“You have to move as slowly as us.”

This was the advice from a government official who was visibly worried by the 
rapid pace we were suggesting for a tech project. This wasn’t the first time we 
saw government afraid of moving fast.

As we work hard to emerge from COVID-19, our government is rightly looking to 
give our economy the best boost it can. Unfortunately, it is turning to the old 
levers to do this: big, legacy infrastructure spending in the physical, not the 
virtual, world.

Don’t get me wrong, there is a need for this too, but when the federal 
government announced its most recent plan, it detailed $72 billion in this kind 
of infrastructure. No strictly digital projects seemed to be in sight. Rather 
than spend billions “fixing” congestion by building more roads or even making 
those roads more efficient, what if our shared COVID-19 experience and response 
has already fixed congestion and we don’t even know it yet?

What if the best initiative right now would be for government to drive a 
remote-work campaign that would future-proof Australia’s competitiveness by 
increasing remote work capacity across government and the private sector? And 
while we’re at it, what ever happened to the idea of regional rejuvenation, 
satellite cities and fixing housing marketing inequities by opening up 
far-flung markets? A robust, government-incentivised and driven remote-work 
agenda right now could make this happen.

But that’s only one idea of a digital-first initiative that could reshape our 
nation—and we’re not even at the starting line.

This is genuinely troubling, because if the economic growth lessons of the last 
three decades—not to mention the last three months—tell us anything, it’s that 
Australia can and should be leading when it comes to the information economy.

We need to embrace and fund digital transformation and technological innovation 
at a pace we haven’t before so that we can emerge more competitive at the 
global scale, not less. The companies that seem to be prospering in the US are 
the digital behemoths, and the occasional toilet paper manufacturer.

The time to build Australia’s future in the world economy is now, and we need 
the government to take the lead.

The New South Wales government which has been kicking goals with its 
tech-focused vision—think its digital driver licence—announced $1.6 billion 
will soon flow into its “digital restart fund.” This is great news, but it 
doesn’t go far enough. There is an underlying problem we need to solve.

If we don’t change the mindset that embraces risk-aversion over experimentation 
at speed, money will be wasted and outcomes will be disappointing. This isn’t 
just an Australian government issue, it’s global. According to one analysis, 
part of the problem is that governments don’t have a competitor against which 
to benchmark innovation: “In the private sector, the most innovative companies 
devote large amounts of time and resources to understanding their competition 
and evaluating their performance in all areas relative to other organisations 
in the industry.”  Competitors force you to move fast, and that’s really good.

We can start picking up the pace by challenging the cumbersome government 
tendering processes that preference the tried, safe and dull over the untried 
but promising. We should actively incentivise speed, not caution. The injection 
of money should be matched by a system-wide interrogation of process that 
unearths and fixes the obstacles that anyone who has worked between government 
and the tech sector knows are there. This is about confronting and altering 
deeply entrenched behaviours until the avoidance of fast-moving projects in 
digital transformation is finally seen as the risk it is.

Without a mindset open to speed and the inevitable mistakes that come from 
learning, innovation will struggle to emerge. It will be delayed and sometimes, 
so out-dated, not even deployed at all. A cycle of poor outcomes will only 
serve to re-enforce the idea that government is better spending its money 
elsewhere. We will also miss applying technology to areas like fire prevention, 
urban planning and economic welfare systems that could really benefit.

Australia has a chance to lead now and it should seize it. In announcing the 
new funding, Premier Berejiklian said we need to “turbocharge digital 
projects”. Cash is only one part of this; the other is not being afraid to 
break the speed limit.


By Angus Dorney co-CEO of cloud engineering company Kablamo
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/the-speed-problem-facing-government-tech-innovation/news-story/3c1f1731ec8055df59346b370db286f9
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