SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  82
Télécharger pour lire hors ligne
DATA CENTRE STRATEGY, G-CLOUD &
GOVERNMENT APPLICATIONS STORE
PROGRAMME PHASE 2
PHASE 2 SCOPE REPORT

Authors: Martin Bellamy and Gerry Gallagher
Date: 10 February 2011
Version No: 0.35

UNCLASSIFIED
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Summary of Vision
Introduction
1.1
At the core of the programme is the vision of providing political, business and ICT
leaders with greatly improved agility, flexibility and choice in the ICT that enables the public
sector and to deliver substantial cost savings on both existing and new ICT services. This will
involve a wholesale move to shared utility style ICT services for use as „the default‟ across
the public sector. Citizens, staff and the third sector will benefit from greater innovation and
choice and from more personalised presentation of relevant services from across the public
sector.
1.2
The programme is being designed to address key ICT related objectives set out by
the Operational Efficiency Programme, and those of the Green ICT Strategy, Digital Britain,
Building Britain‟s Future and Smarter Government.
1.3
Recent developments in ICT have made it possible to consolidate ICT Infrastructure
in a way that delivers increased flexibility and responsiveness to business needs whilst
reducing costs. This change involves a move from ICT being provided individually by
organisations procuring their own separate ICT infrastructure, to a new model in which ICT is
provided as a utility which is known as “Cloud Computing”. The flexibility provided by Cloud
computing has enabled its rapid growth and a corresponding lowering of costs.
1.4
Public sector organisations will benefit from ready access to a wide range of preaccredited ICT services. These will include both „public cloud‟ services and common and
custom „private cloud‟ services procured by other public sector organisations. Services will
offer usage based pricing, elastic scalability (up or down), and there will be in built flexibility to
switch to alternate services or providers.
1.5
Cost savings will be founded on driving down the number of unique public sector
services through rationalising, sharing and re-using software and infrastructure across
organisational boundaries, joining up buying power by establishing an open and transparent
marketplace that delivers „latest best prices‟ to all, and by introducing standard, automated
processes across the entire ICT lifecycle;- from purchasing new solutions through to
migrating existing services to a new supplier. Industry standards will be used „as is‟ for public
cloud services. For private cloud services common standards and services will be driven „up
the stack‟ to the maximum possible extent; the technical standards landscape will be
controlled by the CTO Council through the cross government Enterprise Architecture (xGEA).
1.6
G-Cloud services will be selected and procured from the Government Applications
Store, and automatically provisioned – either from public cloud providers, or from a private
cloud platform hosted in one of a much reduced number of List X compliant government data
centres; these will also support legacy services during the transition period.
1.7
The way forwards involves substantial change from today‟s ICT delivery model;public sector CIO teams will shift from managing the whole ICT lifecycle, to the selection and
integration of relevant services. A federated (rather than centralised) implementation
approach is proposed, allowing many public sector organisations and suppliers to contribute
re-usable assets that can be sourced by others from the Government Applications Store.
Retained ICT organisations will be able to increase focus on business engagement and

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

2
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

achieving value adding outcomes as less effort will be needed on infrastructure management.
There will be choice in the „road-map‟ for each organization; the route chosen will depend on
business priorities and the current ICT and contractual landscape.
1.8
Major change inevitably creates execution risks. Other public and private sector
organisations that have pioneered the move to a shared utility ICT delivery model have had
strong central drive and leadership. Most private sector organisations have had "someone in
charge" on a global basis. The US government has introduced the Klinger Cohen act and
Economic Development act, which mandate some elements of a more common public sector
approach to ICT. The main areas of challenge in successfully moving to the new model
include leadership, business change management, stakeholder engagement and creating a
win-win proposition for business leaders, users of ICT services, public sector ICT
professionals and the ICT supplier community. For the UK, leadership by the CIO Council is
central to achieving the transition within the public sector‟s devolved, federated organisation.
Engagement of Permanent Secretaries and other business leaders will be also be crucial.
The programme will allocate significant resource to the „soft‟ aspects of change; this will
include centrally co-ordinated communications support and sharing of experience.
1.9
The new approach enables substantial benefits in small and medium sized public
sector organisations including local authorities which may be relatively easier to realise in the
short term, as well as significant benefits in central government in the longer term.
Implementation planning will ensure appropriate balance to mitigate the risk that focus on
large organisations „crowds out‟ the potential delivery of larger benefits to the majority.
1.10 Establishing and maintaining „trust‟ will be essential for public sector organisations to
move to the new model – individual organisations will remain responsible for the service they
provide to the public and will need to be able to count on G-Cloud services as being at least
as good as those used today. G-Cloud will be the internal brand for secure, trusted and
shared public sector ICT services;- all G-Cloud services will have common characteristics
including pre-certified standards compliance covering areas such as service delivery,
technical (data, inter-operability etc) and information assurance, provisioning from an efficient
and sustainable data centre, and will be available through the Government Applications Store
at a „value for money‟ best public sector price.
1.11 Given that significant value comes from up front, sharable work on commercials,
service management and information assurance, frameworks will be developed in each of
these areas to enable certification/validation on a component level, so that work does not
have to be repeated when components are assembled into new combinations.
1.12 The transition to the new approach will be achieved through a series of business
focused implementation programmes, each of which will deliver financial and other business
benefits. Some of these will be progressed in parallel. Potential implementation programmes
include Consolidating Data Centres, Utility Applications, Efficient Hosting, Streamlining
legacy, Empowering Business Change, Delivering for Citizens and Staff.
1.13 The programme is adopting a "learning by doing approach” through the “Quick Wins”
work strand. Quick Wins will launch a number of initiatives in February 2010 including several
prototype cloud development environments and a demo version of the Government
Applications Store. These will be available free of charge to public sector organisations. The
strand is exploring extending its scope to build proofs of concept of some automation and

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

3
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

management services. The Quick Wins strand provides a foundation that can potentially be
used to develop a full proof of concept of the future G-Cloud model. CIO Council members
are encouraged to help build programme momentum and early experience by signing their
organisations up to participate in the Quick Wins pilots.
1.14 While further work is needed to determine implementation timescales, the ambition is
to deliver substantial cost savings in the period 2011-2014, to have the proposed approach
fully in place for new services within 3-5 years, and to complete the majority of legacy
rationalisation and migration within 10 years.

Data Centre Consolidation
2.1
Consolidation can commence through inviting suppliers that currently operate multiple
data centres for the public sector to consolidate to two each, with the savings achievable
through estate reductions and virtualisation rebated to their public sector clients. As existing
contracts expire, replacement G Cloud services can then be sourced from the Government
Applications Store where available;- where not, contract renewal can be used to drive
provision of additional G Cloud services as the preferred choice. During the transition period
some unique residual needs will need to be sourced via a conventional procurement
exercise.
2.2
Private G Cloud services will be provisioned from a limited number of sustainable data
centres. Analysis will be conducted to determine whether there is a case for procuring data
centre estate separately from ICT services; this would enable sharing of physical facilities
between multiple G Cloud service providers and ease inter-supplier service transfers.

G Cloud
3.1

There will be 3 main categories of G Cloud branded services:Software as a Service (SaaS) which includes managed services, common, utility and
custom services, all of which can be configured for use by many Public Sector bodies.
Platform as a Service (PaaS); a framework overseen by the CTO Council that will be
used to create and manage provisioning of new business applications based on
shared re-usable components ; and
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) for hosting existing applications. This includes
services providing capability for
o Managing, securing and storing data
o Hosting applications

3.2
The G Cloud brand will offer dedicated „private‟ services for public sector
organisations, and trusted public cloud services in each category. Public cloud services are
developing rapidly, and are already used by a number of public sector bodies, for example for
services that do not involve personal data. The range and sophistication of public cloud
services will continue to grow and more of the Public Sector‟s ICT needs will be met from
public clouds as today‟s constraints are addressed over time. These constraints currently
include:-

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

4
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Information Assurance requirements e.g. data centres are outside the UK;
End to end performance of services from public clouds may not be guaranteed; and
Proprietary standards used by some public clouds create the risk of lock in.
3.3
G-Cloud private cloud services will address these constraints, enabling earlier use of
the shared utility model across the public sector. Private G Cloud services will typically be
provisioned by suppliers using an industry standard platform for example Microsoft Azure,
VMware, or Eucalyptus, an Open Source platform that implements Amazon Web Services
standards.

Government Applications Store
4.1
The Government Applications Store will be the marketplace in which trusted services
can be trialled and then purchased from a variety of sources by the Public Sector. The
services available will include private G-Cloud services, certified public cloud and other ICT
Services (eg COTS); and other public sector ICT services such as PSN services.
4.2
The Government Applications Store will be an open marketplace encouraging both
existing and new suppliers to the Public Sector to participate. New suppliers to the Public
Sector will be able to promote and trial their services as “free” prototypes on the Government
Applications Store in order to gauge market interest, with a defined commercial process to
introduce new categories of service where demand is generated. Services that add new
value will be welcomed into the portfolio provided they meet the minimum assurance
requirements – the approach will be „light touch‟ and will emphasise validating service
outcomes rather than auditing the detailed implementation approach.
4.3
Services available through the Government Applications Store will be certified to
demonstrate their compliance to Public Sector requirements. The scope, service levels,
security accreditation and price of the services will be available for review by potential
purchasers.
4.4
The commercial framework of the Government Application Store will allow
purchasers to buy certified services from an on-line catalogue under a cross public sector
framework contract. Services will be paid for on a per use or subscription basis. The latest
price achieved for the service will be shown to purchasers, however if subsequently a lower
price for this service is achieved by another organisation then this will be made available to
all subscribers of the service - from the point at which the new lower price is achieved.
4.5
The Government Applications Store will encourage re-use of existing services.
Purchasers will be directed to existing Managed Services and then to Common Government
and Utility services. Only if these types of offerings are not suitable will purchasers proceed
to build a custom service. The application services offered will vary from commodity
applications which can be used by any organisation with little change to line of business
applications which will require adapting to a particular organisation.
4.6
In order to avoid “lock in” to a particular infrastructure provider there will be a choice
of at least two infrastructure providers for each application. In principle purchasers will be

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

5
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

able to transfer their chosen application service to another infrastructure provider if required
at some future point, although this may involve some data migration activity.
4.7
Following selection of the application and infrastructure provider, the purchased
service will be provisioned through an automated process in the organisation‟s data context.
This will require standards for common data items, again to be specified by the CTO
Council. Subject to policy and individuals‟ decisions, these standards will also ease the
process of sharing data between different public sector organisations.
4.8
While the Government Applications Store will have a centrally managed „master
catalogue‟, there will be the capability to configure views of the catalogue for specific
communities, for example to enable focus on services most relevant to a particular type of
organisation, or to „grey out‟ services which are not approved by the user‟s organisation.
There will also be the ability to support „Communities of Interest‟, encouraging public sector
organisations and individuals to innovate by creating/configuring and then sharing locally
generated applications. „Closed loop‟ feedback will provide visibility of what‟s working,
enabling future trial and purchasing decisions to be informed by others‟ experiences.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

6
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Contents
1.

Purpose of Document ........................................................................................................... 11

2.

Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 12

3.

Why Use Cloud Computing in the Public Sector ................................................................ 14
Public Sector ICT Landscape........................................................................................... 14

3.1.
3.1.1.

Budgetary Pressures..................................................................................................... 14

3.1.2.

Green Agenda ............................................................................................................... 14

3.1.3.

Digital Britain .................................................................................................................. 15

3.1.4.

ICT Procurement ........................................................................................................... 15

3.1.5.

ICT Strategy for Government ....................................................................................... 16

3.1.6.

Quality of Data Centres................................................................................................. 18
Developments in the ICT Industry ................................................................................... 18

3.2.
3.2.1.

Will G-Cloud Deliver? .................................................................................................... 20

3.2.2.

Will Cloud Computing Happen? ................................................................................... 20

3.2.3.

Can the benefits be delivered? .................................................................................... 20

3.2.4.

Does G-Cloud depend on leading edge technology? ................................................ 21

3.2.5.

Key Risks ....................................................................................................................... 21
Benefits .............................................................................................................................. 23

3.3.
3.3.1.

Budgetary Pressures..................................................................................................... 23

3.3.2.

Green Agenda ............................................................................................................... 23

3.3.3.

Digital Britain .................................................................................................................. 24

3.3.4.

ICT Procurement ........................................................................................................... 24

3.3.5.

Current Initiatives........................................................................................................... 24

3.3.6.

Quality of Data Centres................................................................................................. 25

3.3.7.

ICT Market ..................................................................................................................... 25

4.
4.1.

The New World of G-Cloud .................................................................................................. 26
G-Cloud .............................................................................................................................. 27

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

7
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Application and Information Services .......................................................................... 28

4.1.1.
4.1.1.1.

Personal Information Management .......................................................................... 29

4.1.1.2.

Interaction................................................................................................................... 29

4.1.1.3.

Collaboration and Simple Applications .................................................................... 29

4.1.1.4.

Resource and Management ..................................................................................... 29

4.1.1.5.

Departmental Applications ........................................................................................ 29

4.1.1.6.

Data Services ............................................................................................................. 29

4.1.1.7.

Line of Business (LOB) ............................................................................................. 29

4.1.1.8.

Information Access .................................................................................................... 29

4.1.2.

Infrastructure and Platform Services ........................................................................... 30

4.1.3.

Data Services on the G-Cloud...................................................................................... 31

4.1.4.

Professional ICT Services ............................................................................................ 33

4.1.4.1.

Service Management Services ................................................................................. 33

4.1.4.2.

System Integration Services ..................................................................................... 33

4.1.5.

Exclusions from G-Cloud Scope .................................................................................. 33

4.2.

Government Applications Store ....................................................................................... 34

4.3.

Data Centre Consolidation ............................................................................................... 37

4.4.

Organisation and Governance in the world of G-Cloud ................................................. 38

4.5.

Roadmap ........................................................................................................................... 40

4.6.

Transition ........................................................................................................................... 42

5.

Principles ............................................................................................................................... 43

5.1.

Commercial Principles ...................................................................................................... 43

5.2.

Technical Principles .......................................................................................................... 46

5.3.

Information Assurance Principles .................................................................................... 47

5.5.

Transition Principles.......................................................................................................... 50

6.

Scenarios ............................................................................................................................... 51

7.

Conclusion ............................................................................................................................. 52

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

8
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

8.

