Creating an award winning website

For a project manager, there must be no better feeling than seeing a project you've led achieve recognisable results. And for Steve Mountain of Havant Borough Council, the results have come quicker than expected.

 

Havant Borough Council Hantsweb award winners

Havant Borough Council web team
L-R  Julia Goddard, Steve Mountain, Melanie Powell

Since September 2002, Steve has led the re-development of Havant Borough Council's external website www.havant.gov.uk. On the 11th November 2003, the Council received the HantsWeb award for best Public Sector website in Hampshire, beating competition from all local authorities, including Portsmouth and Southampton, NHS sites, Police and the Fire Brigade. The annual awards, created by Hampshire County Council, attracted over 400 entries. Sites in the Public Sector category were judged by experts on their ability to provide clear information to help their 'customers' understand the service and how to get the best from it.

 

To achieve this level of recognition so quickly is a bonus to Steve and his team whose main target for their re-development work was an improved rating in an annual survey called 'Better Connected' which assesses the content quality and performance of all local authority websites in the UK. Conducted by the Society of Information Technology Managers (SOCITM) and published in February each year, the survey has established a rating system that has become a valuable target and benchmark for those involved in developing local authority websites.

 

In fact, it was Havant Borough Council's drop in the ratings in the last 'Better Connected' survey that provided tangible evidence that the Council had serious problems in managing its website.

Recognising the problem

Steve explains what the situation was when he took on the project last year. "The Council's old site was created and managed by six people using the FrontPage publishing tool and some very manual processes. There was no one person with overall responsibility for developing the website. It had about 1000 pages but there were no controls in place to monitor whether content was out-of-date and we believe it was this poor content updating that contributed significantly to the site being marked down by SOCITM."

 

Creating and managing the content was not the only problem, as Steve explains. "Our IT requirements are Havant Borough Council Civic Officesoutsourced to another organisation and while this is usually a good arrangement, the way our old website was set-up caused problems as it could take a number of days to get updated content uploaded to the live site. We didn't have access to the web server so sometimes pages had to be further amended if problems with links were found once they were live. All in all, this was both frustrating and unacceptable."

 

"The first step forward was recognising we had a problem and that we had to fix it," says Steve. "Fortunately we had put money aside in the budgeting process to address these issues so the next challenge was to work out what needed to be done."

 

A seminar on Content Management Systems held by the Council's IT contractor Atkins, really sold Steve and his team on the concept of Content Management and their need for it to address many of the issues they currently faced. Next they had to decide which system would suit their needs best.

No shortage of choice

Steve explains the selection process. "We started with a 'long-list' of 10 possible vendors and then worked with Atkins to devise a questionnaire, they focused on technical issues and we focused on content and usability requirements. This was sent out and then based on the response we got down to a short-list of five. In some cases it was clear as soon as you opened the envelope that this was not the right vendor.

 

"when it came to usability, Immediacy was a long way ahead"

 

"In order to assess the remaining five we asked them to present to us how they would deal with the range of content challenges we faced. In advance of the presentation, we sent them. A selection of the typical document types we deal with on a daily basis, including Word and Excel files that had various formatting and layout issues, and an extract from an Access database; and asked the vendors to present how their systems would deal with them.

 

"From these presentations we got down to two vendors. These were very closely matched on things like capability, flexibility and price but the one area they differed on was usability one was a form based system and the other, Immediacy, provided a WYSIWYG interface that looked similar to the tools our staff were already used to using. In fact, when it came to usability, Immediacy was a long way ahead and we decided it was the best solution to our needs."

Building momentum

It was now the end of October and all activities so far had been focused on the product rather than how it would be implemented. Atkins and Immediacy then worked together on the design and structure of a new site and prepared a range of site designs for a workshop session that would be attended by staff and end users of Council services.

 

Three broad designs were chosen for the workshop session which was held in early November 2002. "Those attending were impressed with Immediacy's understanding of the Council's and citizen's needs" commented Steve.

 

A final design was chosen and then a few weeks passed while Immediacy worked up a full set of templates for the proposed new site.

Screenshot of Havant Borough Council website

 

In parallel to this, the team at Havant were starting to move forward with content development. "A big step forward was seconding someone into a Web Development Officer's role," says Steve. "It was that person's responsibility to work through a list of the site content as it stood then, and identify who the likely owner was and whether it was still valid. By the time those owners had been confirmed and had a look at their pages, we found that around half of the content was out-of-date."

 

At the end of January, Immediacy delivered the final site templates and the site was installed in the first week of February ready for the Council to add the required content. The roll-out of the new content management system coincided with the implementation of several other new systems, including one for Customer Relationship Management, and it made sense that all these systems should sit alongside each other on the same infrastructure. This demanded some re-configuration by Immediacy to make sure everything worked as it should. Steve commented "Whenever issues have emerged, Immediacy has provided a fix. This has given us confidence that Immediacy is as configurable and extendable as we first thought."

Getting results

In May 2003, a new server cluster was installed with Immediacy running on it and the final site went live on the 20th June.

 

"Immediacy has transformed how we do the web" says Steve, "we now have around 60 people involved in keeping our website up-to-date and a training programme that helps to add more contributors quickly and easily."

 

"Immediacy has transformed the way we do the web"

 

The transformation has clearly worked, with the site scooping the HantsWeb award, which has delighted Steve and his team. "I believe that all the thorough preparation work we did ourselves and in partnership with Atkins and Immediacy was the key to this success"

 

As to the future, Havant Borough Council is now rolling out a new Intranet, using Immediacy. "This is being developed using all the experience we gained on our external website" says Steve. "We are also looking at using Immediacy to set up a number of community portals which will help serve the online needs of our citizens in an even more personalised way".

 

And given the Council's recent Award success, Steve is rightfully confident about the Council achieving its original goal - an improved rating in the SOCITM 'Better Connected' survey.