Singapore’s Coolest Startup?
Exclusive interview: Mark Lim, Director of Government Digital Services.


Everyone loves to complain about public service delivery. From overfull bins to dirty lifts, citizens can get frustrated. Many governments try not to discuss these complaints, but slowly officials across the world have noticed how valuable they can be. Small problems can be tackled before they balloon out of control, if complaints are picked up promptly.
This mindset led to the creation of the OneService app, which allows citizens to complain to 8 different agencies. If there is a problem in their neighbourhood, they simply use their smartphone to tag the problem there and then. They can even send a photo. Behind the scenes, agencies negotiated to unify their complaints procedures, and users can watch the complaint get routed to the correct agency while they await a response.
Over 40,000 people have downloaded the app so far.
2. myResponder app
Many of the GDS’ projects were planned on coffee shop napkins, and this is no exception. The Singapore Civil Defence Force wanted to use volunteers to augment medical services, and met with GDS officials one morning to discuss this further.
After a fair bit of scribbling, the myResponder app was born. This alerts all first aiders of a cardiac arrest within 400 metres, and displays the nearest defibrillator machine as well.
3. Beeline scheme
What if public buses took you straight from your house to your office, without stopping all along the way? And what if you could reserve a seat on one as well? These ideas prompted the creation of the Beeline scheme - a data-driven project run by the GDS’s data unit and the Land Transport Authority.
4. Gov.SG readability
Not every idea has to be a big one. The GDS has been quietly working to make government websites more accessible to disabled people. A team of User Experience (UX) designers have been working to monitor how people currently interact with the sites, simplifying the text, layouts and design to make it easier for citizens to find information. Their equipment includes a high-tech eyeball tracker that monitors user interaction with the site.
How they do it
The GDS has a secret weapon when building its projects. Rather than do everything from scratch, they take elements from one project and drop it straight into another. The map from the Beeline app was also used to build an app that allows nature lovers to tag bird sightings in Singapore parks.
Coders often use ‘GitHub’ (a code repository), and GDS has built its own. This means that code can be shared with any department in government, instantly reducing the time it takes for an app to get off the ground.
They also use, naturally, the agile project management methodology. Lim notes that Google engineers don’t even call it this – they just describe it as project management. But government officials are still getting used to a development model that entails building quickly, testing on users and failing fast. This approach first faced resistance in government, he says, but is slowly being welcomed as the results become clear.
Incubator for talent
The GDS is always looking out for new talent, and recruits in a rather novel way. “We do competitive coding,” Lim says. At the last event, 200 people came to take part, with the top three getting hired. It brings to mind a scene from the Social Network movie, where the actor playing Mark Zuckerberg runs a hacking competition to find the first engineers for Facebook.
This new recruitment approach is in-keeping with the GDS. Across the board, they are mimicking ideas from cutting-edge tech companies, and challenging the old ways of doing things.
That mindset shows when GI tours the office. It is messy and mad: people are packed in everywhere; most surfaces are covered in paper or written on; there are even pictures of wizards and dragons stuck to the walls.
It feels fresh and – importantly – not faked. Even without beanbag chairs and a ping-pong table, the GDS would still feel radical.
It may not intend to IPO, but this startup is getting traction. It is certainly a hot investment for Singapore.
Now read: How the GDS used design thinking to build its 'heart attack app'