn’t have done it without the badger

Carl:
Our developers are constantly pushing new software and new version upgrades onto the website.

Sam:
“Ohh, very important step!”

Carl:
And one way to prevent people from deploying. That is, pushing new versions of software over the top of other people, is by making them insure that they have a physical talisman in their hand. That’s where the badger comes in; it’s basically our change manager. So if you don’t hold the badger, you shouldn’t be deploying.

Sam:
“Compose new Tweet.” “There we go.”

Graham:
“Sam, tell me what you’ve just tweeted?”

Sam:
“I’ve just tweeted: ‘Just shipped a nation’s website from one set of machines to another. #nobiggie.” “So we’re done. Time to go home.”

Bob:
“Yes.”

Weekend links: Next Generation Testing, HMRC, UK Trade and Investment and more

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Found a link you think we’ll like? Share it with us on Twitter – @gdsteam

GDS Digital Marketplace

The Digital Marketplace are talking user research over on their blog.

The first £2 million of the £30m government-led Growth Voucher programme have already been issued to over 1,000 small businesses.

GOV.UK welcomed UK Trade and Investment to the platform this week.

The DVSA have launched the Next Generation Testing (NGT) pilot in South Wales, Hereford and parts of the Midlands.

There were some interesting speakers at the Data Storytelling event at the National Audit Office this week. The BIS Internal Communications team were in attendance.

Although we’re not always ‘appy about apps, we think this HMRC app that helps you find out how the government spends your tax money is a useful tool.

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User needs and revolutions

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User needs and revolutions

In 2010, Martha Lane Fox (the UK’s Digital Champion at the time) completed her review of the government’s web offering. In her letter to Francis Maude she said:

There has been a reinvention of the internet and the behaviour of users in the last few years. Digital services are now more agile, open and cheaper. To take advantage of these changes, government needs to move to a ‘service culture’, putting the needs of citizens ahead of those of departments. (my emphasis)

This idea of creating government digital services based on ‘user needs’ was new for the public sector.

For the private sector, not so much.

Martha understood what the private sector was doing well and translated it for the public sector.

So what’s all this ‘user needs’ business?

I remember when I was first asked to write a piece of content based on a ‘user need’. I didn’t have a clue what they were talking about.

I’d been writing public sector web content for years. This work was based on looking at the information, organising it logically, writing it as clearly as possible and then getting it out there (eventually, after it had been signed off by several layers of people and trundled its way through some unfortunate content management system or other).

Writing for the private sector was different. I’d done a bunch of that too, and in fact soon realised that I already knew how to do what was being asked.

User needs and the private sector

With private sector content strategy, ‘user needs’ is old news – though they don’t call it that.

You have to think about your customers and potential customers if you want to create a successful content strategy. You don’t just have to think about them, you have to get to know them enough to understand their needs.

You want to get the right people to your site, help them understand why the product or service is of benefit to them, and encourage them to take the decision to buy it; or take the next step towards what will hopefully eventually be a purchase (e.g. contacting the organisation to find out more).

If they hate your content, they won’t read it. If they don’t read it, they can’t buy your stuff. Let’s unpack that from the perspective of user needs.

As a writer, you need to understand the audience (i.e. the market for the product or service you’re selling), then design your content to appeal to them.

1. You ask yourself who exactly you’re writing for

Advertising agencies spend a great deal of money working this out until they have various customer ‘personas’ to give to their writers.

A persona will be something like:

Alice is a 32-year-old working mum. She buys her groceries at [some large supermarket name] and has just started doing this online. She’s a member of the local gym but she never goes. She spends £34 a month on hair products and works at a high street bank 3 days a week.

2. You ask yourself what Alice is looking for and why

Every salesperson knows that if you want to sell stuff, you don’t talk about features. Instead, you talk about benefits.

In short, you talk in the customer’s language about how your product or service will benefit them in their lives and help them do what they want to do.

You have to do this from their perspective or it doesn’t work.

For example, from the company’s perspective, product X:

  • comes in a small bottle
  • is made of polyglycerolic whajjamacallit
  • costs £320

These features mean little or nothing to the customer. What’s in it for me?

Turning these features into benefits, you end up with something like:

  • it fits neatly into your handbag so you can use it throughout the day
  • it won’t stain your clothes
  • it’s only for the truly discerning customer who wants to look and feel their best

3. You look at the evidence

Website usage is closely scrutinised. Usually, the success of the content will be judged by how many people went from looking at the website, to clicking ‘buy now’, to actually completing the purchase. Sometimes there are other goals but they’re always clearly defined.

