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Flex contract wins over Whitehall
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Major boost for shared services

Whitehall departments sign up to central IT infrastructure strategy

Sarah Arnott, Computing 04 Oct 2007
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Government plans to cut costs by sharing administration systems are forging ahead as two Whitehall organisations sign up to the Cabinet Office’s central IT deal.

The newly-created Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (Dius) is the first big department to join the Flex managed service contract signed with Fujitsu in May. And the Office of National Statistics is also using the deal for parts of its IT support.

Flex was initially brokered to provide, support and manage the Cabinet Office’s 2,500 desktops. But the same deal is available across the public sector, and as more organisations sign up, the price will drop for everyone.

Speed and price were central to Dius’ decision to use the framework rather than go it alone, said chief information officer (CIO) Karen Delafield.

“Because we are a new department we needed to do something quickly. We were also keen to support the cross-government shared services initiative,” she said.

“Flex offered us an easy procurement route – about four months rather than the standard nine- to 18-month process.

“And our indicative figures suggested the price is about 25 per cent less than other departments are getting,” she said.

Flex is the first standalone shared services programme to be set up since the launch of the Transformational Government strategy in November 2005. It is also part of plans to cut public sector IT costs by 20 per cent.

“If an organisation can’t beat the quality of the service for the price on offer, then it should join up,” said Whitehall CIO John Suffolk. “We have no axe to grind, but if what we have on offer is available for others to use then why would they want to reinvent the wheel?”

Early wins, particularly with large departments, are a big breakthrough for the strategy, according to Eric Woods, government practice director at analyst Ovum.

“The rationalisation of IT provision, particularly for smaller departments, has few potential downsides,” he said.

“What remains to be seen is the ability to deliver on the quality and adaptability that those organisations need.”

See also:

Picture of Big BenGovernment could save £2.8bn per year, says analyst  20 Sep 2007
Picture of parliamentGovernment proposal is part of wider plans to join up service delivery  13 Sep 2007
Picture of the greater london authorityAuthorities given the opportunity to use GLA web site infrastructure  19 Jul 2007
Picture of WhitehallContract extension will allow more government departments to join payroll and HR contract  06 Jul 2007
Picture of doctors and nursesIP VPN will allow flexible working for nurses, therapists and consultants in north London region  25 Jun 2007
Picture of John SuffolkManaged service prices to drop as even more departments join up  21 Jun 2007
Picture of WhitehallTwo large departments will provide services for smaller ministries  22 Mar 2007

All Public Sector IT
Tags: Government

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