John Suffolk
Suffolk: Flex will allow us to cut costs and carbon emissions

Shared services scheme set to go live in October

Fourth department signs up to government programme for shared IT infrastructure

Written by Tom Young

The government project for sharing IT infrastructure between Whitehall departments will go live on 1 October this year.

The Cabinet Office and the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service (Cafcass) will be the first to use the system, which aims to cut overall IT costs by 20 per cent and desktop computing costs by 40 per cent.

Cafcass is the fourth department to sign up to the Flex shared service contract agreed by the Cabinet Office and Fujitsu ­ after the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills and the Office of National Statistics ­ but will be first to go live.

The contract will allow the service to cut IT spending while enabling change, according to Lamorna Wooderson, corporate director at Cafcass.

“We are aiming for a more interactive approach to our work such as games and tests with children ­ this means more laptops,” she said. “Flex will make our annual spend cheaper and more predictable.”

The Cafcass deal is worth £25m over seven years and will provide managed desktop services for 2,000 users across 100 offices and implement a complete update of the hardware and software after four years.

Under the Flex programme, organisations will share central servers as well as helpdesk support and the day-to-day delivery and management of applications.

Consolidation and virtualisation in the Flex servers as well as thin-client desktops will mean reduced carbon emissions for departments involved.

Users will also be able to introduce optional extras such as real-time collaboration, wireless access and other business applications.

“Flex provides us with the opportunity to demonstrate reduced costs from a low-cost desktop infrastructure with high levels of security and the ability to recover quickly from a disaster,” government chief information officer John Suffolk told Computing.

“We also receive benefits from the freedom to work at locations of our choice, improving our productivity and reducing carbon emissions from travel.”

Fujitsu is now bringing on board third-party consultants to provide organisations reluctant to adopt the scheme with a persuasive business case, said John O’Brien, senior analyst at Ovum.

“Educating people on the benefits of shared services is a key step in getting them on board ­ especially local authorities,” he said.

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Find a place in the sun with YP

May issue of Young Professional features a guide to living...

James Thompson, Ecosecurities CFO

Profile: James Thompson, CFO of Ecosecurities

James Thomspon couldn't have started his job at a worse...

Practice careers guide: big versus small

Is big really best or would working for a medium...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Has the credit crunch made you fear for your job?
Yes, my company says jobs will go
Maybe, if things get worse, I could be hit
No, business is quite stable

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job