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Friday, October 07, 2022

Someone Who Really Knows myGov Issues A Pretty Dire Warning About Its Future!

This appeared last week:

A myGov makeover? This pig will need more than lipstick

Glenn Archer
Contributor

Just over a week ago, I upgraded my three-year-old iPhone to a shiny new model. It was a pretty smooth experience until I went to use the myGovID app so that I could, as you might expect, log into myGov.

While I anticipated that it might be necessary to reauthenticate myself/phone to the app, I never dreamed I’d need to also redo my biometric, scan my passport and enter my Medicare card number. This was hardly the user-centered experience I was led to believe was to be the future.

Not so much the promise of “set up once and use it again and again”, and more like “set up again and again…”.

The myGovID is the digital identity that is the key to the portal that is myGov. It will progressively take the place of the myGov account sign-in using username and password. However, the experience of having to reverify my identity to my iPhone was just my most recent of several examples of myGov failing to meet one of its most basic criteria – that being ease of use.

As it happened, this occurred only 24 hours after the announcement by Bill Shorten that David Thodey would lead a “user audit” to help “unlock the potential of myGov to turn it into a world-class citizen centric service that supports citizens throughout their life-course.”

A user centred review of how the federal government enables its citizens to interact online seems way overdue.

Some might suggest that being “world-class” is aspirational, but what might surprise many is that for the last decade Australia has been ranked in the top 10 of countries in the world on the UN’s well regarded biennial eGovernment Survey for digital service delivery. So, while there’s certainly some work to do, it’s not an unreasonable target.

Unfortunately, given what I believe are the fundamental challenges facing the government in improving myGov, the review’s narrow terms of reference, together with some recent comments attributed to the review’s chair, I doubt that the review will provide the sort of guidance or advice we truly need to improve citizen’s myGov experience.

“The truth is Services Australia has done a lot of work in this area. I think we’ll just look at what they’ve done and see if we can take the best-in-class out of that,” Mr Thodey told the Sydney Morning Herald when the review was announced.

Many of myGov’s shortcomings can be traced back to the failure by the DTO/DTA to implement the program in a manner consistent with the vision originally espoused by the Reliance Framework. This framework was endorsed in 2011-12 by the then Labor government and represented the basis for subsequent decisions to adopt the myGov model and to invest significantly in establishing and operating it.

Under the framework, myGov was expected to deliver improved online service delivery for citizens, including a single digital credential. This was to be supported by a governance framework, standardised business processes, and common standards.

As documented in the ANAO’s audit of the program conducted in 2016, good progress was being made. However, that was until later that year, when the DTO became “responsible for myGov service strategy, policy and user experience including: any changes to the current myGov service capabilities that related to policy objectives or user needs; and the on-boarding of new member services.”

Unfortunately, by this stage DTO was no longer recognised by agencies as having the expertise or capability to perform this role and, in part, this led to the establishment of the DTA, which was given far greater direct authority to influence agency policy, programs and business processes.

For various reasons that go beyond the scope of this note, the DTA failed dismally to leverage this authority or to put in place any effective governance structure to support myGov’s advancement. Hence, Services Australia now takes the lead here.

In 2015, when I was at Gartner, I produced a research note on government portals. It included a number of observations and made several recommendations, but perhaps the most critical ones relevant to myGov today were that:

  • the choice of online credential used by the portal is critical and importantly, that a “good online credential is necessary but not sufficient to ensure portal success. It won’t guarantee success but a poor one will ensure failure.”
  • any whole-of-government portal should “enable multiagency service integration, the transformation of business processes and a transition to digital government”; and
  • the government must understand that “portal success is dependent on citizen centricity, policy and business process redesign, together with engaged leadership, appropriate governance and the authority to simplify and consolidate policy”.

Firstly, as the research showed even then, you cannot separate the matter of having a simple, reliable, and secure digital credential from that of enabling an effective and user-friendly digital service. These are interdependent, and the latter simply will not deliver the benefits expected without the former.

A digital credential without an application that makes use of its various levels of confidence or identity proofing (IP) levels, is a waste of effort and money.

Which reminds me, based on the little detail that’s been shared, the investment by the federal government on the Trusted Digital Identity Framework (TDIF) along with GovPass, myGovID and the Digital ID Beta program components, in total is approaching half a billion dollars.

Let that sink in for a moment.

While the ATO’s use of myGovID to replace the failing AUSkey credential (used by businesses), has arguably been a success, the same cannot be said for Services Australia’s approach to using it for citizens.

In particular, the implementation at the IP3 level is simply not fit for this purpose and broad adoption will only be achieved through compromise or some clever changes to definitions.

Overall, its difficult to see how a case could be made that the level of investment by the government on the TDIF program has delivered Value For Money. Then again, that should probably come as no surprise really, given the recent ANAO audit report on DTA’s approach to procurement.

Secondly, one of the critical design criteria for any government portal that acts as a platform to integrate services provided by multiple independent agencies, must be the need to ensure a common user interface and experience. This is especially true for users as they move virtually across agency boundaries.

…… Lots Omitted.

Glenn Archer is a Visiting Fellow at the ANU and former Australian Government CIO and head of AGIMO.

Read the rest of the very long article here:

https://www.innovationaus.com/a-mygov-makeover-this-pig-will-need-more-than-lipstick/

All I can say is that someone has a great deal of work to do!

David.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"All I can say is that someone has a great deal of work to do!"

The big problem the current government has inherited is that there is nobody to do it. The Libs trashed AGIMO, DTO/DTA was worse than useless, now there is nobody with the skills and experience left.

Consultants are not positioned to make decisions that the government should make, so whoever takes this on will be running around like a headless chook.

Anonymous said...

Oh my. Sounds like I'll never get to use it then, if there's nobody to fix it.

As it stands, I cannot sufficiently identify myself to the app. I don't have a drivers license (I don't drive by choice), so a passport and a birth certificate are all I can use. BUT, you can't use a birth certificate if it was issued from another state. I'm in VIC now, but was born in SA. So, I'm stuffed. I can never use it.