Appendices ............................................................................................................................ 53

A1. Appendix 1 - Glossary of terms ............................................................................................ 53
A2. Appendix 2 Stakeholder list .................................................................................................. 55
A3. Appendix 3 – Details of Scenarios........................................................................................ 57
A3.1. Central Government Department ICT Service Director ................................................... 57
A3.1.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 57
A3.1.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 57
A3.1.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 57
A3.2. Local Government Director of Housing ............................................................................. 59
A3.2.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 59
A3.2.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 59
A3.2.3. Outcome A: ...................................................................................................................... 59
A3.2.4. Outcome B: ...................................................................................................................... 60
A3.3. Private Sector Application Provider................................................................................... 61
A3.3.1. Role................................................................................................................................... 61
A3.3.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 61
A3.3.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 61
A3.4. Central Government Department ICT Service Director ................................................... 62
A3.4.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 62
A3.4.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 62
A3.4.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 62
A3.5. Local Government CIO....................................................................................................... 63
A3.5.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 63
A3.5.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 63
A3.5.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 63
A3.6. Private Sector ICT Provider ............................................................................................... 64
A3.6.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 64

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

9
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

A3.6.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 64
A3.6.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 64
A4. Appendix 4 Drivers for Change............................................................................................. 65
A4.1. Strategic Drivers for Change ............................................................................................. 65
A4.2. Financial Drivers for Change ............................................................................................. 65
A4.3. Non Financial Drivers for Change ..................................................................................... 66
A4.4. Technological Drivers for Change ..................................................................................... 67
A5. Appendix 5 Programme Risks .............................................................................................. 68
A6. Appendix 6 Information Assurance ...................................................................................... 78

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

10
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

1. Purpose of Document
The G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and Data Centre Consolidation Phase 2
programme started on 5 October 2009 and will run till 12 February 2010. The programme
comprises seven workstrands and a Programme Office function. These workstrands have
been staffed by a mix of civil servants, consultants and industry volunteers.
This document provides a Vision of how the G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and
Data Centre Consolidation will deliver ICT services to the Public Sector. The Vision builds on
the Government Data Centre Strategy Phase 1 Report produced by Phase 1 of the
programme; it is also based on the Government ICT Strategy.
The Vision should be used by stakeholders to gain an overview and high level understanding
of G-Cloud.
The Vision is underpinned by further documents which provide more detail in addition to that
provided in the Vision, these include:
Commercial Strategy
Technical Architecture Strategy
Information Assurance Strategy
Service Management Framework Approach
Service Specification
Transition Approach
Business Plan

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

11
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

2. Introduction
The Government Data Centre Strategy Programme Phase 1 identified the desirability of
consolidating existing public sector data centres and creating a private government
computing cloud (G-Cloud) for the public sector. This document describes the Vision of how
a consolidated set of public sector data centres and a G-Cloud would provide ICT services to
the public sector. It will be used by Phase 2 of the Data Centre Consolidation, G-Cloud and
Applications Store programme to develop more detailed business case and plans,
specifications, architectures and a transition strategy for and to the G-Cloud.
UK Government currently has an extensive and disparate ICT estate supporting the delivery
of services. The emergence of cloud computing and new application delivery models offer
the opportunity to consolidate and improve this existing ICT estate through provision of
standard, commodity ICT services to the whole of the public sector through a government
cloud (G-Cloud).
The government will develop an integrated set of strategies for consolidation of existing data
centres in the public sector, delivery of ICT services through a government cloud (G-Cloud)
and the development of an Application Store for purchase of G-Cloud services.
These strategies will address a number of government objectives:
Reduction of ICT costs

-

A sustainable reduction in the operational costs of ICT across public sector to
contribute to the Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) savings target for
ICT

-

The reduction in cost will include a lower cost associated with future change
in ICT service provider specifically the cost of transition to a new provider

Improve government services and agility through use of ICT

-

To support a better citizen experience of government services by allowing
government to provide new ICT services faster to meet citizen needs

-

Enabling improved responsiveness to ministerial and business generated
changes through faster deployment of ICT services

Reduction of carbon footprint due to Government ICT services
-

Through consolidating and optimising use of existing spare ICT capacity and
decommissioning unused capacity

-

Adoption of more carbon efficient technology

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

12
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Improve data centre services

-

By removing known issues in existing infrastructure including lack of
resilience and known security concerns

Align with other Government thinking

-

Including supporting the objectives of Digital Britain through the deployment
of ICT services and creation of a new market for government ICT services

-

Integrating with wider Government ICT initiatives e.g. PSN, Desktop Strategy
to ensure that the overall government ICT Strategy is supported by the GCloud

In order to implement the G-Cloud and support these strategies a set of multi dimensional
changes will need to occur:
Technical – implementation of a G-Cloud architecture covering applications , data
management storage and security services;
Process – implementation of processes to use and manage G-Cloud services;
Commercial – implementation of a commercial framework to permit contracting of
services from the G-Cloud; and
Cultural – a shift to sharing and re-use of ICT services from the G-Cloud
The remainder of this document describes the Vision for Datacentre Consolidation, G-Cloud
and Application Store which will meet these objectives. The services described will be
available to all UK public sector organisations from small bodies through to major central
government departments. The Vision described is for 10 years hence, although many
aspects of the Vision can be implemented within 2 years.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

13
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3. Why Use Cloud Computing in the Public Sector
Why should the Public Sector adopt Cloud Computing? What will a new model for delivery of
ICT to the Public Sector bring? Is Cloud computing dependent on new and untried
technology? In this section these questions are answered and why the new model proposed
for ICT in the Public Sector must be implemented is explained.

3.1. Public Sector ICT Landscape
Public Sector ICT has developed to meet the needs of specific public bodies, with limited
sharing of resources, this approach has led to duplication and excess capacity with ICT
system silos in individual public bodies.
Public Sector ICT is now subject to a number of significant drivers for change. These drivers
range from budgetary pressures to ensuring the UK is at the leading edge of the global
digital economy.

3.1.1.

Budgetary Pressures

In April 2009, HM Treasury published the Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) Final
Report which estimated that overall savings of around 20 per cent of the estimated £16
billion annual Public Sector ICT expenditure (£3.2 billion) should be achievable without
compromising the quality of frontline public services. These savings must now be found by
delivering ICT services more efficiently.

3.1.2.

Green Agenda

Government runs some of the world‟s largest computer systems and is Britain‟s largest
purchaser of Information and Communication Technology (ICT). This technology is used to
improve the lives of millions of people and can enable smarter ways of working to reduce
carbon. However, this same technology is a major consumer of energy and natural
resources. UK government has made a number of sustainable operational commitments:
Central government office estate will achieve carbon neutrality by 2012;
UK to reduce greenhouse gases by 26% or more by 2020, 60% by 2050; and
Sustainable Operations on the Government Estate (SOGE) targets.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

14
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

ICT globally emits comparable levels of carbon to the aviation industry, and emissions
continue to grow. Recognising this, the Greening Government ICT Strategy set two
challenging targets which support delivery of mandatory SOGE (Sustainability on the
Government Estate) targets:
government ICT will be carbon neutral by 2012, and
carbon neutral across its lifecycle by 2020.
In order to deliver on these commitments delivery of ICT services to the Public Sector in new
more energy efficient ways which support the Government‟s climate change agenda need to
be developed and implemented.

3.1.3.

Digital Britain

The delivery of services to the public by ICT enables wider Government aims for the UK in
the global digital economy and citizen engagement. The Government in the Digital Britain
Report (June 2009) identifies the need for the UK to be at the leading edge of the global
digital economy. The Report also states that “an ambitious and clear programme of The
Digital Switchover of Public Services, to primarily electronic and online delivery, will
unlock significant cost savings, whilst at the same time serving to increase levels of
satisfaction”. The achievement of these aims will require a step change in the efficiency of
ICT procurement and delivery by the Public Sector.

3.1.4.

ICT Procurement

Government procurements are overseen by the Office of Government Commerce (OGC)
which has an objective of ensuring the Government gets best value from its spending and
that procurements support the Government‟s sustainability agenda.
Currently the procurement and delivery of ICT programmes in the Public Sector is a lengthy
and costly process. Procurement of large ICT systems can take in excess of 12 months. The
cost of this procurement cycle for both the Public Sector and Suppliers is significant. The
length of time involved means that ICT services in support of new Government policies can
rarely be deployed in the timescale best suited to support the policy. A more agile method of
procuring and delivering ICT in the Public Sector is needed.
These constraints affect Local and Regional Government in addition to central Government.
The OGC is seeking ways in which government procurements can become more efficient
and quicker while supporting sustainability.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

15
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3.1.5.

ICT Strategy for Government

The CIO Council agreed the overall ICT strategy for Government in summer 2009.
This ICT Strategy supports existing core public sector goals, set in Digital Britain, Building
Britain‟s Future, Excellence and fairness, and the Operational Efficiency Programme:
improving public service delivery
improving access to public services, and
increasing the efficiency of public service delivery
At the heart of the strategy is the creation of a common, secure and flexible infrastructure
that is available across the public sector. It comprises the strands depicted below:

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

16
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

There are 14 strands making up the strategy:
1. The Public Sector Network Strategy - Rationalising and standardising to create a
„network of networks‟, enabling secure fixed and mobile communications for greater
capability at a lower price.
2. The Government Cloud (G-Cloud) - Rationalising the government ICT estate, using
cloud computing to increase capability and security, reduce costs and accelerate
deployment speeds.
3. The Data Centre Strategy - Rationalising data centres to reduce costs while
increasing resilience and capability.
4. The Government Applications Store (G-AS) - Enabling faster procurement, greater
innovation, higher speed to deliver outcomes and reduced costs.
5. Shared services, moving systems to the Government Cloud - Continually moving
to shared services delivered through the Government Cloud for common activities.
6. The Common Desktop Strategy - Simplifying and standardising desktop designs
using common models to enhance interoperability and deliver greater capability at a
lower price.
7. Architecture and standards - Creating an environment that enables many suppliers
to work together, cooperate and interoperate in a secure, seamless and cost-efficient
way.
8. The Open Source, Open Standards and Reuse Strategy - Levelling the playing
field for procurement, enabling greater reuse of existing tools, fewer procurement
exercises and enhanced innovation – all at a lower cost.
9. The Greening Government ICT Strategy - Delivering sustainable, more efficient
ICT at a lower price.
10. Information Security and Assurance Strategy - Protecting data (citizen and
business) from harm – whether accidental or malicious.
11. Professionalising IT-enabled change - Improving the capabilities, knowledge, skills
and experience of those involved in ICT-enabled business change through the
Government IT Profession.
12. Reliable project delivery - Using portfolio management and active benefits
management to ensure that government undertakes the right projects in the right
ways.
13. Supply management - Working together to gain maximum value from suppliers –
both for individual organisations and collectively across the public sector.
14. International alignment and coordination - Ensuring that international treaties and
directives reflect UK national requirements and that the UK remains at the forefront of
delivery.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

17
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3.1.6.

Quality of Data Centres

The Data Centre Strategy Report produced by the Strategic Supply Board for the Government CIO
Council in September 2009 had a number of findings including:

There is a major opportunity for government to make significant cost savings whilst
delivering improved agility, flexibility, resilience, security and environmental
sustainability. High level analysis suggests a reduction in ICT data centre
infrastructure costs will deliver a net £900 million of cost savings over 5 years, with
recurrent savings of more than £300m a year thereafter;
There are significant variations within the current estate that are not justified by
differences in business needs, which will be rationalised by the approach proposed
in this Vision;
Other organisations have successfully delivered major ICT consolidation
programmes to create a dynamic ICT infrastructure and there is considerable
experience to draw on;
The challenges in consolidating ICT infrastructure are organisational and cultural
rather than technical; and
There is the potential for further cost saving and operational benefits by delivering a
government private Cloud (G-Cloud) in addition to data centre consolidation.

3.2. Developments in the ICT Industry
Recent developments in ICT have made it possible to consolidate ICT Infrastructure in a way
that delivers increased flexibility and responsiveness to business needs whilst reducing
costs. This change involves a move from ICT being provided individually by organisations
procuring their own separate ICT infrastructure, to a new model in which ICT is provided as
a utility which is known as “Cloud Computing”. Over the last few years consumer facing firms
delivering products in large volumes have adopted Cloud computing.
Cloud computing is most frequently cited as providing ICT “as a service” to customers using
a utility model over a network. Cloud computing offers a commercial model of “pay as you
use” thus avoiding the capital expenditure usually associated with provision of ICT. The
flexibility provided by Cloud computing has enabled its rapid growth and a corresponding
lowering of costs. Cloud services can be either infrastructure or application services.
At the core of the Cloud computing model are 3 principles:
simplification and standardisation of ICT infrastructure;
automated processes to support activities such as change management and service
reporting; and

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

18
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

enabling of Software as a Service (SaaS) through standards and multi tenanting of
services.
Cloud application services are applications delivered as a service via a network to a browser
front end. Cloud application services usually require the creation of a multitenant architecture
where one application supports many firms or organisations, but provides a unique view for
each. Cloud applications are often SaaS, but not all SaaS applications are cloud application
services. SaaS applications delivered as single-tenant applications on dedicated
infrastructures are not Cloud application services.
Large corporate firms which have implemented Cloud computing report:
ICT cost reductions of 40-65%;
improved agility in implementing strategy with ICT support; and
improved speed in implementing changes to support business needs.
Public Cloud services are gaining in acceptance by corporate world and the Public Cloud
providers are increasing their capacity and services. Amazon has 1000 staff involved in
developing their Public Cloud offering. Early concerns of the market regarding the security
and service levels offered by Public Clouds are being taken very seriously and
improvements have been made in these areas with further improvements planned. However
a number of firms have decided to setup a Cloud computing model in house, creating a
private cloud for use only within their organisation. This provides a number of advantages:
Cloud services can be tailored to the firm‟s requirements;
security is under the control and monitoring of the organisation; and
end to end service levels are easier to achieve.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

19
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3.2.1.

Will G-Cloud Deliver?

The G-Cloud model can bring many beneficial changes to the delivery of ICT across the
Public Sector but will it really deliver? In the section below how Cloud computing has the
foundations and track record to succeed is described.

3.2.2.

Will Cloud Computing Happen?

What is the evidence that Cloud computing is becoming a standard ICT delivery model:
Large ICT Services Suppliers have invested in the implementation of large global
public clouds;
The ICT industry itself is migrating to the use of clouds to deliver in house ICT
services; and
Private sector organisations are adopting Cloud computing to deliver ICT services.

3.2.3.

Can the benefits be delivered?

What is the evidence that the key elements of the G-Cloud – Cloud computing, Data Centre
Consolidation and Software as a Service (SaaS) are capable of delivering the promised
benefits:
Bechtel have adopted a cloud computing model with a resulting saving of 60% on
their ICT costs;
In a data centre consolidation programme Hewlett-Packard have reduced the number
of data centres globally from 85 to just 6;
IBM have reduced their data centres globally from 155 to 7; and
Telegraph Media Group has used SaaS to
-

make new functionality available without complex software upgrades

-

pay only for the computing power needed

-

lower total cost of ownership of ICT.

