Exclusive: How this GovTech unit pivoted to fight Covid-19
Interview with Rahul Daswani, Head of People and Culture at Open Government Products, GovTech, Singapore.

GovTech responded by pairing volunteers with existing project teams within the government. “You're going to have to figure out new ways of working; this could be working with people who you haven't worked with before,” Daswani (left) said at a GovInsider seminar last month. This saw over 30 volunteer coders join the full time efforts to build new tech.
Meanwhile, GovTech also launched the COVID-19 Idea Sprint, a two-week hackathon calling for prototypes and solutions from the public. They opened up a Slack channel for people to discuss their ideas directly with civil servants.
GovTech, OGP and the Smart Nation and Digital Government Office held a series of video sessions where ministries set out their Covid-19 challenges and invited the tech community to prototype solutions. For instance, the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth shared issues around mental health and isolation, while the Ministry of Health discussed contact tracing. Over 300 people took part, Daswani says.
This openness with the community and opportunities for informal “water cooler” conversations allowed the team to build better products. “We're getting feedback from people who are using it and also passionate about technology at the same time,” he says.
Measuring success
How do you measure progress on tech tools to tackle a pandemic? OGP has created new systems that enable closer collaboration.
People get evaluated by six of their peers, along with a review by a manager. “You want to encourage more than just individual performance; you want to encourage cooperation,” he says. Every person gets a colour-coded chart showing others’ assessment of them. Scores from those working closely with an employee carry more weight.
Promotions and career progress are not decided by comparing staff against each other. Instead, people are measured against a “career schema” - a set of capabilities that each role requires. “Relative rankings without clear descriptions of good performance at each level for different job types aren't seen as fair or objective as a system with clearly defined absolute scales.”
Aside from technical abilities, people are measured on their values and impact on the wider organisation and community. “By putting these down explicitly, it really encourages the behaviours and skills that you want, and you end up with a much larger impact both externally and internally,” adds Daswani.
The measures are benchmarked against those used by leading tech firms. “We wanted to make it industry-compatible, because then it is also transferable, and it's reflective of what's happening around in other tech firms.”
Tech for HR
Daswani believes there is potential for new technology to improve the way people work with each other. “Automation is great because then I can then go back to fundamental rethinking, I can check in with people in my organisation more,” he says.
For instance, he’s used software to speed up the hiring process. It emails candidates an employment contract which they can sign electronically. “We've had people sign it within 7 minutes. You'll never be able to do this with a paper-generated contract.”
He is also experimenting with AI to recruit people, though the tech isn’t close to good. “Machine learning algorithms haven't been able to give me a sufficiently better quality of candidates than traditional recruiting agencies,” he says.
Algorithms largely judge people by what’s on their CV, but many of the skills in demand today can’t be measured this way. Daswani looks for people who are self-starters, have strong public service values and can communicate in tough situations. These are “important but not easily measured”, he says.
[blockquote] "That is one tech innovation I wish we had already" [/blockquote]
In the future, virtual reality could offer more natural ways for colleagues to connect, Daswani believes. “If you could in VR tap somebody on the shoulder or crack up at a side comment, I think that would be so great. That is one tech innovation I kind of wish we had already and I think can make a big difference.”
Everyone has been disrupted by Covid-19. But that disruption can’t prevent government from innovating and serving its citizens. OGP has made some of its tools open source, so that others can innovate quicker: Postman, a system for sending out government alerts, and Go, a tool to share links and updates from trusted sources.
OGP, along with its partner ministries, has adapted new tools and ideas to battle the disease - opening up the work of government, bringing the community in, and structuring and leading in different ways. Many of the innovations will likely remain even once this virus is finally slain.
Images by Open Government Products