Many council web sites are now providing as good a service as their
commercial counterparts, but quality is patchy and inconsistent across the
sector, according to a report from local authority user group
Socitm.
Experts say that to provide the correct online services to the right groups
of citizens, councils must improve their understanding of user requirements.
UK council web sites attract an estimated 21.2 million visitors every month,
up 30 per cent on last year, according to Socitm Insight’s annual survey.
Use of transactional web sites that offer interactive functions such as
payments and bookings, has increased by 36 per cent.
But usability was cited as a recurrent problem, even on sites that impressed
reviewers for other reasons, such as content or innovation.
Meeting the requirements of users is the key to improving online services and
it is important that services are designed with the web in mind, said Siobhan
Coughlan, head of service transformation for the
Improvement
and Development Agency.
“The priority is usability web sites need to be made less scary. Lots of
sites have good information, but have not thought about citizens’ individual
needs,” she said.
“If you want your citizens to use self-service functions, you have to
understand user preferences and design services for the web site.”
While 47 per cent of web sites met Socitm’s standards for use of search
engines, only six per cent met the standard for resilience.
And although homepage performance improved by five per cent, errors have
increased by two per cent and availability is down by two per cent.
But there are excellent examples available – see Top new ideas,
below – although there is room for improvement and scope for further
efficiencies, said Jos Creese, head of IT at Hampshire County Council.
“The quality and usability of many local authority web sites is as good as
the best in the private sector, or better, but there is a need to extend online
services, which also need to be integrated with other methods of delivery, such
as contact centre support,” he said.
“This will permit some traditional delivery channels to be switched off to
reduce overall costs, and the benefits achieved from this need to be clearly
demonstrated.
“This must be driven by the needs of the public. Not every service or every
citizen can interact electronically, and these are the areas where we need to
focus scarce traditional resources such as face-to-face contact.”
Web sites can even act as a catalyst for improving business processes, said
Socitm report author Martin Greenwood.
“Web sites provide an opportunity to rethink processes,” he said. “The web
site is the end of a process. So when a service is put online, it should have
already been reviewed.”
Top new ideas on council web sites in 2008
Source: Socitm Insights
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