The Organising for Digital Delivery report highlights the need to tackle legacy IT systems across government and make better use of the data government holds to improve services.
The report was commissioned by Cabinet Office and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport, and written by the Digital Economy Council to look at the government’s delivery of digital services.
The Cabinet Office described the report as "invaluable input in finalising the commitments and actions" of the recent Declaration on Government Reform - and therefore helps illustrate in detail the Government's thinking for the future of government digital services.
The report simultaneously flagged a lack of confidence from Departmental Permanent Secretaries in the work of the Government Digital Service (GDS) and raised a concern that GDS had "to some extent lost its way" - and a general concern about "under-developed level of digital expertise amongst senior Civil Service leadership".
If central digital capacity isn't supported, and Departmental leaders are not asking the right questions - then it's easy to explain the failure to share data across Whitehall, a further challenge raised by the report:
"Our investigations suggest that many Government Departments are investing significant sums in collecting and storing often very large datasets but making little use of this data to influence action of decision making."
One senior civil servant recruited from the private sector is quoted in the report as saying that their biggest surprise was "how little we do with our data."
The report makes eight recommendations to address these challenges and deliver on the ambition to make UK Government digital services the best in the world:
The report suggests a reinvigoration of the central Government Digital product function, by owning critical services such as the GOV.UK communication portal, identity validation, payment and other current and future digital services which are most effectively delivered centrally across Government.
This is set to include strengthening and leading a central planning, budgeting and monitoring team to ensure that over £5bn of Government investment in technology is being allocated effectively and to monitor and audit the performance of Departments against their technology commitments.