However in order to gain the benefits of Cloud computing the Public Sector will need to
adopt a new approach to ICT services. The existing approach of defining and procuring
bespoke systems which meet the specific needs of a department will need to shift to an
approach which makes use of standard or generic systems which are available at lower cost
and adapts the processes of the department to use the system.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

20
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

The commercial potential of cloud computing and cloud services is widely accepted, both in
private industry and in the public sector. The opportunities for cost reduction and efficiency
in the UK public sector are real and achievable, but require significant changes to
procurement practices, delivery frameworks and across the supplier landscape.
A pre-requisite for realisation of the commercial objectives are a set of UK Government
technical & operational standards that can define the G-Cloud based on a (significant)
number of competing infrastructural service providers operating at any appropriate security
level.
However Government has a significant legacy of applications which exhibit many pre-cloud
symptoms, including low server utilisation and high operational costs. It must be understood
that the cloud computing and cloud sourcing paradigms do not always directly lead to
reduced costs - the real challenge will be to ensure that sufficient economy of scale and
standardisation is reached quickly enough to deliver a net saving.

3.2.4.

Does G-Cloud depend on leading edge technology?

Does the G-Cloud depend on new and untried technologies which mean that the Public
Sector must take on significant technology risks in its implementation?
In fact the innovation of the G-Cloud model is in its approach to the governance and
management of ICT in the Public Sector rather than the deployment of new technology.
Cloud computing is based on significant amounts of existing technology. Specific aspects of
the G-Cloud may require new technologies but this will not be the norm for the majority of
the G-Cloud if a prudent approach to its design is implemented.
Instead for G-Cloud to be successful Public Sector leadership will need to encourage
existing ICT services to be re-used where possible avoiding bespoke solutions to common
challenges across the Public Sector.
The successful introduction and implementation of the G-Cloud is a leadership not a
technology challenge.

3.2.5.

Key Risks

The programme must manage effectively a number of risks in order to deliver the G-Cloud
benefits. These risks cover a number of key areas including: Commercial, Information
Assurance, Technical Architecture, Organisation and Governance.
The full list of key risks to delivery of the programme are listed in Appendix 5. However a
number of key risks are highlighted in the following sections.
3.3.9.1 Commercial
A Commercial approach will be implemented which manages the following risks:
Current resource constrained environment prevents up front investment for G-Cloud
becoming available;

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

21
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Pricing and contractual framework for the G-Cloud is attractive to Public Sector but
discourages suppliers from making services available on the G-Cloud;
Business case may double count savings with other Public Sector programmes;
Procurement regulations do not allow additional consumers after initial procurement
of the service; and
Take up of G-Cloud proceeds too slowly so benefits will not be significant enough to
attract Public Sector organisations in future.
3.3.9.2 Information Assurance
An Information Assurance approach will be implemented which manages the following risks:
Aggregation of data in G-Cloud raising IL levels beyond 4 and preventing use of GCloud services by public bodies with lower IL infrastructure; and
Common infrastructure and shared nature of G-Cloud cannot be assured by
departmental SIRO model and so are not accredited.
In addition the challenges of situational awareness on the G-Cloud will require approaches
to be developed during the implementation of the G-Cloud.
More details of the Information Assurance principles and approach to risks are provided in
Section 5.3 and Appendix 6.
3.3.9.3 Technical Architecture
A Technical Architecture for the G-Cloud will be developed which manages the risk that
adoption of G-Cloud “locks” the Public Sector into a particular vendor‟s proprietary standards
as industry standards for Cloud technologies are not currently agreed
3.3.9.4 Organisation and Governance
An Organisation and Governance approach will be implemented which manages the
following risks:
G-Cloud is not taken up or deployed effectively across the Public Sector due to decentralised nature of ICT governance in the Public Sector; and
Senior stakeholders may not support the implementation of the G-Cloud.
3.3.9.5 Public Sector Network
The G-Cloud programme will have a number of dependencies on the Public Sector Network
programme. Programme managements will work together to ensure that these
dependencies are managed or mitigated in order that the G-Cloud is implemented as
planned.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

22
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3.3. Benefits

The new world of the G-Cloud offering utility computing from consolidated data centres and
encouraging re-use of ICT assets through the Government Applications Store will bring a
comprehensive set of benefits across the Public Sector ICT landscape.

3.3.1.

Budgetary Pressures

The G-Cloud will deliver a fundamental contribution to the cost savings for OEP and will
facilitate and accelerate the OEP targets. This will be achieved by:
Data Centre Consolidation
-

Reduced hardware maintenance, server capital expenditure, and power
consumption through more efficient and better utilised infrastructure.

-

Reduced up-front investment costs through standardisation and sharing of
assets.

-

Reduced estate footprint through site sales/repurposing of accommodation.

G-Cloud
-

Reduced capital investment in computer infrastructure through utility-based
rental of computing and processing time.

-

Reduced server purchase costs through virtualisation of servers across
departments leading to higher utilisation rates

-

Reduced data recovery costs through fewer dedicated DR facilities.

Government Applications Store
-

Reduced application purchase prices through economies of scale.

-

Reduced licensing costs through licensing consolidation and reuse.

-

Reduced investment costs through SaaS pay for use model

-

3.3.2.

Reduced bespoke application development through reuse of existing
components.

Volume discounts achieved by purchasers apply to all public sector bodies
already using the service

Green Agenda

The G-Cloud will lead to more efficient use of ICT by the Public Sector so lowering the
carbon emissions associated with delivering ICT services:
Consolidation of data centres will reduce footprint of building estate;

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

23
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Virtualisation will drive higher server utilisation reducing server footprint; and
Re-use of ICT assets will lower development and project resources used to
implement new services and systems.
The G-Cloud will also facilitate smarter ways of working through integration of government
information and data sources, further reducing government‟s environmental impact and
carbon footprint.

3.3.3.

Digital Britain

The G-Cloud will deliver greater agility and speed in the delivery of policy and services,
underpinned by the adoption of shared infrastructure at lower cost. The agility will result from
the ability to re-use existing assets and the new commercial model reducing procurement
timescales and costs.
The G-Cloud will through the Government Applications Store create a marketplace with a
low cost of entry to new and small ICT suppliers encouraging the development of new UK
ICT businesses and supporting the UK‟s position in the digital world.

3.3.4.

ICT Procurement

The commercial model of the G-Cloud will be based on pre agreed frameworks. This will
remove the need for lengthy and costly procurements. This will reduce costs for both the
Public Sector and Suppliers. In addition the Public Sector will be able to deliver ICT services
faster in support of policy.
Procurement law will apply to the G-Cloud, and all normal rules will need to be followed. It
will be important to get this right at the outset. This is particularly the case given the arrival
of the regulations implementing the Remedies Directive on 20 December 2009. This puts an
increasing emphasis on the use of legally compliant procurement vehicles.

3.3.5.

Current Initiatives

The G-Cloud will complement and support the implementation of existing Public Sector
programmes:
PSN: the G-Cloud will offer PSN a route to market through the Government
Applications Store. In addition the G-Cloud will use PSN services to connect users to
G-Cloud services.
Strategic Desktop: the G-Cloud will provide ICT services for the Strategic Desktop

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

24
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

3.3.6.

Quality of Data Centres

Existing data centre space and infrastructure will be rationalised into a smaller set of secure
physical data centres – these will host both the G-Cloud and existing legacy applications
during the migration period. The outcome will be a significantly smaller footprint in highly
virtualised shared data centres which meet government standards for resilience, security
and sustainability at an overall lower cost. This will result not only in a reduction in the costs
of data centres but also in the risks of disruption to delivery of ICT services to the Public
Sector.

3.3.7.

ICT Market

The market for Cloud services, IaaS, PaaS and SaaS is expanding; the G-Cloud and
Government Applications Store will offer the Public Sector the opportunity to access this
market. The expansion of this market will provide the Public Sector with new services and
greater competition will help to that these services will be cost efficient.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

25
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

4. The New World of G-Cloud
The G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and consolidation of existing public sector
data centres are all components of the new model for delivery of public sector ICT services.
The G-Cloud will provide a variety of infrastructure and application services for the public
sector. The Government Applications Store will provide a “portal” to purchase G-Cloud
services. The consolidation of existing data centres will provide both a modern and fit for
purpose environment for the public sector ICT while at the same ensuring that excess data
centre capacity is reduced to meet government cost saving and carbon emission reduction
targets.
These services will be offered both from a UK government specific cloud (G-Cloud) and from
public clouds. Services from the public clouds will be used where the public cloud service
offers appropriate levels of security, service levels and performance for public sector use. It
is anticipated that the levels of security on the G-Cloud will support higher impact levels than
on the public clouds.
The vision is for G-Cloud services to be accessed via the Public Sector Network (PSN) from
the strategic government desktop although in the short term other existing public sector
networks and desktops may be used to access the G-Cloud.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

26
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

4.1. G-Cloud
G-Cloud: “bringing utility convenience to public sector ICT – shared, flexible, agile,
transparent and efficient allocation of ICT when it’s needed, through sharing standardised
resources to reduce costs”
The G-Cloud is the delivery of Public Sector ICT by a shared secure “utility” style ICT
services infrastructure, underpinned by a new commercial model enabling public bodies to
have the option to pay only for the service at the time when they use it. This approach is now
developing rapidly and is known as “Cloud Computing”. It is enabled by common standards,
and by heavily automated secure business processes that enable substantial reductions in
costs.

“G-Cloud” is the Public Sector brand for the use of certified cloud computing.
There will be 3 main categories of G-Cloud branded services:Software as a Service (SaaS) which includes managed services, common, utility and
custom services, all of which can be configured for use by many Public Sector
bodies;
Platform as a Service (PaaS) will be will be used to provide a platform for creating
new business applications based on shared re-usable components. The platform
offered will be approved and overseen by the CTO Council;
Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) will provide ICT infrastructure primarily computing
resource and data storage.
The G-Cloud will be a UK Public Sector implementation of “cloud computing” that will provide
both secure, private cloud services and access to certified public cloud services, for example
those provided by Amazon cloud services. These services will range from ICT infrastructure
services through to application and information services and to ICT professional services
such as service management.
The G-Cloud will offer dedicated „private‟ services for public sector organisations, and trusted
public cloud services. The range and sophistication of public cloud services is growing and
more of the Public Sector‟s ICT needs will be met from public clouds as today‟s constraints
are addressed over time. These constraints currently include:Information Assurance requirements e.g. data centres are outside the UK;
End to end performance of services from public clouds may not be guaranteed; and
Proprietary standards used by some public clouds create the risk of lock in.
G-Cloud private cloud services will address these constraints, enabling earlier use of the
shared utility model across the public sector. Private G-Cloud services will typically be
provisioned by suppliers using an industry standard platform for example Microsoft Azure,
VMware, or Eucalyptus - an Open Source platform that implements Amazon AWS
standards.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

27
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

The services offered by the G-Cloud will be defined in a Service Catalogue which any public
sector organisation can use to purchase ICT services. Each service will be described in the
Service Catalogue, its description will include details of the service, service levels offered,
service reports provided, if relevant the increments of capacity offered, time periods or
increments for which the service can be procured and the price of the service.
Services provided by the G-Cloud will be up to security level IL4 only.
In order to provide services in the G-Cloud a supplier will undergo a certification process for
both their organisation and each of their services. This certification process will ensure that
services meet the quality and information assurance requirements of the public sector and
will provide consuming public bodies with the confidence that G-Cloud services are suitable
for supporting provision of services to citizens. The information assurance certification will
represent a partial accreditation, a residual element of accreditation which cannot be carried
out centrally remaining with the consuming organisation.
A public sector body will govern the certification process, overseeing and managing the
approval of suppliers and their services.

4.1.1.

Application and Information Services

The G-Cloud will provide a variety of application and information services to the public
sector. These services will vary from the purchase of software licenses to access to
government stores of information where this is appropriate from a statutory and information
assurance perspective. The focus will be on re-use of existing assets and use of commodity
services. Existing common application services where possible will be offered so that public
bodies do not need to develop or commission development of new application services.

Application & Information Services
-

-

-

ERP
Flex Desktop
Gateway (Citizen
and Business
Authentication)
Payment of
Grants
Government
Banking
Government
Vetting

-

DVLA./IPS
Verification
Authentication
Services
Correspondence
Handling
Secure Data
Handling (GCHQ)
CIS (X)

Procurement Strand and Crowd Sourcing
01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

28
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Applications available on the G-Cloud will vary from personal productivity tools through to
complex departmental specific applications which are tightly integrated with their data. The
services available for each class of application will vary.
A large proportion of these applications will already be in use elsewhere in the public sector,
so their provision to other public bodies via the G-Cloud will promote re-use of applications
across government allowing the cost reduction for the public sector through both larger
volume discounts and avoidance of new development costs.
Applications will generally be provided as Software as a Service (SaaS), where the body
using the application will pay using a pay for use model.
Applications will be available on at least two different infrastructure platforms so that public
sector bodies can transfer loads between infrastructure suppliers if required.
The different classes of application are described below:

4.1.1.1.

Personal Information Management

These are personal productivity applications where data will be specific to the individual or
body. Examples are Email, Calendaring and Contacts.

4.1.1.2.

Interaction

These are applications which support contact and interaction with others. Examples are Peer
to Peer communications and Social Networking applications.

4.1.1.3.

Collaboration and Simple Applications

These are applications which either support collaborative working or provide support for
common tasks. Examples are workflow and records management.

4.1.1.4.

Resource and Management

These are applications which support public sector staff in their daily duties. Examples are
travel booking and expense claiming applications.

4.1.1.5.

Departmental Applications

These are applications with data specific to and useful to a department. Examples are
computer based training or small departmental databases.

4.1.1.6.

Data Services

These are applications providing access to data. Examples are management reporting and
access to geographic data.

4.1.1.7.

Line of Business (LOB)

These are applications which support the functioning of the public body; they will have data
which is specific to that public body. They will require tuning for a particular department.
Examples are a HR application or a CRM system.

4.1.1.8.

Information Access

These are applications provided by a department to other public bodies which give access to
data held by the department. The data will generally be tightly coupled to an application. The

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

29
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

G-Cloud will provide this service as a gateway using CTO Council endorsed G-Cloud
services to connect the two public bodies.
This service will only be permitted where statute allows the data to be shared with the
requesting public body and information assurance requirements for the data are adequately
supported across the G-Cloud.
An example of this service is CISx from the DWP.

4.1.2.

Infrastructure and Platform Services

The G-Cloud will provide a variety of ICT infrastructure and platform services to the public
sector. These services will be based on a layered architecture model, and are standardised
to widen their applicability to multiple public sector consumers.