How this relates to public sector content

We write user needs in the following way:

As a … (e.g. ‘self-employed person’)

I want to … (e.g. ‘file my tax return)

So that I can … (e.g. ‘avoid nasty fines’)

We work out who the audience is, then we look at what they want to do and why.

This is similar to the private sector approach, only we’re not trying to sell anything or compete with other sites. We’re simply meeting the need – as quickly and effectively as possible.

We use various tools to find out:

  • what the user is looking for
  • how they’re articulating their need
  • what the different elements of that need are

If we’re looking at a larger or higher-profile piece of work, our user research team will do more in-depth testing too.

Evidence

If the user doesn’t want to do something, they aren’t looking for it, so there’s little demand. A page that doesn’t meet an actual user need, even if it theoretically meets a presumed user need, will show up in our data.

The web made it relatively quick and very cheap to publish things. So we published things. And then published more things. We published more and more until the user had to wade through a swamp of government content to find the thing that actually met their need.

When we were looking at content on Directgov and Business Link we found there was a lot of content on there that users simply weren’t interested in. It was there, but no one looked at it. So it didn’t make it onto GOV.UK.

It’s not surprising that Martha Lane Fox concluded we needed ‘revolution not evolution’. But like most revolutions, this one didn’t come out of nowhere.


Weekend links: hackathons, time travel, glow-in-the-dark motorways and more

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Got a link you think we’ll like? Share it with us on Twitter – @gdsteam

Google Street Map time machine of Aviation House

Google Street Map “time machine” of Aviation House

Forget Back to the Future – Google Street Map are giving you the chance to go back in time using historical imagery from past Street View collections.

The Ministry of Justice took part in a Public Sector Hackathon last week.

What cars will we be driving tomorrow? Richard Bruce, Head of the Office for Low Emission Vehicles, thinks he knows the answer.

The Environment Agency have been busy helping anglers report their catch to the government – and they’ve been using agile to do it.

Some clever folks in the Netherlands have developed light-absorbing glow-in-the-dark road markings that could be set to change the way we drive forever.

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Just doodling: telling the story with a few pen strokes

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One thing visitors to the GDS office can’t help noticing is the colourful selection of cartoons and doodles stuck on the walls.

Paul Downey - just doodling

Many of them are the work of GDS technical architect Paul Downey. His witty drawings do more than just brighten up the office and put smiles on people’s faces – they also act as useful reminders about the principles that guide our work.

Many’s the time one of us has used one of Paul’s drawings in a presentation, because they say such a lot with just a few pen strokes.

We thought it would be nice to get Paul in front of a camera and ask him where the ideas come from, and how the doodling began.

(This film is an experiment, the first one we’ve made about an individual, rather than about a team or a service. As always, feedback is welcome.)

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When to use caps around GOV.UK

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govukcapped

Why do we write GOV.UK in capitals? And why is the URL written lower-case? You may well have heard the reasons, but we’ve never actually written them down. Let’s fix that now.

When we were thinking about names for the government website we came up with a number of ideas, but soon realised it already had an identity people knew – that little bit of the end of the URL, gov.uk.

To formalise the name we simply put it in capitals, GOV.UK. We did that because we want it to be absolutely clear that this is the name and identity of the government website. So, when using the name of the government’s website, we use upper-case: GOV.UK.

But, when we want to tell people the URL, we want it to look like a URL, so we put it in lower-case, with the three w’s: www.gov.uk.

So that’s it in writing. When writing the name, GOV.UK, please use capitals. When writing the URL, www.gov.uk, please use lower case. Thanks.

Follow James on Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for email alerts.


Weekend links: more Lego, lessons learned, DVSA and more

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Found a link you think we’ll like? Share it with us on Twitter – @gdsteam

reg-traveller-work-620x348

The Registered Traveller exemplar at the Home Office talk about their successes and failures when it comes to sharing code between projects.

We liked this post about using graphic design to make learning maths easier.

The guys from FutureGov have written about their local government learnings.

The Inside GOV.UK team and the DVSA on how making one small change increased clickthroughs by 600%.

Jon Rouse writes  “We know – and want – to improve services in health and care – but it’s not just about having the right people and processes, we need the tools and technology to help us do it.”

And finally, something fun for the bank holiday weekend – Lego Ideas (an open platform for user-designed playsets) moves from beta to live!

Join the conversation on Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for email alerts.


