What agile means for the Home Office

I’m Clare Young, Head of Agile Delivery in Home Office Digital. My job involves building and leading the delivery manager community and promoting the use of agile ways of working...
I’m Clare Young, Head of Agile Delivery in Home Office Digital. My job involves building and leading the delivery manager community and promoting the use of agile ways of working...
...humble blog post. In the Home Office Digital content design team we often share ideas, advice and suggestions about each other’s work. We wanted to do the same for our...
...anything ‘wrong’. But for some it was too much of a leap. One participant managed to avoid touching or interacting with the cards for the whole session. However, this still...
...train new team members. He later asked for more copies to be printed – both to put up in the office and to use as an engagement tool for other...
I wrote a blog post back in September about the accessibility posters we've created at the Home Office called ‘Dos and Don'ts on designing for accessibility' - and I thought...
...users what they ask for (like easier ways to fill in the current form) what ‘we’, as people in government, want to get them to do (like read and understand...
...there was a really good reason for these things when the service was built, but technology, the law or the user need has changed and it’s no longer relevant. Sharing...
...designers working across different locations and teams, all solving difficult problems for users. This can lead to duplication and inefficiencies. Large organisations designing at this scale, such as Airbnb, are...
...For example, how might policy work more effectively for a particular area? How might we rethink the current immigration system? How might border control work better in future? Often part...
...outcomes for users. In government we build products and services that must work for everyone. Katy’s focus on accessibility and inclusive design has laid strong foundations for the future. I...
Recent Comments