IL Level Options

Resilience

Service Level

Database

Operating System

CPU Processor Power

Memory Capacity

Disk, SAN or offline storage

Environment (space, air conditioning & power only)

A public body will be able to purchase services at multiple layers. For example on one
occasion the body could purchase a server capacity service onto which the body loads its
own operating system and database. On another occasion the body may choose to
purchase a database service into which the supplier has packaged underlying operating
system and server capacity.
Data across the Public Sector continues to expand. A key infrastructure service offering will
be storage services for data, such as SAN services. This offering will enable public bodies
to access and store their data cost effectively in resilient, secure storage, with the ability to
expand or contract the capacity without major capital investment in their ICT infrastructure.
There is an opportunity for greater development of services for Data Management, Storage
and Security separately from services provided for applications processing. This Data
Capability can become a long-term asset in that applications can be chosen accordingly to
meet a given organisations current business priorities.
The G-Cloud will provide data services for storage and management of:
Operational data;

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

30
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Management Information data for analysis and reporting; and
Archive data for storage.
Database services are becoming common in cloud computing, so in addition database
services will be offered as part of G-Cloud, providing structured storage of data. This service
will enable public bodies to access and use data to support new business services. The GCloud will implement standards that will enable wider, but secure and legislatively permitted
shared access to data resources with other Public Sector bodies where there is a policy
decision to do so.
More detail on G-Cloud data services are provided in Section 4.1.3 Data in the G-Cloud.
In order to ensure that services in the G-Cloud are available from multiple suppliers the
services available will conform to open and industry standards for ICT components. The
capacity of services will be measured using industry standard units.
Services will be defined so that varying levels of resilience, service levels and support allow
consumers to purchase services to host business services of varying priority to the public
body involved. In addition this differentiation will allow the purchase of services with high
levels of resilience and superior service levels for production systems while more cost
effective services with lower service levels are available for development and test services.
Specific specifications of services for purposes such as Disaster Recovery will also be
available.

4.1.3.

Data Services on the G-Cloud

Data is one of the key assets of the Public Sector. As it develops, the G-Cloud will become
the repository of a significant portion of Public Sector data. Data also persists beyond an
application, with migration between applications being required as the application stack
changes.
Cloud providers are addressing the new challenges and opportunities management of data
in a cloud environment offers:
Microsoft has implemented cloud-based data platforms which seek to provide a
database service which meets the needs of primarily network based application
access;
Cisco are offering SAN consolidation services and security approaches for multiple
organisation use of SANs;
Amazon offers database services including tools which are scalable to meet the
needs of cloud services; and
Other suppliers are developing data and database services for the cloud.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

31
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

The continuing expansion of data is a key challenge for Public Sector ICT. The G-Cloud will
provide access to a cost effective, secure and resilient data storage capacity which can be
expanded or contracted rapidly in accordance with business needs of the Public Sector.
In addition the G-Cloud can provide database services which will allow access to structured
data which can be used to support new business services.
The Public Sector will draw on G-Cloud data services for storage and management of:
Operational data;
Management Information data for analysis and reporting; and
Archive data for storage.
The management of this data by the G-Cloud will encompass its complete lifecycle including:
creation or migration onto the G-Cloud;
monitoring of growth including provision of additional storage capacity as needed
protection through appropriate resilience and security;
migration to cost effective storage facilities as full operational use ceases; and
archival or secure destruction at end of life.
The G-Cloud will offer data services which enable wider, but secure and legislatively
permitted access to this resource across the Public Sector.
The development of data standards for the G-Cloud will support widening of access and
ease of data transfer at contract termination for public bodies.
Data is currently often tightly coupled with a business application within a public body‟s ICT
estate. However as data usually persists beyond the life of the application, transition from a
legacy application to a new or enhanced application can involve an expensive and time
consuming activity of data transfer including data structure changes to fit with the new
application‟s requirements. The definition of data standards for G-Cloud which recognise
data persistence has the potential to reduce the amount of effort to migrate data.
In addition the G-Cloud offers the potential to make existing data assets more widely
available across the Public Sector. Capitalising on this potential will require the G-Cloud to
define data standards and a data strategy. A Data Strategy will be developed in Phase 3 of
the programme.
The G-Cloud will offer data services which are compliant with the security and the legislative
constraints that data held in the Public Sector must operate under.
The Public Sector is already adopting standards to make Public Sector data more available
in line with the objectives of bodies such as the National Archives and with the launch of
data.gov.uk. G-Cloud data strategy and standards will be aligned with the existing public
sector work.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

32
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

However data obtained by the Public Sector must only be used in the manner allowed and
specified by the associated legislation, the strategy for data and the operational controls of
the G-Cloud will ensure that data is not accessed or shared in violation of this principle. This
will require the storage of data in separated infrastructure storage areas. The G-Cloud will
data tools to permit the wider sharing of appropriate data in a controlled manner.

4.1.4.

Professional ICT Services

A number of professional services will be provided to support the delivery of G-Cloud
components and to aggregate services from components available on the G-Cloud.

4.1.4.1.

Service Management Services

Both suppliers and larger public bodies will offer service management services on the GCloud. This service will manage the overall delivery of services from the G-Cloud so that an
integrated and consistent operational service is provided. These services will include the
service management of operational services such as change management, incident
management and service reporting. The service management will be based on a common
industry accepted framework such as ITIL. This will enable suppliers of service components
to use a standard method for interaction with the service integrator and public sector
consumers. These services will be of particular value to smaller public bodies with limited
ICT expertise available in their organisation.

4.1.4.2.

System Integration Services

These services will provide public bodies with services which will integrate G-Cloud
components into coherent services which can be consumed by a public sector body.

4.1.5.

Exclusions from G-Cloud Scope

The G-Cloud will provide a wide range of ICT and business services across all of the Public
Sector. These services will be made available over time in line with the G-Cloud roadmap.
The initial G-Cloud services will therefore be limited in range and coverage across Public
Sector compared to the end Vision for G-Cloud.
However even in the final Vision the scope of G-Cloud and Government Applications Store
does not include:
Services which are not ICT services or business services not supported primarily by
ICT systems, for example
- Facilities management;
- Catering services;
- Stationary procurement;

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

33
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Development of services which are already provided by other strategic Government
projects such as PSN or common desktop, although these services may be
purchased through the Government Applications Store;
IL5 IL5 and above are not provided in the G-Cloud, although such services may be
co-located in the data centres from which G-Cloud services are provided. However
only those elements of an application which are at IL 5 and above are excluded from
G-Cloud, lower security rated components of the application can be hosted within the
G-Cloud;
Legacy services of limited life or applicability which would not justify cost of migration
to G-Cloud;
Making G-Cloud services available to the private sector, eg commercial firms except
for the creation of composite services for resale to the Public Sector, for example
providing infrastructure services to a software house so that it can provide a
complete application service to a set of public bodies; and
Making G-Cloud services available to foreign governments.
There are no exclusions to the Data Centre Consolidation at this stage, However as detailed
design and planning continues it may be necessary to exclude overseas locations due to
reliance on network capacity and information assurance considerations.

4.2. Government Applications Store
Government Applications Store: “enabling faster, more cost-effective and more consistent
certified ICT enabled solutions to business challenges through reusing and sharing
applications and services”
The Government Applications Store is the Public Sector ICT marketplace to readily source,
share and promote Managed Services, Utility Services and Common Services. It will include
Infrastructure components and services aswell as application and business solutions. Only
where existing services cannot meet a public body‟s requirements will Custom Services to
create a new service be available.
The services available will include private G-Cloud services, certified public cloud and other
ICT Services (eg COTS); and other public sector ICT services such as PSN services.
Services available through the Government Applications Store will be certified to
demonstrate their compliance to Public Sector standards and requirements. The commercial
framework of the Government Application Store will allow purchasers to buy certified
services from an on-line catalogue under a cross public sector framework contract. The
scope, service levels, security accreditation and price of the services will be available for
review and comparison by potential purchasers. Services will be paid for on a per use or
subscription basis. The latest price achieved for the service will be shown to purchasers,
however if subsequently a lower price for this service is achieved by another organisation
then this will be made available to all subscribers of the service - from the point at which the
new lower price is achieved.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

34
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Home

About

Managed
Service

Utility Services

Common
Services

Custom
Services

FAQs

Contact us

UK Govt Applications Store
What do you want to do?
Type in query

Search

Featured Apps
Featured Apps
Featured Apps

Please choose your required service below

Managed
Services

Utility
Services

Featured Apps

Common
Services

Custom
Services

The Government Applications Store will provide a portal for public bodies purchasing
services from the G-Cloud. Open Source software and services will be available in the
Government Applications Store encouraging cost effective services to be provided in this
market.
While the Government Applications Store will have a centrally managed „master catalogue‟,
there will be the capability to configure views of the catalogue for specific communities, for
example to enable focus on services most relevant to a particular type of organisation, or to
„gray out‟ services which are not funded by the user‟s organisation. There will also be the
ability to support „Communities of Interest‟, encouraging public sector organisations and
individuals to innovate by creating/configuring and then sharing locally generated
applications. „Closed loop‟ feedback will provide visibility of what‟s working, enabling future
trial and purchasing decisions to be informed by others‟ experiences.

Certification of a service will include review and approval of its information assurance,
service management and commercial elements.
In order to avoid “lock in” to a particular infrastructure provider there will be a choice of at
least two infrastructure providers for each application. In principle purchasers will be able to
transfer their chosen application service to another infrastructure provider if required at some
future point, although this may involve some data migration activity.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

35
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Following selection of the application and infrastructure provider, the purchased service will
be provisioned through an automated process in the public body‟s infrastructure and data
context.
The Government Applications Store will continually be updated with new services. It will be
an open marketplace encouraging new suppliers to join the existing community of ICT
suppliers to the public sector. In order to support new suppliers joining a prototyping facility
will be available on the Government Applications Store. The prototyping facility will allow a
supplier to offer free for a period a new service without complete certification. If this service
is taken up by public bodies the supplier will be able to subsequently “upgrade” the service
to certified and chargeable. This will provide an agile way for new and smaller suppliers to
trial new services and join the Government Applications Store. Services that add new value
will be welcomed into the portfolio provided they meet the minimum assurance requirements
– the approach will be „light touch‟ and will emphasise validating service outcomes rather
than auditing the detailed implementation approach.
The Government Applications Store will also list requests for new services from public
bodies. Suppliers and other public bodies will be able to review these requests and decide
whether they wish to provide the suggested service. If new services are created in response
to the requests they will be required to undergo certification before being made available on
the Application Store.
The public sector body will be responsible for identifying in advance:
which services users in the body can purchase;
which users are allowed to purchase services; and
which disallowed services can be seen by users. So that if necessary a user
can raise a request/justification for a currently unapproved for purchase
service to be made available for purchase within their public body.
The Government Applications Store will be designed so that potential purchasers of services
are directed to existing managed services, then common and utility services only if these
sources do not yield a satisfactory option will the purchaser be able to commission a custom
solution, which must meet G-Cloud certification standards. This approach will encourage reuse of existing services, thereby reducing cost for the public sector by preventing
unnecessary development of new applications and maximising volume discounts with
existing Suppliers.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

36
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

4.3. Data Centre Consolidation
Data Centre Consolidation: “delivering public sector ICT services from the optimum
number of high performing, energy-efficient, cost-effective and standards-based data
centres”
Existing data centre space and infrastructure will be rationalised into a smaller set of secure
physical data centres – these will host both the G-Cloud and existing legacy applications
during the migration period. The outcome will be a significantly smaller footprint in highly
virtualised shared data centres which meet government standards for resilience, security
and sustainability at an overall lower cost.
Consolidation can commence through inviting suppliers that currently operate multiple data
centres for the public sector to consolidate to two each, with the savings achievable through
estate and virtualisation rebated to their public sector clients. As existing contracts expire,
replacement G-Cloud services can then be sourced from the Government Applications Store
where available;- where not contract renewal can be used to drive provision of additional GCloud services as the preferred choice. During the transition period some unique residual
needs will need to be sourced via a conventional procurement exercise.
All services delivered from existing facilities will be analysed to identify those which may be
discontinued, combined, re-engineered or replaced in order to improve service delivery
efficiency and lower the risk exposure on delivery of public sector ICT services.
Consolidation will focus on removing data centres with significant issues:
Lack of resilience;
Security concerns;
Lack of capacity (space or power); and
Situated in areas of risk eg sited on a floodplain so at risk of flooding.
Consolidation will include implementing the Phase 1 recommendation that a set of
mandatory minimum standards for data centre security and resilience across government
are produced and that the consolidated data centres adhere to these standards.
Substandard data centres will be addressed either by improvement of the facility or transition
of its load to a more appropriate facility. Adoption of a transition approach will only be carried
out where transition costs do not outweigh benefits of the transition.
The data centre consolidation will provide a set of modern, resilient, secure data centres.
The data centres will be a mix of private and government owned but will be managed to
meet requirements across government and provide services to the G-Cloud. They will make
services available to government and application providers on a fair and flexible basis. This
approach which fosters competition will be underpinned by appropriate technical and
commercial arrangements.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

37
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

A set of the data centres will remain outside the G-Cloud to provide specific non commodity
type services that the G-Cloud is not designed to provide. An example of these services
would be where a public body requires services at IL 5 or IL 6 security level.
It is intended that Data Centre Consolidation will be progressed through three parallel
projects which will;
Consolidate Public Sector owned Data Centres
Consolidate Private Sector owned or operated Data Centres
Procure new services from the market both for infrastructure and Data Centre
facility services
A standard benchmark (e.g. Rack as a Service) will be established to enable the comparison
of the cost and quality of facilities from the various sourcing routes.