Updated assisted digital guidance in the Government Service Design Manual

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The Digital By Default Service Standard came into full force this month. We have updated the Government Service Design Manual to help services understand and meet the requirements of criteria 10:

Assisted digital

Assisted digital is support for people who can’t use online government services independently. This support will make sure that these people can access and complete government services online.

IMG_6899.jpg

Updates to the manual

We have made updates to three pages in the Government Service Design Manual that focus on assisted digital.

The guide to assisted digital

This gives a detailed view, including what good assisted digital looks like. The guide also explains how assisted digital differs from (and relates to) digital inclusion, digital take-up (sometimes called channel shift), and how the government will become digital by default.

The assisted digital action plan

This shows service managers how to develop assisted digital support as part of their digital by default service, and how to meet the requirements of the service standard at each development phase.

Researching assisted digital users

This page gives extra guidance on how to research the specific needs, barriers, and challenges of assisted digital users, and how researching them differs from research into digital service users.

Requirements of services

With the Service Standard now in full effect, we will be carrying out a far more robust assessment of services’ plans for assisted digital provision. We will look in detail at the evidence service managers have gathered to support their plans.

Assessors have a set of prompts for assessments at each phase of service design, helping them to get the best information from the service manager about how the service meets the Service Standard. These are shared with service managers in advance of assessment.

By the end of Alpha

The focus here is on making plans that are based on high quality research into assisted digital user needs and volume.

Assessors will look for evidence from service managers including: learning from research; expected amount of assisted digital support required; barriers for assisted digital users to using the digital service independently; plans to test assisted digital support; and funding plans to ensure free and sustainable assisted digital support for users.

Beta

The focus here is on having plans for full assisted digital support that meet user needs and volume, including piloting that support as part of wider beta testing.

Assessors will look for evidence from service managers including how learning from user research has informed their assisted digital support; timelines for getting assisted digital support in place; expected volume and costs by channel during the beta and when fully live; joined up and consistent support across central government transactions.

Live

The focus here is on support meeting user needs and volume to at least the minimum service requirement, and ongoing monitoring of users’ changing needs.

Assessors will look for evidence from service managers including: how assisted digital support has been tested and iterated during the beta; how assisted digital support provides value for money and that volumes and costs are in line with estimates; how performance of assisted digital support is being measured; users are aware of the assisted digital support and can access it easily; the assisted digital support is trusted by users with positive feedback and a good end-to-end user experience.

We’d like to thank everyone who helped us with this update, and we look forward to working with government departments putting high quality assisted digital support in place.

Follow the assisted digital team on Twitter.

Email the assisted digital team for further information.

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Using A/B testing to make things better

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Our user support analysts have used A/B testing to help 1,000 more users a month find the contact details they’re looking for on GOV.UK.

Find out how …

Follow Ricky on Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for email alerts.


Transcript

My name’s Ricky Morris. I’ve been looking at how we can improve our processes around feedback on GOV.UK. We noticed that when people were getting in touch with us, they were asking for contact information that was already available on other pages. When people come to GOV.UK they may not know the exact name of the department that they want to get in touch with, so we had an idea about putting some of that contact information up so that people could get there easier and quicker. We ran an A/B test where we compared one design – a new design – to the old design. The old contact page had 5 links on it with the most popular contact pages. We added 20 more, and what we discovered was that for the new design, of 50,000 people a week who come to the contact page, we were helping nearly a thousand of them get straight to the contact information they needed. Running A/B tests is a great way of getting very robust data with very measurable evidence of how we’re making an impact.

Weekend links: International Space Station, more hackathons, GDS Technology, and more

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Found a link you think we’ll like? Share it with us on Twitter @gdsteam.

International Space Station - image courtesy of NASA

Image courtesy of NASA on a Creative Commons licence

Over on GDS technology this week Anna Shipman is talking about building tools to provision our machines.

Our identity assurance team issued a prior information notice (PIN) in the Official Journal of the European Union (OJEU). Find out more about what this means for procurement.

Congratulations to MOJ Digital who recently came second at the Public Sector Hackathon in London.

Find out the latest on the HMRC website transition over to GOV.UK.

And finally, one of our favourite things this week is the NASA live stream from the International Space Station.

 

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Releasing all the things: a good day for the Performance Platform

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Yesterday we released 83 dashboards. We wouldn’t normally plan to release like this. We like to do little and often. However, on this occasion, we have a new overview dashboard which we’ve released for 82 services.

In addition to these we also released a dashboard for IPO Patent Renewals, one of the exemplar services, and changes to the Performance Platform homepage.

