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Alphagov – actual agile stuff from government

I was at the alphagov pre-launch event last week as a representative of the ‘social media types who work with local govenment’ category (i think!) – very interesting!!

For those of you who don’t know – alphagov is the project answer to Martha Lane Fox’s entirely sensible suggestion that you need one government website and not hundreds.

As you’ll see below this is a real alpha release and is in no way complete – and for those of us who have been saying that government should get more agile and release early and get feedback this is a great step.

The project has actually taken the brief in a slightly different direction and rather than create another leviathan of a site they have looked at creating a set of tools that can sit on top of content and provide a single interface.  The overall approach is spot on – they have made the whole thing about search and about taking people straight to the content that people want.  You don’t want a relationship with a government website, you want to get in and get out with the minimum feeling of contamination from the experience.  There are some brilliant principles in play here as they design for the majority case and not the edge (example given was driving licences and the fact it’s crazy to pretend that a specialist hgv licence should be treated the same as ‘my first driving test’ given the differences in volumes of requests).

There is also an attempt to clean up some of the madly complex language that information is presented within and to use forms rather than complex explanations (for example calculating sick pay based on dates and offering a sample answer, rather than making you read through and figure it out).  You can see an example below:

They have also made the bold, but I think entirely practical decision to deal with accessibility once they have a clear view of user behaviour rather than making it part of the alpha release. This is a decision that will be debated a great deal, but at least they have been clear and up-front about what they have achieved in this area.  I also salute their rather clear decision to ignore the existence of IE6 altogether – I wish more people would do the same.

The team has been working quickly and agilely to get an alpha build together – and they have done an excellent job.  If anything, parts of the site look more beta than alpha, which is a credit to whoever is doing design (though may, of course, bite them on the arse when people think it’s finished – you really can’t win!!!).  I think we should also really appreciate the fact that they are releasing an alpha at all, given government’s obsession with the launch and the (false) idea that you can completely finish a website before launching it.  It offers hope that government can ‘do digital’ differently and, before we all wade in to explain how we would do it better, I think we should all be applauding the fact that they have got this far with a very different project approach.

So: no criticisms, but a few observations and suggestions at this point.

My last point is from the perspective of someone who is focused on trying to get people involved in decision making. I think the site should make it clearer who is accountable for the bit of government you have found. I’m not talking about a complaints process, which as Will Perrin pointed out quite rightly you may need at a transaction level, but an opportunity to react to bits of government policy that you understand but don’t agree with. If I have one criticism of the project, it’s the fact that it seems to have a customer, not a citizen view of the user.  This is an expedient and practical decision as with many interactions we are customers and given timescales I can see why it’s this way. But I wouldn’t want this model to be embedded as I think this is another important aspect of doing things differently.

At the point where you end up at a dead end within ‘The System’ and you think the process is just wrong then you should have the option to do something about it – otherwise your next click is to post a cross update on your Facebook page. Give people a ‘I want to change this’ button and then offer them the chance to email their MP if it’s personal or make a suggestion if it’s process change. You could point them to related consultations and you could tell them how things could change. This could be an elaborate  tease like the futile experience of complaining to a mobile phone company or it could point out to people that ultimately, as citizens, we have a little bit of responsibility for the way things are.

I often go on about the need for government to (urgently) become more agile. So, big congratulations to alphagov for getting government to do that and quickly releasing a really good alpha version of a complex proposition – and then asking people what they think. It’s not perfect and it’s not finished – and that is progress. Looking forward to seeing what happens next.

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