4.4. Organisation and Governance in the world of G-Cloud
The G-Cloud involves substantial change from today‟s ICT delivery model; - public sector CIO
teams will shift from managing the whole ICT lifecycle, to the selection and integration of
relevant services. Retained ICT organisations will be able to increase focus on business
engagement and achieving value adding outcomes as less effort will be needed on
infrastructure management.
Technical standards for the G-Cloud will be controlled by the CTO Council through the cross
government Enterprise Architecture (xGEA). A regulator/authority will be responsible for:
Maintenance of standards applicable to services including security
Certification of suppliers and supplier services
The delivery of services on the G-Cloud will conform to a comprehensive service
management framework based on ITIL. This framework will cover the management of
processes such as:
Change Management
Incident Management
Service Reporting
Larger government departments may interact directly with suppliers on the G-Cloud,
however for many public sector bodies a Service Manager will provide a service
management service which ensures that the body has an integrated set of services from the
G-Cloud and that delivery of these services is managed.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

38
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

Department C
Department B
Department A
Service
Management

Service
Management

Service Catalogue

Regulatory
or Authority
Body
responsible
for
Standards
and
Certification

G- Cloud
Application
Services

Infrastructure
Services

Professional
Services

The options for organisation and governance in the G-Cloud are being developed by the GCloud Phase 2 programme.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

39
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

4.5. Roadmap

The implementation of the Data Centre Consolidation, G-Cloud and Government
Applications Store will cover a period of 5 or more years, but an objective of the roadmap will
be that the achievement of benefits will commence early. The approach to building the GCloud will be to build blocks of ICT services to support Public Sector digital capabilities and
then roll these out through the G-Cloud across the Public Sector.
The identification of and prioritisation of services to be built will be based on the
requirements of Public Sector bodies and communities. For example if secure email facilities
is identified by a group of Local Authorities as a service they require urgently then this would
be an early service made available on the G-Cloud.
The roadmap for specific services and their sequencing on the G-Cloud will be a deliverable
of Phase 3 of the programme. However in the remainder of this section the approach to
developing this roadmap is described and a potential roadmap is outlined.
Where appropriate the approach taken to implementation will be to identify public bodies
with existing plans to procure or implement a service suitable for inclusion on the G-Cloud,
this public body will then lead on the procurement of the service for the G-Cloud ensuring
that the procured or developed service meets the security, technical and contractual
certification requirements of the G-Cloud. The new service will then be available to all public
bodies for sharing and re-use via the Government Applications Store. This approach will
minimise the need to fund central development and procurement of services, in addition it
will ensure that each new service already has a committed market providing confidence to
private sector suppliers that participation in the procurement is worthwhile and will result in
genuine new business.
Risk management of the G-Cloud will also dictate the sequencing with which new services
are introduced. In the early stages – years 1 and 2 of the programme, private cloud, lower
criticality services with moderate service level and security requirements will be added.
Example services could include existing services such as Government Gateway or DCSF
collaborative working.
As confidence in the G-Cloud brand grows and the Government Applications Store becomes
a dynamic and vibrant market place, services which are critical to Public Sector delivery and
have higher service level and security requirements will be incorporated into the G-Cloud.
Public cloud services will also be enabled at this time. Early candidates for inclusion on the
G-Cloud will include the „Champion Assets‟ endorsed by the Government CIO Council‟s.
Subject to funding approval, the programme will be initiated in Spring 2010 to startup the
delivery of Data Centre consolidation, G-Cloud and Government Applications Store.
However, once the operational management and regulatory functions of the G-Cloud
become mature, the programme will transfer further development of the G-Cloud to these
bodies and itself be wound down.
The programme will be responsible for those aspects of the G-Cloud implementation will
require central control for example the procurement of the Government Applications Store.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

40
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

The programme will manage the organisational and cultural activities required to transition
public bodies to use of the G-Cloud. The G-Cloud will require a cultural change in the ICT
departments of public bodies. In the G-Cloud identification of business needs and matching
re-usable assets rather than procurement and management of custom solutions will be
critical to cost effective delivery of ICT. An approach to equipping the ICT department with
the structure and skills to successfully move to this G-Cloud way of working will be provided
by the programme to participating public bodies.
While the definitive approach to implementation of the G-Cloud will be delivered in Phase 3,
a potential approach is outlined in the succeeding paragraphs:
A planned engagement programme across public bodies will identify the „early adopter‟
public bodies for creation and re-use of G-Cloud services. A small group of early adopters
across Central and Local Government in year 1 will pioneer use of the G-Cloud. The GCloud will be extended to larger groups of public bodies in further years, with existing
adopters expanding the percentage of services they draw from the G-Cloud over time.
In order for the G-Cloud to deliver its benefits it must become a trusted brand. This will be
enabled by the risk managed approach to delivery of the G-Cloud but could also be
supported by the publicising of G-Cloud successes for example an annual G-Cloud Award
could be initiated.
Potential milestones in year 1 include:
Setup of management function for G-Cloud including regulator
Procurement of Government Applications Store
Initiate a consolidation programme for Public Sector owned Data Centres
Initiate a consolidation programme for Private Sector owned or operated Data
Centres
Procurement of new infrastructure and Data Centre facility services for ICT services
Implementation of some G-Cloud services by at least two central government
departments
Implementation of private G-Cloud services for a local authority
Key achievements in year 2- 3
Front line “innovation culture” established
First G-Cloud Awards ceremony held
Launch of public cloud services
Early adopters will now have 40% of relevant ICT services from G-Cloud
Consolidation and closure of more data centres across Public Sector and suppliers
G-Cloud becomes self funding
Early adopters have 70% of relevant ICT services from G-Cloud
During succeeding years, the G-Cloud could continue to expand by:
Completion of data centre consolidation
Adoption of G-Cloud across remaining public bodies
Public Sector retained ICT departments complete transition to new model

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

41
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

During this period the G-Cloud becomes a trusted and reliable brand for Public Sector ICT
services. Suppliers will use the G-Cloud as the primary route to market for providing ICT
services to Public Sector. Digital services of high criticality to citizens and Public Sector will
become established on the G-Cloud, re-use of digital assets will be the predominant model
in Public Sector ICT. The approach to delivery of ICT services in Public Sector will be based
on an established culture of sharing assets.

4.6. Transition
The approach to transition to the Vision of the G-Cloud must meet a number of
requirements:
Transition must take place in a manner which ensures that public sector services
are not disrupted;
Individual G-Cloud services are made available as soon as suitably available and
certified rather than when all planned services are ready so that the resulting
savings can begin quickly;
Public bodies moving to the G-Cloud must not incur unnecessary costs by
terminating existing contracts early; and
The public sector must have the skills and governance in place to purchase and
manage services provided by the G-Cloud.
These requirements mean that the transition to the Vision will take place in a phased
manner. Phasing of the transition will affect both the implementation of the G-Cloud itself
and its adoption by individual public bodies.
Services will be introduced to the G-Cloud by suppliers over time. The initial Service
Catalogue for the G-Cloud will reflect those services which are technologically feasible to
provide over the G-Cloud today, as suppliers and public sector understanding of the
potential of G-Cloud develops both parties will make new services available. In addition the
types of services available will evolve with technology, as new technologies appear the
potential services and their economic feasibility for provision through the G-Cloud will
change leading to new services continually being added to G-Cloud. This approach to
implementation of the G-Cloud will ensure that its initial use is not delayed while large
numbers of services are developed for deployment in a “big bang” launch.
An individual public body will adopt the G-Cloud in a phased manner also. This will allow the
public body to purchase services from the G-Cloud as existing ICT contracts for those types
of ICT services terminate. This means that the public body will not need to terminate
contracts early and incur termination charges unnecessarily.
Another advantage of this phased approach is that it avoids the risk of a “big bang”
implementation of G-Cloud at a public body where potentially all its services are at risk of
failure at go live. It also allows the public sector to develop the skills required for managing
G-Cloud services over time.

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

42
Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2

A detailed approach to Transition is being prepared as part of the G-Cloud Phase 2
programme.

5. Principles
The Vision has been developed based on a number of principles which cover Commercial,
Technical, Operational and Transition aspects of the G-Cloud. The principles govern the
extent, outcomes and structure of the Vision.

5.1. Commercial Principles
The commercial principles will support the creation of a commercial framework to support a
transition to cloud computing and cloud sourcing enabling sustained lower costs, improved
agility and better service.
Ease of Change: Creating a marketplace where purchasers can switch easily
between providers at the end of contracts and establish the principle of contract
migration and make provision for it by:

-

limiting the term of contracts

-

Minimise termination clauses

-

Open standards for connecting

-

Allow the market to determine the best approach to term contracts

-

Transition (see later)

Comparable Pricing: Pricing should reflect total cost of service and be priced on
a utility model by a measurable unit (transaction, user, month, capacity). Pricing
should incorporate and make visible all additional service charges, or costs of
change. The ultimate aim is for no term contracts. Different business models may
exist for different parts of the stack (IaaS, PaaS, SaaS) and for different IL levels
Ease of Transaction: To minimise the transaction cost for purchase of service
through the cloud. Transacting should be standardised, simple, and low cost for
both parties by:

-

Frameworks should be designed for categories of service to incorporate
simplified legal requirements

-

Single standardised version of Ts & Cs would be optimal incorporating legal
concepts determined by the framework

01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5

UNCLASSIFIED

43
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1
G-Cloud Program vision UK t1

Contenu connexe

Tendances

GPMS Product Solutions Profile
GPMS Product Solutions ProfileGPMS Product Solutions Profile
GPMS Product Solutions ProfileRaja Seevan
 
Federal Cloud Computing Strategy
Federal Cloud Computing StrategyFederal Cloud Computing Strategy
Federal Cloud Computing StrategyGovCloud Network
 
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)Vince Garr
 
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal Agencies
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal AgenciesNJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal Agencies
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal AgenciesGovCloud Network
 
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and Response
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and ResponsePublic Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and Response
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and ResponseEsri
 
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud Computing
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud ComputingIRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud Computing
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud ComputingIRJET Journal
 
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONS
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONSREFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONS
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONScsandit
 
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applicationsInterventions for scientific and enterprise applications
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applicationseSAT Publishing House
 
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...eSAT Journals
 
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...AIRCC Publishing Corporation
 
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More putrimeisya
 
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of View
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of ViewOutsourcery Disaggregation Point of View
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of ViewDamon Crawford
 

Tendances (16)

GPMS Product Solutions Profile
GPMS Product Solutions ProfileGPMS Product Solutions Profile
GPMS Product Solutions Profile
 
Federal Cloud Computing Strategy
Federal Cloud Computing StrategyFederal Cloud Computing Strategy
Federal Cloud Computing Strategy
 
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)
brocade-five-pillars-federal-data-centers-wp (1)
 
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal Agencies
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal AgenciesNJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal Agencies
NJVC Implementation of Cloud Computing Solutions in Federal Agencies
 
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and Response
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and ResponsePublic Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and Response
Public Safety Enterprise: GIS Solutions for Community Protection and Response
 
Meter Data Management 2.0
Meter Data Management 2.0Meter Data Management 2.0
Meter Data Management 2.0
 
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud Computing
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud ComputingIRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud Computing
IRJET- Efficient and Secure Data Storage in Cloud Computing
 
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONS
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONSREFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONS
REFERENCE ARCHITECTURE FOR SMAC SOLUTIONS
 
Bobs paper
Bobs paperBobs paper
Bobs paper
 
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applicationsInterventions for scientific and enterprise applications
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications
 
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...
Interventions for scientific and enterprise applications based on high perfor...
 
Foraying the Cloud
Foraying the CloudForaying the Cloud
Foraying the Cloud
 
On the Path to a Smarter World
On the Path to a Smarter WorldOn the Path to a Smarter World
On the Path to a Smarter World
 
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...
Web Services as A Solution for Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning Interoperab...
 
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More
IoT for Manufacturing Supply Chain Logistic, Predictive Maintenance and More
 
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of View
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of ViewOutsourcery Disaggregation Point of View
Outsourcery Disaggregation Point of View
 

En vedette

Текст проекта Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...
Текст проекта  Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...Текст проекта  Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...
Текст проекта Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...Victor Gridnev
 
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...Victor Gridnev
 
«гособлакj» и план-график
«гособлакj» и план-график «гособлакj» и план-график
«гособлакj» и план-график Victor Gridnev
 
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услуг
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услугKD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услуг
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услугVictor Gridnev
 
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации Victor Gridnev
 
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13Victor Gridnev
 
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...Victor Gridnev
 
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13Victor Gridnev
 
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком гуртов) 16 04_13
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком  гуртов) 16 04_13конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком  гуртов) 16 04_13
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком гуртов) 16 04_13Victor Gridnev
 
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13Victor Gridnev
 
Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)
 Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж) Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)
Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)Victor Gridnev
 

En vedette (13)

Текст проекта Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...
Текст проекта  Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...Текст проекта  Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...
Текст проекта Постановления о "портале комплексных услуг" (МКС - Почта Росси...
 
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...
Пояснительная записка к тексту проекта Постановлении о "портале комплексных у...
 
«гособлакj» и план-график
«гособлакj» и план-график «гособлакj» и план-график
«гособлакj» и план-график
 
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услуг
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услугKD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услуг
KD 2013 ТТ на федеральный реестр государственных и муниципальных услуг
 
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации
О концептуальной модели построения «гособлака» и плане-графике его реализации
 
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13
конференция нижний новгород (сф гаттаров) 16.04.13
 
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...
Об утверждении плана мероприятий («дорожной карты») «Повышение качества регул...
 
ТЗ ЕПГУ 2013
ТЗ ЕПГУ 2013ТЗ ЕПГУ 2013
ТЗ ЕПГУ 2013
 
ТЗ ЕСИА 2013
ТЗ ЕСИА 2013ТЗ ЕСИА 2013
ТЗ ЕСИА 2013
 
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (иэгос юркевич) 16 04 13
 
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком гуртов) 16 04_13
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком  гуртов) 16 04_13конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком  гуртов) 16 04_13
конференция нижний новгород (ростелеком гуртов) 16 04_13
 
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13
конференция нижний новгород (айти гриднев) 16 04 13
 
Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)
 Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж) Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)
Гриднев айти презентация 30 05 2013 v1_2 (Воронеж)
 

Similaire à G-Cloud Program vision UK t1

Adoption of cloud computing model in government
Adoption of cloud computing model in governmentAdoption of cloud computing model in government
Adoption of cloud computing model in governmenticyhouse
 
Cloud computing-strategy 1
Cloud computing-strategy 1Cloud computing-strategy 1
Cloud computing-strategy 1Duy Hoang Nguyen
 
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloud
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloudChris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloud
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloudeventwithme
 
oracle-public-sector-global-wp
oracle-public-sector-global-wporacle-public-sector-global-wp
oracle-public-sector-global-wpDavid John Kerr
 
F E B R U A R Y 8 , 2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docx
F E B R U A R Y  8 ,  2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docxF E B R U A R Y  8 ,  2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docx
F E B R U A R Y 8 , 2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docxmydrynan
 
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscape
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscapeAndy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscape
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscapeSocitm
 
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A Perspective
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A PerspectiveCloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A Perspective
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A PerspectiveCognizant
 
TGC 4 : Digital Telco
TGC 4 : Digital TelcoTGC 4 : Digital Telco
TGC 4 : Digital TelcoSadiq Malik
 
25 Point Plan Highlights
25 Point Plan Highlights25 Point Plan Highlights
25 Point Plan Highlightsjfkhilton
 
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...Marie-Michelle Strah, PhD
 
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...Gary Wood
 
Reaching optimization avispl
Reaching optimization avisplReaching optimization avispl
Reaching optimization avisplAVI-SPL
 
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docx
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docxAcross the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docx
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docxdaniahendric
 
Martin Gould Psn
Martin Gould PsnMartin Gould Psn
Martin Gould PsnSocitm
 
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 20172017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017PwC
 
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for Utilities
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for UtilitiesManaging the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for Utilities
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for UtilitiesIndigo Advisory Group
 
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3Jessica Copeman
 

Similaire à G-Cloud Program vision UK t1 (20)

Adoption of cloud computing model in government
Adoption of cloud computing model in governmentAdoption of cloud computing model in government
Adoption of cloud computing model in government
 
Cloud computing-strategy 1
Cloud computing-strategy 1Cloud computing-strategy 1
Cloud computing-strategy 1
 
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloud
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloudChris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloud
Chris Price (for Chris Chant)-Public Sector ICT Landscape & G-cloud
 
oracle-public-sector-global-wp
oracle-public-sector-global-wporacle-public-sector-global-wp
oracle-public-sector-global-wp
 
F E B R U A R Y 8 , 2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docx
F E B R U A R Y  8 ,  2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docxF E B R U A R Y  8 ,  2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docx
F E B R U A R Y 8 , 2 0 1 1Vivek Kundra U.S. Chief Inf.docx
 
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscape
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscapeAndy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscape
Andy Tait, Cabinet Office - public sector ICT landscape
 
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A Perspective
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A PerspectiveCloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A Perspective
Cloud Adoption in Capital Markets: A Perspective
 
TGC 4 : Digital Telco
TGC 4 : Digital TelcoTGC 4 : Digital Telco
TGC 4 : Digital Telco
 
25 Point Plan Highlights
25 Point Plan Highlights25 Point Plan Highlights
25 Point Plan Highlights
 
Ebook estrategia cloud para Gobierno
Ebook estrategia cloud para GobiernoEbook estrategia cloud para Gobierno
Ebook estrategia cloud para Gobierno
 
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...
Strategic, Privacy and Security Considerations for Adoption of Cloud and Emer...
 