Homepage

Why so much?

Currently there are two places where you can find performance information on government services. The Performance Platform and Transactions Explorer. Service managers have told us this is unhelpful. They want all their data in one place.

It is also confusing for users who are looking for something specific. Why should you need to look in two places?

To improve this, we’ve combined the two sets of data into a single dashboard for each service on the Performance Platform. This release includes all the high volume services; those with over 750,000 transactions. We’ll do the same for the remaining services soon. In the meantime, the latest data (up to December 2013) is now available for them on the Transactions Explorer.

What’s new?

The 82 new overview dashboards show quarterly data for transactions and digital take-up which was not shown in the Transactions Explorer. This provides a bit more insight into how the service is performing.

Bar-Charts

Home sweet home?

We knew that to successfully transition 82 dashboards to the Performance Platform we would need to make it easy for users to find the dashboard they are looking for, so we made some tweaks to the homepage and brought back the services page. This is a temporary solution, but we hope a filterable list on the services page which lists all the dashboards will make it easy enough while we work on designs and search.

Services-page

What else?

We’ve also released a dashboard for Patent Renewals, an Intellectual Property Office transaction and one of the exemplars. The dashboard is one of the first to have user satisfaction data which is taken from the done page surveys on GOV.UK. At the moment this visualisation shows the average response.

Customer sat

We are already working on improving this to show the breakdown of responses from very satisfied to very unsatisfied and that will be released soon.

User-satisfaction

This week has been really exciting for us as a team. Releasing 83 dashboards in a day is more than we did in the whole of last year. We will need to spend some time iterating and improving what we have, but expect to see even more dashboards on the Performance Platform in the coming weeks. In the meantime, take a look at the new dashboards and let us know what you think.

Join in the conversation on Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for email alerts.



Over 50 million visits and other data stories

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The product analysts are always keeping an eye on how GOV.UK is performing, and I thought it would be interesting to share a milestone and some other data about user behaviour.

50 million visits

In March this year GOV.UK saw over 50 million visits in a calendar month for the first time. Visits to GOV.UK are on a steady upward trend – driven by strong optimisation in search and the transition of agency websites.

GOV.UK traffic

 

But, you’ll notice the impact of holiday periods – Christmas and Easter – when people are clearly less inclined to interact with government. February dips, of course, since it is a short month.

GOV.UK now ranks in the top 40  websites in the UK

Experian Hitwise collects anonymous data about internet use in the UK.  We use this to monitor the popularity of GOV.UK against all other web properties.

Popularity rank of GOV.UK and visits

Not surprisingly, there is a correlation between visits and rank. Again, when there is a holiday, GOV.UK’s visits and rank tend to dip – you can even see that in the last week’s data when Monday was a Bank Holiday. Of course, like any ‘league table’, GOV.UK’s position is also influenced by the performance of other sites. Its usual neighbours are banks, ISPs’ sites and some newspapers.

Visits to GOV.UK from overseas

Over the last 18 months, we’ve seen visits to GOV.UK from people overseas double from around six per cent of total visits to 12% in April. We only know that users are visiting from an overseas IP address, so we don’t know if they are foreign nationals or British people resident or on holiday abroad or in overseas territories.

Ordered by raw volume, the top ‘nations’ visiting GOV.UK include USA, Russia and China, the larger European nations and countries with historical connections with the UK. But, after taking population into account the list switches to UK territories and dependencies, with the Isle of Man, Falklands Island and Guernsey topping the list.

What else are we doing?

The product analysts are working on a wide range of products for GOV.UK and GDS, including:

  • content dashboards on the Performance Platform
  • standard KPIs
  • setting benchmarks for users’ interaction for different content formats
  • supporting transition
  • improving site search

Keep a lookout for our data analysis posts on Inside GOV.UK and the GDS data blog.

Weekend links: Instagram, filtered search, cyclotrons and more

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Found a link you think we’d like? Share it with us on Twitter @gdsteam.

Take a look at DfID’s Instagram feed – great stories and a real insight into their work.

Children playing basketball amid the rubble in Tacloban, six months on from #TyphoonHaiyan. UK aid has helped a million people who were affected by the typhoon. Picture: Henry Donati/DFID #Philippines #Yolanda #Haiyan #UKaid #Tacloban

 

Filtered search is changing the way we can use GOV.UK – meet our first finders on Inside GOV.UK.

