DTA’s whole-of-government architecture taskforce
The whole-of-government architecture taskforce is part of the government’s commitment to moving away from a siloed approach and moving toward a whole-of-government strategy to deliver better services to citizens at reduced costs. The whole-of-government architecture was announced by Stuart Robert, Minister for Government Services, during his AIIA address in November .
The taskforce brings together people from Services Australia, Australian Tax Office, Home Affairs and Defence, along with DTA members.
The taskforce’s role
The taskforce is focusing on:
Supporting connected services and platforms
Creating architecture communities to share knowledge and work collaboratively across government
Developing guidelines, standards and tools to support whole-of-government architecture
More about DTA’s whole-of-government
Beta architectural concepts model
Earlier this month, DTA blogged about the taskforce’s first — a beta architectural concepts model. (In this context, ‘concepts’ refer to categories of architectural components.) The beta model identifies 10 concepts/categories:
External participant
Product
Channel
Government service
Value stream
Enabling service
Internal participant
Business capability
Platform
Information
You can see a diagram of the concepts in the DTA .
The central concept is government service. This is defined as: “the end-to-end means of meeting a user need, such as applying for the age pension, or lodging a tax return.”
The 10 concepts also inform the taskforce’s streams of work. The example given in the DTA blog is platforms. Within this concept/category, the taskforce is creating a list of existing platforms and capturing the services the platforms provide and how they map to business capabilities.
The beta concepts model is the first deliverable (as far as we know) from the taskforce and shows some of the early thinking and cataloguing happening behind the scenes to deliver on the whole-of-government architecture strategy.
Salsa Digital’s take
We’re driven by our vision to help create a more open, more connected and more consolidated government. Whole-of-government services are key to delivering in all three of these areas. We’ll be watching the whole-of-government architecture taskforce with great interest and look forward to seeing the next deliverable.