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...
White Paper - Delivering on the IoT Experience - The HPE Universal IoT Platfo...
 
Reaching optimization avispl
Reaching optimization avisplReaching optimization avispl
Reaching optimization avispl
 
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docx
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docxAcross the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docx
Across the world, governments are trying to present, in the best p.docx
 
Martin Gould Psn
Martin Gould PsnMartin Gould Psn
Martin Gould Psn
 
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 20172017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017
2017 Top Issues Core Transformation - January 2017
 
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for Utilities
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for UtilitiesManaging the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for Utilities
Managing the Energy Information Grid - Digital Strategies for Utilities
 
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3
ViON_Benefits of Cloud_WhitePaper_D6_V3
 
GovNext
GovNextGovNext
GovNext
 
Redington Value Journal - November 2016
Redington Value Journal - November 2016Redington Value Journal - November 2016
Redington Value Journal - November 2016
 

Plus de Victor Gridnev

Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020
Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020
Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020Victor Gridnev
 
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 год
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 годПрограмма "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 год
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 годVictor Gridnev
 
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...Victor Gridnev
 
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdf
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdfГриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdf
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdfVictor Gridnev
 
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития Victor Gridnev
 
E government survey 2018 final for web
E government survey 2018 final for webE government survey 2018 final for web
E government survey 2018 final for webVictor Gridnev
 
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018Victor Gridnev
 
Модель данных ЕАЭС v4_7 02_02_2018 Datamodel
Модель данных ЕАЭС  v4_7 02_02_2018 DatamodelМодель данных ЕАЭС  v4_7 02_02_2018 Datamodel
Модель данных ЕАЭС v4_7 02_02_2018 DatamodelVictor Gridnev
 
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie web
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie webЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie web
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie webVictor Gridnev
 
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы  цэплан мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы  цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы цэVictor Gridnev
 
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...Victor Gridnev
 
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...Victor Gridnev
 
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэплан мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэVictor Gridnev
 
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...Victor Gridnev
 
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ Обзор
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ ОбзорЦифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ Обзор
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ ОбзорVictor Gridnev
 
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_oct
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_octСколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_oct
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_octVictor Gridnev
 
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформацию
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформациюДоклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформацию
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформациюVictor Gridnev
 
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство Victor Gridnev
 
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017Victor Gridnev
 
Про IoT Gartner i2017
Про IoT Gartner i2017Про IoT Gartner i2017
Про IoT Gartner i2017Victor Gridnev
 

Plus de Victor Gridnev (20)

Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020
Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020
Цифровая повестка ЕАЭС 2016-2020
 
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 год
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 годПрограмма "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 год
Программа "Цифровая экономика Российской Федерации" 2017 год
 
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...
Гриднев В_ Презентация по подходам к проектному управлению цифровой трансформ...
 
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdf
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdfГриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdf
Гриднев ЕЭК Презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС 05_2018.pdf
 
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития
Отчет "Римского клуба" за 50 лет существования и прогнозы развития
 
E government survey 2018 final for web
E government survey 2018 final for webE government survey 2018 final for web
E government survey 2018 final for web
 
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018
ЕЭК_Гриднев_В_В_презентация по реализации цифровых инициатив ЕАЭС v8_1 05_2018
 
Модель данных ЕАЭС v4_7 02_02_2018 Datamodel
Модель данных ЕАЭС  v4_7 02_02_2018 DatamodelМодель данных ЕАЭС  v4_7 02_02_2018 Datamodel
Модель данных ЕАЭС v4_7 02_02_2018 Datamodel
 
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie web
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie webЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie web
ЦСР про реформу госуправления 2018 gosupravlnie web
 
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы  цэплан мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы  цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная безопасность» программы цэ
 
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...
план мероприятий по направлению формирование исследовательских компетенций и ...
 
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...
план мероприятий по направлению «Нормативное регулирование» программы «Цифров...
 
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэплан мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэ
план мероприятий по направлению информационная инфраструктура программы цэ
 
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...
ЕЭК 26_122017 Об утверждении Положения о модели данных Евразийского экономиче...
 
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ Обзор
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ ОбзорЦифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ Обзор
Цифровая повестка ЕЭК от ВБ Обзор
 
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_oct
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_octСколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_oct
Сколково про ЦИфровую экономику Sk de web_17_oct
 
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформацию
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформациюДоклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформацию
Доклад Skolkovo как поминать цифровую трансформацию
 
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство
Skolkovo Доклад про цифровое производство
 
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017
Deloitte принципы blockchai 2017
 
Про IoT Gartner i2017
Про IoT Gartner i2017Про IoT Gartner i2017
Про IoT Gartner i2017
 

Dernier

APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfRbc Rbcua
 
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesAnnual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesKeppelCorporation
 
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy Verified Accounts
 
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03DallasHaselhorst
 
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...lizamodels9
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607dollysharma2066
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckHajeJanKamps
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMintel Group
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfKhaled Al Awadi
 
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith PereraKenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Pereraictsugar
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaoncallgirls2057
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Riya Pathan
 
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update Presentation Slides
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update  Presentation SlidesKeppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update  Presentation Slides
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update Presentation SlidesKeppelCorporation
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyotictsugar
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfJos Voskuil
 
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,noida100girls
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...lizamodels9
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxMarkAnthonyAurellano
 

Dernier (20)

APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
 
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesAnnual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
 
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail AccountsBuy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
Buy gmail accounts.pdf Buy Old Gmail Accounts
 
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
 
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...
Call Girls In Radisson Blu Hotel New Delhi Paschim Vihar ❤️8860477959 Escorts...
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
 
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith PereraKenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
 
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update Presentation Slides
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update  Presentation SlidesKeppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update  Presentation Slides
Keppel Ltd. 1Q 2024 Business Update Presentation Slides
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
 
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information TechnologyCorporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
Corporate Profile 47Billion Information Technology
 
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
BEST Call Girls In Old Faridabad ✨ 9773824855 ✨ Escorts Service In Delhi Ncr,
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Uttam Nagar Delhi NCR
 