The GDS content designers and writers were inspired by Limerick Day this week. Over lunch, we challenged them to explain our work through poetry … here’s our favourite:

Image courtesy of John Keogh under a Creative Commons licence

Image courtesy of John Keogh under a Creative Commons licence

Over on the public health matters blog the spotlight is on anxiety as part of Mental Health Awareness Week. The post includes information about The Big White Wallan online community where people can talk openly and anonymously about what’s on their mind.

Faraday circuits, steam engines and cyclotrons all feature in the intricate typefaces developed by New Delhi design student Khyati Trehan.

User research is a massive part of our work at GDS, and this week the cabinet office technology blog is talking about user testing with cabinet office staff – working hard to make sure everyone has the technology and support they need to do their work.

On Sunday it’s International Museums Day – find out what events are happening, and where, on the #MuseumDay map.

Could wearable technology improve your productivity in the workplace?

From the earliest known musings of a Bronte to the details of Oscar Wilde’s trial – the British Library has unveiled the world’s largest digital English literature resource.

Reading the digital revolution

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On Monday I gave a talk at Sprint Policy, an event discussing the impact digital technology and digital thinking was having on the world of policymaking.

I mentioned a few books, blog posts and ways of looking at the web that are pretty well known around GDS. It’s the world we work in.

It struck me that not many people in the audience recognised them, so I thought I’d publish the list here. It’s not exhaustive – if you think there’s something important missing then leave a comment below.

The Cluetrain Manifesto - image by Paul Downey

The Cluetrain Manifesto – image by Paul Downey

The Cluetrain Manifesto

Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet by Katie Hafner and Matthew Lyon

Small Pieces Loosely Joined: A Unified Theory of the Web by David Weinberger

The Web We Lost by Anil Dash

Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organising Without Organisations by Clay Shirky

Out of Control, and The Shirky Principle by Kevin Kelly

Motivation, Agency and Public Policy by Julian Le Grand

The Agile Manifesto

The Cathedral and the Bazaar by Eric S. Raymond

Government as a Platform by Tim O’Reilly

Revolution not Evolution by Martha Lane Fox

 

EDIT 28/5/2014:

A few suggestions came in over twitter after this was published, which I thought I’d add below…

Systems Thinking in the Public Sector by John Seddon

Codev2 by Lawrence Lessig

Being Digital by Nicholas Negroponte

Open Policy Making and Digital – a happy coupling

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So … digital is just about transforming services? No, not in our view, nor in the view of our open policy making colleagues. Yesterday we co-hosted an event with the Open Policy Making (OPM) team in the Cabinet Office that included how digital is being used by policy makers across government.

We heard from policy makers about how they are designing policy with digital outcomes in mind, and how they are using digital tools and techniques throughout the policy making process.

Digital tools are increasingly being used to engage with citizens and stakeholders, to seek their views on emerging policy, to inform debate and to better understand the impact of policy decisions. We saw how digital tools are being used to support this engagement and how better outcomes are being delivered.

The Department of Health - Digital and Policy: a journey from niche to embedded

The Department of Health – Digital and Policy: a journey from niche to embedded

The event wasn’t simply about the use of digital tools though. The use of data and service design thinking in the policy making process were also important themes.  Designing policy and the resulting services with users at the heart was emphasised by many speakers.

The messages neatly match our view of starting with needs (user needs not government needs) that are set out in our Design Principles and are also reflected in a recent report, Designing the Digital Economy, by the Design Commission.

We’d like to hear from you if you have got examples of great service design in the public sector so that we can share this with others that are looking to learn.

To find out more about what happened on the day, read OPM’s blog and look at the Storify that they created which includes pictures, tweets and presentations from the day.

Weekend links: vCloud, Darwin database, proof of concept and more

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Found a link you think we’ll like? Share it with us on Twitter @gdsteam.

What is the user need?

Sarah Richards – our ex Head of Content – says users are selfish; find out what she means in this blog post.

The National Rail’s Darwin database is going to be free for devs to use from June – making cool train app stuff easier to do.

We recently moved GOV.UK to a new platform – find out how we used vCloud Tools to create the virtual machines and networks required as well as configure the firewall, NAT rules and load balancers.

At our recent Sprint policy event, we learned it’s not change that should worry us, but staying the same.

We’ve been hacking Google Analytics this week – find out why on the data blog.

Reviewing design work is never easy – but these ten questions are a pretty good start.

Last week marked the end of a 6-week proof of concept at the Land Registry - illustrating what a digital service might look like in the future.

What’s the ideal music to listen to at work? This infographic will help you decide.

 

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