BOSTON, MA--(Marketwired - Jun 5, 2014) - Getting better, but still plenty of room for improvement: that's the current assessment by everyday users of their governments' delivery of online services, according to a new report by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG), Digital Government: Turning the Rhetoric into Reality.
On the basis of a survey of 12,450 users in 12 countries about their experiences with, and opinions of, 37 different types of services, BCG found that the public sector has made good progress in digital service delivery, but most countries are not moving nearly as quickly as users would like. Developing countries lead in the rate of online usage, although most of them trail developed nations in user satisfaction.
Almost 95 percent of the respondents have used at least one online government service in the past two years. An average of 32 percent use online government services more than once a week. Already, at least half of users in most of the countries surveyed want digital channels to play a greater role in the delivery of key services. On average, 60 percent of users rank online government services as important.
Satisfaction rates are generally high -- but they could be much higher. The percentage of users who are satisfied with government services online ranges from 41 percent in Russia and Malaysia to 61 percent in the U.S. Generally, developed countries have more satisfied users than developing nations. Satisfaction falls away and frustrations rise among more digitally experienced younger users, who have higher expectations for the online experience, and among people who try to engage in more sophisticated tasks and transactions.
"Many governments are already well on the way to improving digital service delivery, but there is often a gap between rhetoric and reality," said Miguel Carrasco, a BCG partner and coauthor of the report. "Users are conditioned to expect innovative online services in such sectors as retailing, media, and financial services, and they wish that their governments would get on with it."
Many of the services that can be accessed online provide only information and forms, but users are looking to get help and transact business. The breadth and depth of demand will increase substantially in the next few years -- breadth in terms of both numbers of users and the range of services they wish to access online, as well as depth in terms of how much these users want to do, the devices they want to use, and the increasing sophistication of the interactions in which they seek to engage.