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
 

G-Cloud Program vision UK t1

  • 1. DATA CENTRE STRATEGY, G-CLOUD & GOVERNMENT APPLICATIONS STORE PROGRAMME PHASE 2 PHASE 2 SCOPE REPORT Authors: Martin Bellamy and Gerry Gallagher Date: 10 February 2011 Version No: 0.35 UNCLASSIFIED
  • 2. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Summary of Vision Introduction 1.1 At the core of the programme is the vision of providing political, business and ICT leaders with greatly improved agility, flexibility and choice in the ICT that enables the public sector and to deliver substantial cost savings on both existing and new ICT services. This will involve a wholesale move to shared utility style ICT services for use as „the default‟ across the public sector. Citizens, staff and the third sector will benefit from greater innovation and choice and from more personalised presentation of relevant services from across the public sector. 1.2 The programme is being designed to address key ICT related objectives set out by the Operational Efficiency Programme, and those of the Green ICT Strategy, Digital Britain, Building Britain‟s Future and Smarter Government. 1.3 Recent developments in ICT have made it possible to consolidate ICT Infrastructure in a way that delivers increased flexibility and responsiveness to business needs whilst reducing costs. This change involves a move from ICT being provided individually by organisations procuring their own separate ICT infrastructure, to a new model in which ICT is provided as a utility which is known as “Cloud Computing”. The flexibility provided by Cloud computing has enabled its rapid growth and a corresponding lowering of costs. 1.4 Public sector organisations will benefit from ready access to a wide range of preaccredited ICT services. These will include both „public cloud‟ services and common and custom „private cloud‟ services procured by other public sector organisations. Services will offer usage based pricing, elastic scalability (up or down), and there will be in built flexibility to switch to alternate services or providers. 1.5 Cost savings will be founded on driving down the number of unique public sector services through rationalising, sharing and re-using software and infrastructure across organisational boundaries, joining up buying power by establishing an open and transparent marketplace that delivers „latest best prices‟ to all, and by introducing standard, automated processes across the entire ICT lifecycle;- from purchasing new solutions through to migrating existing services to a new supplier. Industry standards will be used „as is‟ for public cloud services. For private cloud services common standards and services will be driven „up the stack‟ to the maximum possible extent; the technical standards landscape will be controlled by the CTO Council through the cross government Enterprise Architecture (xGEA). 1.6 G-Cloud services will be selected and procured from the Government Applications Store, and automatically provisioned – either from public cloud providers, or from a private cloud platform hosted in one of a much reduced number of List X compliant government data centres; these will also support legacy services during the transition period. 1.7 The way forwards involves substantial change from today‟s ICT delivery model;public sector CIO teams will shift from managing the whole ICT lifecycle, to the selection and integration of relevant services. A federated (rather than centralised) implementation approach is proposed, allowing many public sector organisations and suppliers to contribute re-usable assets that can be sourced by others from the Government Applications Store. Retained ICT organisations will be able to increase focus on business engagement and 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 2
  • 3. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 achieving value adding outcomes as less effort will be needed on infrastructure management. There will be choice in the „road-map‟ for each organization; the route chosen will depend on business priorities and the current ICT and contractual landscape. 1.8 Major change inevitably creates execution risks. Other public and private sector organisations that have pioneered the move to a shared utility ICT delivery model have had strong central drive and leadership. Most private sector organisations have had "someone in charge" on a global basis. The US government has introduced the Klinger Cohen act and Economic Development act, which mandate some elements of a more common public sector approach to ICT. The main areas of challenge in successfully moving to the new model include leadership, business change management, stakeholder engagement and creating a win-win proposition for business leaders, users of ICT services, public sector ICT professionals and the ICT supplier community. For the UK, leadership by the CIO Council is central to achieving the transition within the public sector‟s devolved, federated organisation. Engagement of Permanent Secretaries and other business leaders will be also be crucial. The programme will allocate significant resource to the „soft‟ aspects of change; this will include centrally co-ordinated communications support and sharing of experience. 1.9 The new approach enables substantial benefits in small and medium sized public sector organisations including local authorities which may be relatively easier to realise in the short term, as well as significant benefits in central government in the longer term. Implementation planning will ensure appropriate balance to mitigate the risk that focus on large organisations „crowds out‟ the potential delivery of larger benefits to the majority. 1.10 Establishing and maintaining „trust‟ will be essential for public sector organisations to move to the new model – individual organisations will remain responsible for the service they provide to the public and will need to be able to count on G-Cloud services as being at least as good as those used today. G-Cloud will be the internal brand for secure, trusted and shared public sector ICT services;- all G-Cloud services will have common characteristics including pre-certified standards compliance covering areas such as service delivery, technical (data, inter-operability etc) and information assurance, provisioning from an efficient and sustainable data centre, and will be available through the Government Applications Store at a „value for money‟ best public sector price. 1.11 Given that significant value comes from up front, sharable work on commercials, service management and information assurance, frameworks will be developed in each of these areas to enable certification/validation on a component level, so that work does not have to be repeated when components are assembled into new combinations. 1.12 The transition to the new approach will be achieved through a series of business focused implementation programmes, each of which will deliver financial and other business benefits. Some of these will be progressed in parallel. Potential implementation programmes include Consolidating Data Centres, Utility Applications, Efficient Hosting, Streamlining legacy, Empowering Business Change, Delivering for Citizens and Staff. 1.13 The programme is adopting a "learning by doing approach” through the “Quick Wins” work strand. Quick Wins will launch a number of initiatives in February 2010 including several prototype cloud development environments and a demo version of the Government Applications Store. These will be available free of charge to public sector organisations. The strand is exploring extending its scope to build proofs of concept of some automation and 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 3
  • 4. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 management services. The Quick Wins strand provides a foundation that can potentially be used to develop a full proof of concept of the future G-Cloud model. CIO Council members are encouraged to help build programme momentum and early experience by signing their organisations up to participate in the Quick Wins pilots. 1.14 While further work is needed to determine implementation timescales, the ambition is to deliver substantial cost savings in the period 2011-2014, to have the proposed approach fully in place for new services within 3-5 years, and to complete the majority of legacy rationalisation and migration within 10 years. Data Centre Consolidation 2.1 Consolidation can commence through inviting suppliers that currently operate multiple data centres for the public sector to consolidate to two each, with the savings achievable through estate reductions and virtualisation rebated to their public sector clients. As existing contracts expire, replacement G Cloud services can then be sourced from the Government Applications Store where available;- where not, contract renewal can be used to drive provision of additional G Cloud services as the preferred choice. During the transition period some unique residual needs will need to be sourced via a conventional procurement exercise. 2.2 Private G Cloud services will be provisioned from a limited number of sustainable data centres. Analysis will be conducted to determine whether there is a case for procuring data centre estate separately from ICT services; this would enable sharing of physical facilities between multiple G Cloud service providers and ease inter-supplier service transfers. G Cloud 3.1 There will be 3 main categories of G Cloud branded services:Software as a Service (SaaS) which includes managed services, common, utility and custom services, all of which can be configured for use by many Public Sector bodies. Platform as a Service (PaaS); a framework overseen by the CTO Council that will be used to create and manage provisioning of new business applications based on shared re-usable components ; and Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) for hosting existing applications. This includes services providing capability for o Managing, securing and storing data o Hosting applications 3.2 The G Cloud brand will offer dedicated „private‟ services for public sector organisations, and trusted public cloud services in each category. Public cloud services are developing rapidly, and are already used by a number of public sector bodies, for example for services that do not involve personal data. The range and sophistication of public cloud services will continue to grow and more of the Public Sector‟s ICT needs will be met from public clouds as today‟s constraints are addressed over time. These constraints currently include:- 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 4
  • 5. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Information Assurance requirements e.g. data centres are outside the UK; End to end performance of services from public clouds may not be guaranteed; and Proprietary standards used by some public clouds create the risk of lock in. 3.3 G-Cloud private cloud services will address these constraints, enabling earlier use of the shared utility model across the public sector. Private G Cloud services will typically be provisioned by suppliers using an industry standard platform for example Microsoft Azure, VMware, or Eucalyptus, an Open Source platform that implements Amazon Web Services standards. Government Applications Store 4.1 The Government Applications Store will be the marketplace in which trusted services can be trialled and then purchased from a variety of sources by the Public Sector. The services available will include private G-Cloud services, certified public cloud and other ICT Services (eg COTS); and other public sector ICT services such as PSN services. 4.2 The Government Applications Store will be an open marketplace encouraging both existing and new suppliers to the Public Sector to participate. New suppliers to the Public Sector will be able to promote and trial their services as “free” prototypes on the Government Applications Store in order to gauge market interest, with a defined commercial process to introduce new categories of service where demand is generated. Services that add new value will be welcomed into the portfolio provided they meet the minimum assurance requirements – the approach will be „light touch‟ and will emphasise validating service outcomes rather than auditing the detailed implementation approach. 4.3 Services available through the Government Applications Store will be certified to demonstrate their compliance to Public Sector requirements. The scope, service levels, security accreditation and price of the services will be available for review by potential purchasers. 4.4 The commercial framework of the Government Application Store will allow purchasers to buy certified services from an on-line catalogue under a cross public sector framework contract. Services will be paid for on a per use or subscription basis. The latest price achieved for the service will be shown to purchasers, however if subsequently a lower price for this service is achieved by another organisation then this will be made available to all subscribers of the service - from the point at which the new lower price is achieved. 4.5 The Government Applications Store will encourage re-use of existing services. Purchasers will be directed to existing Managed Services and then to Common Government and Utility services. Only if these types of offerings are not suitable will purchasers proceed to build a custom service. The application services offered will vary from commodity applications which can be used by any organisation with little change to line of business applications which will require adapting to a particular organisation. 4.6 In order to avoid “lock in” to a particular infrastructure provider there will be a choice of at least two infrastructure providers for each application. In principle purchasers will be 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 5
  • 6. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 able to transfer their chosen application service to another infrastructure provider if required at some future point, although this may involve some data migration activity. 4.7 Following selection of the application and infrastructure provider, the purchased service will be provisioned through an automated process in the organisation‟s data context. This will require standards for common data items, again to be specified by the CTO Council. Subject to policy and individuals‟ decisions, these standards will also ease the process of sharing data between different public sector organisations. 4.8 While the Government Applications Store will have a centrally managed „master catalogue‟, there will be the capability to configure views of the catalogue for specific communities, for example to enable focus on services most relevant to a particular type of organisation, or to „grey out‟ services which are not approved by the user‟s organisation. There will also be the ability to support „Communities of Interest‟, encouraging public sector organisations and individuals to innovate by creating/configuring and then sharing locally generated applications. „Closed loop‟ feedback will provide visibility of what‟s working, enabling future trial and purchasing decisions to be informed by others‟ experiences. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 6
  • 7. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Contents 1. Purpose of Document ........................................................................................................... 11 2. Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 12 3. Why Use Cloud Computing in the Public Sector ................................................................ 14 Public Sector ICT Landscape........................................................................................... 14 3.1. 3.1.1. Budgetary Pressures..................................................................................................... 14 3.1.2. Green Agenda ............................................................................................................... 14 3.1.3. Digital Britain .................................................................................................................. 15 3.1.4. ICT Procurement ........................................................................................................... 15 3.1.5. ICT Strategy for Government ....................................................................................... 16 3.1.6. Quality of Data Centres................................................................................................. 18 Developments in the ICT Industry ................................................................................... 18 3.2. 3.2.1. Will G-Cloud Deliver? .................................................................................................... 20 3.2.2. Will Cloud Computing Happen? ................................................................................... 20 3.2.3. Can the benefits be delivered? .................................................................................... 20 3.2.4. Does G-Cloud depend on leading edge technology? ................................................ 21 3.2.5. Key Risks ....................................................................................................................... 21 Benefits .............................................................................................................................. 23 3.3. 3.3.1. Budgetary Pressures..................................................................................................... 23 3.3.2. Green Agenda ............................................................................................................... 23 3.3.3. Digital Britain .................................................................................................................. 24 3.3.4. ICT Procurement ........................................................................................................... 24 3.3.5. Current Initiatives........................................................................................................... 24 3.3.6. Quality of Data Centres................................................................................................. 25 3.3.7. ICT Market ..................................................................................................................... 25 4. 4.1. The New World of G-Cloud .................................................................................................. 26 G-Cloud .............................................................................................................................. 27 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 7
  • 8. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Application and Information Services .......................................................................... 28 4.1.1. 4.1.1.1. Personal Information Management .......................................................................... 29 4.1.1.2. Interaction................................................................................................................... 29 4.1.1.3. Collaboration and Simple Applications .................................................................... 29 4.1.1.4. Resource and Management ..................................................................................... 29 4.1.1.5. Departmental Applications ........................................................................................ 29 4.1.1.6. Data Services ............................................................................................................. 29 4.1.1.7. Line of Business (LOB) ............................................................................................. 29 4.1.1.8. Information Access .................................................................................................... 29 4.1.2. Infrastructure and Platform Services ........................................................................... 30 4.1.3. Data Services on the G-Cloud...................................................................................... 31 4.1.4. Professional ICT Services ............................................................................................ 33 4.1.4.1. Service Management Services ................................................................................. 33 4.1.4.2. System Integration Services ..................................................................................... 33 4.1.5. Exclusions from G-Cloud Scope .................................................................................. 33 4.2. Government Applications Store ....................................................................................... 34 4.3. Data Centre Consolidation ............................................................................................... 37 4.4. Organisation and Governance in the world of G-Cloud ................................................. 38 4.5. Roadmap ........................................................................................................................... 40 4.6. Transition ........................................................................................................................... 42 5. Principles ............................................................................................................................... 43 5.1. Commercial Principles ...................................................................................................... 43 5.2. Technical Principles .......................................................................................................... 46 5.3. Information Assurance Principles .................................................................................... 47 5.5. Transition Principles.......................................................................................................... 50 6. Scenarios ............................................................................................................................... 51 7. Conclusion ............................................................................................................................. 52 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 8
  • 9. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 8. Appendices ............................................................................................................................ 53 A1. Appendix 1 - Glossary of terms ............................................................................................ 53 A2. Appendix 2 Stakeholder list .................................................................................................. 55 A3. Appendix 3 – Details of Scenarios........................................................................................ 57 A3.1. Central Government Department ICT Service Director ................................................... 57 A3.1.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 57 A3.1.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 57 A3.1.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 57 A3.2. Local Government Director of Housing ............................................................................. 59 A3.2.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 59 A3.2.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 59 A3.2.3. Outcome A: ...................................................................................................................... 59 A3.2.4. Outcome B: ...................................................................................................................... 60 A3.3. Private Sector Application Provider................................................................................... 61 A3.3.1. Role................................................................................................................................... 61 A3.3.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 61 A3.3.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 61 A3.4. Central Government Department ICT Service Director ................................................... 62 A3.4.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 62 A3.4.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 62 A3.4.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 62 A3.5. Local Government CIO....................................................................................................... 63 A3.5.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 63 A3.5.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 63 A3.5.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 63 A3.6. Private Sector ICT Provider ............................................................................................... 64 A3.6.1. Role: ................................................................................................................................. 64 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 9
  • 10. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 A3.6.2. Challenge: ........................................................................................................................ 64 A3.6.3. Outcome: .......................................................................................................................... 64 A4. Appendix 4 Drivers for Change............................................................................................. 65 A4.1. Strategic Drivers for Change ............................................................................................. 65 A4.2. Financial Drivers for Change ............................................................................................. 65 A4.3. Non Financial Drivers for Change ..................................................................................... 66 A4.4. Technological Drivers for Change ..................................................................................... 67 A5. Appendix 5 Programme Risks .............................................................................................. 68 A6. Appendix 6 Information Assurance ...................................................................................... 78 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 10
  • 11. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 1. Purpose of Document The G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and Data Centre Consolidation Phase 2 programme started on 5 October 2009 and will run till 12 February 2010. The programme comprises seven workstrands and a Programme Office function. These workstrands have been staffed by a mix of civil servants, consultants and industry volunteers. This document provides a Vision of how the G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and Data Centre Consolidation will deliver ICT services to the Public Sector. The Vision builds on the Government Data Centre Strategy Phase 1 Report produced by Phase 1 of the programme; it is also based on the Government ICT Strategy. The Vision should be used by stakeholders to gain an overview and high level understanding of G-Cloud. The Vision is underpinned by further documents which provide more detail in addition to that provided in the Vision, these include: Commercial Strategy Technical Architecture Strategy Information Assurance Strategy Service Management Framework Approach Service Specification Transition Approach Business Plan 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 11
