I feel somewhat obliged to highlight the latest blog post by Stephen Hale, head of digital at the Dept of Health. As regular readers will know, Stephen switched the department’s web publishing strategy over to WordPress just over a year ago, and he’s written subsequently about the joy of making such a move.
The countdown is now well and truly ‘on’ for government’s move to its new bespoke web platform: in less than a week, Directgov and BusinessLink will have been switched off. Government departments’ corporate sites will make the transition over the next few months: initially as ‘islands’, but reaching a critical mass ‘in around February’, according to the Inside Inside Government blog. A post on another Health blog quoted a completion date of April – and that certainly tallies with conversations I’ve had.
All of which leaves Stephen in reflective mood.
In DH, since we switched our main content management tool for dh.gov.uk to WordPress, weโve expanded the range of people who can publish DH content. Weโve been able to do this because itโs now dead easy for people to do it. WordPress removes complexity for the editor โ form relates to function pretty well.
As a result the digital team spend much less time publishing than we once did, and less time training and supporting editors. So we are able to focus more of our effort on ambitious uses of digital for health and care, and our policy engagement work.
– which is exactly the message I have been pushing around Whitehall for several years. How great to see it reflected back on a *.gov.uk website.
Stephen’s post closes:
Iโm expecting [with] the publishing tools for the Inside Government bits of GOV.UK … our editors wonโt need a manual and a training course to do their jobs. From what Iโve seen, itโs looking good.
Is it just me, or is that a veiled threat? ๐
Response
Good to see the DH has made such progress with its digital offering. Just a pity this is not rubbing off on some other public sector areas e.g. noticed a lot of new NHS clinical commissioning group websites coming online, most of which seem to be running on proprietory software. This also seems to be trend with commissioning support unit websites which is a bit weird – why ask a potential competitor to develop a website for your customer?!