Service transformation means that the government has mastered the issues surrounding delivery of services and has turned its focus exclusively to building greater value for citizens into the systems, and encouraging increasing numbers of citizens to take advantage of them.
Most countries have achieved at least basic online service delivery, Rohleder said, and they're focusing now on improving their systems and trying to increase usage. "It's what we saw in the commercial world three to five years ago," he said.
"You have to not just put forms online," Jupp said. "Customer relationships are now underpinning e-government."
Singapore edged ahead of the United States because of some innovative technologies, Rohleder said. The country mounts inexpensive chips on cars, for example, that can detect when the cars are driving on a road where the government wants to curtail congestion. The drivers get bills in the mail based on the chips' readings.
Rohleder said the relatively low levels of funding that Congress appropriated for the e-gov initiatives in 2002 and 2003 are not a serious hurdle for the effort. Creative uses of e-government systems can save money, making up somewhat for low funding levels.
However, "There has to be some level of appropriation for any initiative, to get it started," he said.
Quelle: Federal Computer Week
