By Nataša Patterson, Director of Resident Experience and Digital at the London Borough of Lambeth

Lambeth Council has over 150 lines of business. This becomes a challenge when customers quite rightly want a tailored user experience, but you as an organisation are relying on legacy systems.

That’s why in 2021 we developed a new customer experience strategy and embarked on delivering a council wide digital customer platform with a focus on residence experience to put the framework into action.

As customer expectations grow in line with the digital age, a streamlined digital customer experience is the holy grail for any council. People are now seeking the ‘John Lewis experience’ across all the services they use, both in the private and public sector.

Understandably, they don't want to know about how many legacy systems a council has, nor do they need to consider the complexities of delivering that experience when you're working with multiple systems. But they do expect a consistent, reliable and user-friendly experience regardless to match consumer expectations.

 

Forging our own ‘digital strategy’

In honesty I find the general notion of digital first a bit dated, so when we formed our digital approach, we set out from the beginning that digital first wasn’t our main driver.

The decision behind this was to focus on investing in our digital infrastructure, making sure that digital footprint worked for the customer, with a view that digital first will happen naturally as a result. I'd like to call us pragmatically ambitious, and I am under no illusion that this task is a mammoth one to deliver.

Our first step has been to implement a new digital customer platform, which can enable single sign on in the first instance and from here we will begin a step change of integrating the business line of systems into that. We chose IEG4’s OneVu, a citizen engagement platform, which converges several systems to give a complete single view of each customer, both internally and for them as well.

 

Integration – drilling down to specific issues

If I told you we had a specific strategy around integration I’d probably be lying, I still have scars from API battles of the past.

But I’m now inclined to explore new data processes due to changing attitudes around data lakes and data warehouses, because of the benefits they have in speeding up the process of integration. We now have a central data repository and a single interface.

Data is a challenge in local government. It's become a hot topic of conversation because local government naturally has masses of it, but we fall down when it comes to utilising it to solve issues.

This is why we have chosen to use it to focus on a proof of concept around specific problems we're trying to resolve, at present, the focus is on cost of living crisis and how we can leverage data to agree targeted interventions.

By starting small in that space, we have created the foundations for our localities model, which allows us to take preventative measures. We not only invest in the frontline for reactive services like the call centre, but we also work to join up all the agencies and voluntary sector working in the borough with our own council assets and build relationships with our communities.

Data is crucial to that. It's a massive undertaking, but the way the axis works in the future is probably in prevention, rather than this reactive legacy.

 

The technology we use

The way that technology has advanced in recent years has been very welcome in local government, but equally I think the culture still needs to catch up.

Bearing this in mind we decided to focus on the elements that are going to be most useful in in transforming infrastructure for the team.

Looking from a technical point of view and which technology aligns most with that approach; I don't think I could just pick one. Cloud has enabled a much easier workflow, and data strategy and data methodology have given us the integration capability.

Internal digital capability has been key, however. We've all been victims in local government of big transformation programmes delivered to us by massive consultancies that haven’t quite delivered. In my experience smaller and more agile solutions and the companies that provide them are worth investing in.

Are we there yet?

Investing digital capability and resource is key, but it’s worth remembering that these solutions will never be delivered, done and dusted. They will always just move from the programme space then develop iteratively as our strategy evolves.

Yes, it can be a risk, especially for authorities that haven't cracked the ‘Holy Grail’ yet but at Lambeth we continue to work towards ours and by working with the right tech partners has simplified this and made that journey much easier.