  • 12. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 2. Introduction The Government Data Centre Strategy Programme Phase 1 identified the desirability of consolidating existing public sector data centres and creating a private government computing cloud (G-Cloud) for the public sector. This document describes the Vision of how a consolidated set of public sector data centres and a G-Cloud would provide ICT services to the public sector. It will be used by Phase 2 of the Data Centre Consolidation, G-Cloud and Applications Store programme to develop more detailed business case and plans, specifications, architectures and a transition strategy for and to the G-Cloud. UK Government currently has an extensive and disparate ICT estate supporting the delivery of services. The emergence of cloud computing and new application delivery models offer the opportunity to consolidate and improve this existing ICT estate through provision of standard, commodity ICT services to the whole of the public sector through a government cloud (G-Cloud). The government will develop an integrated set of strategies for consolidation of existing data centres in the public sector, delivery of ICT services through a government cloud (G-Cloud) and the development of an Application Store for purchase of G-Cloud services. These strategies will address a number of government objectives: Reduction of ICT costs - A sustainable reduction in the operational costs of ICT across public sector to contribute to the Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) savings target for ICT - The reduction in cost will include a lower cost associated with future change in ICT service provider specifically the cost of transition to a new provider Improve government services and agility through use of ICT - To support a better citizen experience of government services by allowing government to provide new ICT services faster to meet citizen needs - Enabling improved responsiveness to ministerial and business generated changes through faster deployment of ICT services Reduction of carbon footprint due to Government ICT services - Through consolidating and optimising use of existing spare ICT capacity and decommissioning unused capacity - Adoption of more carbon efficient technology 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 12
  • 13. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Improve data centre services - By removing known issues in existing infrastructure including lack of resilience and known security concerns Align with other Government thinking - Including supporting the objectives of Digital Britain through the deployment of ICT services and creation of a new market for government ICT services - Integrating with wider Government ICT initiatives e.g. PSN, Desktop Strategy to ensure that the overall government ICT Strategy is supported by the GCloud In order to implement the G-Cloud and support these strategies a set of multi dimensional changes will need to occur: Technical – implementation of a G-Cloud architecture covering applications , data management storage and security services; Process – implementation of processes to use and manage G-Cloud services; Commercial – implementation of a commercial framework to permit contracting of services from the G-Cloud; and Cultural – a shift to sharing and re-use of ICT services from the G-Cloud The remainder of this document describes the Vision for Datacentre Consolidation, G-Cloud and Application Store which will meet these objectives. The services described will be available to all UK public sector organisations from small bodies through to major central government departments. The Vision described is for 10 years hence, although many aspects of the Vision can be implemented within 2 years. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 13
  • 14. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3. Why Use Cloud Computing in the Public Sector Why should the Public Sector adopt Cloud Computing? What will a new model for delivery of ICT to the Public Sector bring? Is Cloud computing dependent on new and untried technology? In this section these questions are answered and why the new model proposed for ICT in the Public Sector must be implemented is explained. 3.1. Public Sector ICT Landscape Public Sector ICT has developed to meet the needs of specific public bodies, with limited sharing of resources, this approach has led to duplication and excess capacity with ICT system silos in individual public bodies. Public Sector ICT is now subject to a number of significant drivers for change. These drivers range from budgetary pressures to ensuring the UK is at the leading edge of the global digital economy. 3.1.1. Budgetary Pressures In April 2009, HM Treasury published the Operational Efficiency Programme (OEP) Final Report which estimated that overall savings of around 20 per cent of the estimated £16 billion annual Public Sector ICT expenditure (£3.2 billion) should be achievable without compromising the quality of frontline public services. These savings must now be found by delivering ICT services more efficiently. 3.1.2. Green Agenda Government runs some of the world‟s largest computer systems and is Britain‟s largest purchaser of Information and Communication Technology (ICT). This technology is used to improve the lives of millions of people and can enable smarter ways of working to reduce carbon. However, this same technology is a major consumer of energy and natural resources. UK government has made a number of sustainable operational commitments: Central government office estate will achieve carbon neutrality by 2012; UK to reduce greenhouse gases by 26% or more by 2020, 60% by 2050; and Sustainable Operations on the Government Estate (SOGE) targets. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 14
  • 15. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 ICT globally emits comparable levels of carbon to the aviation industry, and emissions continue to grow. Recognising this, the Greening Government ICT Strategy set two challenging targets which support delivery of mandatory SOGE (Sustainability on the Government Estate) targets: government ICT will be carbon neutral by 2012, and carbon neutral across its lifecycle by 2020. In order to deliver on these commitments delivery of ICT services to the Public Sector in new more energy efficient ways which support the Government‟s climate change agenda need to be developed and implemented. 3.1.3. Digital Britain The delivery of services to the public by ICT enables wider Government aims for the UK in the global digital economy and citizen engagement. The Government in the Digital Britain Report (June 2009) identifies the need for the UK to be at the leading edge of the global digital economy. The Report also states that “an ambitious and clear programme of The Digital Switchover of Public Services, to primarily electronic and online delivery, will unlock significant cost savings, whilst at the same time serving to increase levels of satisfaction”. The achievement of these aims will require a step change in the efficiency of ICT procurement and delivery by the Public Sector. 3.1.4. ICT Procurement Government procurements are overseen by the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) which has an objective of ensuring the Government gets best value from its spending and that procurements support the Government‟s sustainability agenda. Currently the procurement and delivery of ICT programmes in the Public Sector is a lengthy and costly process. Procurement of large ICT systems can take in excess of 12 months. The cost of this procurement cycle for both the Public Sector and Suppliers is significant. The length of time involved means that ICT services in support of new Government policies can rarely be deployed in the timescale best suited to support the policy. A more agile method of procuring and delivering ICT in the Public Sector is needed. These constraints affect Local and Regional Government in addition to central Government. The OGC is seeking ways in which government procurements can become more efficient and quicker while supporting sustainability. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 15
  • 16. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3.1.5. ICT Strategy for Government The CIO Council agreed the overall ICT strategy for Government in summer 2009. This ICT Strategy supports existing core public sector goals, set in Digital Britain, Building Britain‟s Future, Excellence and fairness, and the Operational Efficiency Programme: improving public service delivery improving access to public services, and increasing the efficiency of public service delivery At the heart of the strategy is the creation of a common, secure and flexible infrastructure that is available across the public sector. It comprises the strands depicted below: 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 16
  • 17. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 There are 14 strands making up the strategy: 1. The Public Sector Network Strategy - Rationalising and standardising to create a „network of networks‟, enabling secure fixed and mobile communications for greater capability at a lower price. 2. The Government Cloud (G-Cloud) - Rationalising the government ICT estate, using cloud computing to increase capability and security, reduce costs and accelerate deployment speeds. 3. The Data Centre Strategy - Rationalising data centres to reduce costs while increasing resilience and capability. 4. The Government Applications Store (G-AS) - Enabling faster procurement, greater innovation, higher speed to deliver outcomes and reduced costs. 5. Shared services, moving systems to the Government Cloud - Continually moving to shared services delivered through the Government Cloud for common activities. 6. The Common Desktop Strategy - Simplifying and standardising desktop designs using common models to enhance interoperability and deliver greater capability at a lower price. 7. Architecture and standards - Creating an environment that enables many suppliers to work together, cooperate and interoperate in a secure, seamless and cost-efficient way. 8. The Open Source, Open Standards and Reuse Strategy - Levelling the playing field for procurement, enabling greater reuse of existing tools, fewer procurement exercises and enhanced innovation – all at a lower cost. 9. The Greening Government ICT Strategy - Delivering sustainable, more efficient ICT at a lower price. 10. Information Security and Assurance Strategy - Protecting data (citizen and business) from harm – whether accidental or malicious. 11. Professionalising IT-enabled change - Improving the capabilities, knowledge, skills and experience of those involved in ICT-enabled business change through the Government IT Profession. 12. Reliable project delivery - Using portfolio management and active benefits management to ensure that government undertakes the right projects in the right ways. 13. Supply management - Working together to gain maximum value from suppliers – both for individual organisations and collectively across the public sector. 14. International alignment and coordination - Ensuring that international treaties and directives reflect UK national requirements and that the UK remains at the forefront of delivery. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 17
  • 18. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3.1.6. Quality of Data Centres The Data Centre Strategy Report produced by the Strategic Supply Board for the Government CIO Council in September 2009 had a number of findings including: There is a major opportunity for government to make significant cost savings whilst delivering improved agility, flexibility, resilience, security and environmental sustainability. High level analysis suggests a reduction in ICT data centre infrastructure costs will deliver a net £900 million of cost savings over 5 years, with recurrent savings of more than £300m a year thereafter; There are significant variations within the current estate that are not justified by differences in business needs, which will be rationalised by the approach proposed in this Vision; Other organisations have successfully delivered major ICT consolidation programmes to create a dynamic ICT infrastructure and there is considerable experience to draw on; The challenges in consolidating ICT infrastructure are organisational and cultural rather than technical; and There is the potential for further cost saving and operational benefits by delivering a government private Cloud (G-Cloud) in addition to data centre consolidation. 3.2. Developments in the ICT Industry Recent developments in ICT have made it possible to consolidate ICT Infrastructure in a way that delivers increased flexibility and responsiveness to business needs whilst reducing costs. This change involves a move from ICT being provided individually by organisations procuring their own separate ICT infrastructure, to a new model in which ICT is provided as a utility which is known as “Cloud Computing”. Over the last few years consumer facing firms delivering products in large volumes have adopted Cloud computing. Cloud computing is most frequently cited as providing ICT “as a service” to customers using a utility model over a network. Cloud computing offers a commercial model of “pay as you use” thus avoiding the capital expenditure usually associated with provision of ICT. The flexibility provided by Cloud computing has enabled its rapid growth and a corresponding lowering of costs. Cloud services can be either infrastructure or application services. At the core of the Cloud computing model are 3 principles: simplification and standardisation of ICT infrastructure; automated processes to support activities such as change management and service reporting; and 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 18
  • 19. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 enabling of Software as a Service (SaaS) through standards and multi tenanting of services. Cloud application services are applications delivered as a service via a network to a browser front end. Cloud application services usually require the creation of a multitenant architecture where one application supports many firms or organisations, but provides a unique view for each. Cloud applications are often SaaS, but not all SaaS applications are cloud application services. SaaS applications delivered as single-tenant applications on dedicated infrastructures are not Cloud application services. Large corporate firms which have implemented Cloud computing report: ICT cost reductions of 40-65%; improved agility in implementing strategy with ICT support; and improved speed in implementing changes to support business needs. Public Cloud services are gaining in acceptance by corporate world and the Public Cloud providers are increasing their capacity and services. Amazon has 1000 staff involved in developing their Public Cloud offering. Early concerns of the market regarding the security and service levels offered by Public Clouds are being taken very seriously and improvements have been made in these areas with further improvements planned. However a number of firms have decided to setup a Cloud computing model in house, creating a private cloud for use only within their organisation. This provides a number of advantages: Cloud services can be tailored to the firm‟s requirements; security is under the control and monitoring of the organisation; and end to end service levels are easier to achieve. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 19
  • 20. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3.2.1. Will G-Cloud Deliver? The G-Cloud model can bring many beneficial changes to the delivery of ICT across the Public Sector but will it really deliver? In the section below how Cloud computing has the foundations and track record to succeed is described. 3.2.2. Will Cloud Computing Happen? What is the evidence that Cloud computing is becoming a standard ICT delivery model: Large ICT Services Suppliers have invested in the implementation of large global public clouds; The ICT industry itself is migrating to the use of clouds to deliver in house ICT services; and Private sector organisations are adopting Cloud computing to deliver ICT services. 3.2.3. Can the benefits be delivered? What is the evidence that the key elements of the G-Cloud – Cloud computing, Data Centre Consolidation and Software as a Service (SaaS) are capable of delivering the promised benefits: Bechtel have adopted a cloud computing model with a resulting saving of 60% on their ICT costs; In a data centre consolidation programme Hewlett-Packard have reduced the number of data centres globally from 85 to just 6; IBM have reduced their data centres globally from 155 to 7; and Telegraph Media Group has used SaaS to - make new functionality available without complex software upgrades - pay only for the computing power needed - lower total cost of ownership of ICT. However in order to gain the benefits of Cloud computing the Public Sector will need to adopt a new approach to ICT services. The existing approach of defining and procuring bespoke systems which meet the specific needs of a department will need to shift to an approach which makes use of standard or generic systems which are available at lower cost and adapts the processes of the department to use the system. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 20
  • 21. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 The commercial potential of cloud computing and cloud services is widely accepted, both in private industry and in the public sector. The opportunities for cost reduction and efficiency in the UK public sector are real and achievable, but require significant changes to procurement practices, delivery frameworks and across the supplier landscape. A pre-requisite for realisation of the commercial objectives are a set of UK Government technical & operational standards that can define the G-Cloud based on a (significant) number of competing infrastructural service providers operating at any appropriate security level. However Government has a significant legacy of applications which exhibit many pre-cloud symptoms, including low server utilisation and high operational costs. It must be understood that the cloud computing and cloud sourcing paradigms do not always directly lead to reduced costs - the real challenge will be to ensure that sufficient economy of scale and standardisation is reached quickly enough to deliver a net saving. 3.2.4. Does G-Cloud depend on leading edge technology? Does the G-Cloud depend on new and untried technologies which mean that the Public Sector must take on significant technology risks in its implementation? In fact the innovation of the G-Cloud model is in its approach to the governance and management of ICT in the Public Sector rather than the deployment of new technology. Cloud computing is based on significant amounts of existing technology. Specific aspects of the G-Cloud may require new technologies but this will not be the norm for the majority of the G-Cloud if a prudent approach to its design is implemented. Instead for G-Cloud to be successful Public Sector leadership will need to encourage existing ICT services to be re-used where possible avoiding bespoke solutions to common challenges across the Public Sector. The successful introduction and implementation of the G-Cloud is a leadership not a technology challenge. 3.2.5. Key Risks The programme must manage effectively a number of risks in order to deliver the G-Cloud benefits. These risks cover a number of key areas including: Commercial, Information Assurance, Technical Architecture, Organisation and Governance. The full list of key risks to delivery of the programme are listed in Appendix 5. However a number of key risks are highlighted in the following sections. 3.3.9.1 Commercial A Commercial approach will be implemented which manages the following risks: Current resource constrained environment prevents up front investment for G-Cloud becoming available; 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 21
  • 22. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Pricing and contractual framework for the G-Cloud is attractive to Public Sector but discourages suppliers from making services available on the G-Cloud; Business case may double count savings with other Public Sector programmes; Procurement regulations do not allow additional consumers after initial procurement of the service; and Take up of G-Cloud proceeds too slowly so benefits will not be significant enough to attract Public Sector organisations in future. 3.3.9.2 Information Assurance An Information Assurance approach will be implemented which manages the following risks: Aggregation of data in G-Cloud raising IL levels beyond 4 and preventing use of GCloud services by public bodies with lower IL infrastructure; and Common infrastructure and shared nature of G-Cloud cannot be assured by departmental SIRO model and so are not accredited. In addition the challenges of situational awareness on the G-Cloud will require approaches to be developed during the implementation of the G-Cloud. More details of the Information Assurance principles and approach to risks are provided in Section 5.3 and Appendix 6. 3.3.9.3 Technical Architecture A Technical Architecture for the G-Cloud will be developed which manages the risk that adoption of G-Cloud “locks” the Public Sector into a particular vendor‟s proprietary standards as industry standards for Cloud technologies are not currently agreed 3.3.9.4 Organisation and Governance An Organisation and Governance approach will be implemented which manages the following risks: G-Cloud is not taken up or deployed effectively across the Public Sector due to decentralised nature of ICT governance in the Public Sector; and Senior stakeholders may not support the implementation of the G-Cloud. 3.3.9.5 Public Sector Network The G-Cloud programme will have a number of dependencies on the Public Sector Network programme. Programme managements will work together to ensure that these dependencies are managed or mitigated in order that the G-Cloud is implemented as planned. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 22
  • 23. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3.3. Benefits The new world of the G-Cloud offering utility computing from consolidated data centres and encouraging re-use of ICT assets through the Government Applications Store will bring a comprehensive set of benefits across the Public Sector ICT landscape. 3.3.1. Budgetary Pressures The G-Cloud will deliver a fundamental contribution to the cost savings for OEP and will facilitate and accelerate the OEP targets. This will be achieved by: Data Centre Consolidation - Reduced hardware maintenance, server capital expenditure, and power consumption through more efficient and better utilised infrastructure. - Reduced up-front investment costs through standardisation and sharing of assets. - Reduced estate footprint through site sales/repurposing of accommodation. G-Cloud - Reduced capital investment in computer infrastructure through utility-based rental of computing and processing time. - Reduced server purchase costs through virtualisation of servers across departments leading to higher utilisation rates - Reduced data recovery costs through fewer dedicated DR facilities. Government Applications Store - Reduced application purchase prices through economies of scale. - Reduced licensing costs through licensing consolidation and reuse. - Reduced investment costs through SaaS pay for use model - 3.3.2. Reduced bespoke application development through reuse of existing components. Volume discounts achieved by purchasers apply to all public sector bodies already using the service Green Agenda The G-Cloud will lead to more efficient use of ICT by the Public Sector so lowering the carbon emissions associated with delivering ICT services: Consolidation of data centres will reduce footprint of building estate; 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 23
  • 24. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Virtualisation will drive higher server utilisation reducing server footprint; and Re-use of ICT assets will lower development and project resources used to implement new services and systems. The G-Cloud will also facilitate smarter ways of working through integration of government information and data sources, further reducing government‟s environmental impact and carbon footprint. 3.3.3. Digital Britain The G-Cloud will deliver greater agility and speed in the delivery of policy and services, underpinned by the adoption of shared infrastructure at lower cost. The agility will result from the ability to re-use existing assets and the new commercial model reducing procurement timescales and costs. The G-Cloud will through the Government Applications Store create a marketplace with a low cost of entry to new and small ICT suppliers encouraging the development of new UK ICT businesses and supporting the UK‟s position in the digital world. 3.3.4. ICT Procurement The commercial model of the G-Cloud will be based on pre agreed frameworks. This will remove the need for lengthy and costly procurements. This will reduce costs for both the Public Sector and Suppliers. In addition the Public Sector will be able to deliver ICT services faster in support of policy. Procurement law will apply to the G-Cloud, and all normal rules will need to be followed. It will be important to get this right at the outset. This is particularly the case given the arrival of the regulations implementing the Remedies Directive on 20 December 2009. This puts an increasing emphasis on the use of legally compliant procurement vehicles. 3.3.5. Current Initiatives The G-Cloud will complement and support the implementation of existing Public Sector programmes: PSN: the G-Cloud will offer PSN a route to market through the Government Applications Store. In addition the G-Cloud will use PSN services to connect users to G-Cloud services. Strategic Desktop: the G-Cloud will provide ICT services for the Strategic Desktop 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 24
  • 25. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 3.3.6. Quality of Data Centres Existing data centre space and infrastructure will be rationalised into a smaller set of secure physical data centres – these will host both the G-Cloud and existing legacy applications during the migration period. The outcome will be a significantly smaller footprint in highly virtualised shared data centres which meet government standards for resilience, security and sustainability at an overall lower cost. This will result not only in a reduction in the costs of data centres but also in the risks of disruption to delivery of ICT services to the Public Sector. 3.3.7. ICT Market The market for Cloud services, IaaS, PaaS and SaaS is expanding; the G-Cloud and Government Applications Store will offer the Public Sector the opportunity to access this market. The expansion of this market will provide the Public Sector with new services and greater competition will help to that these services will be cost efficient. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 25
  • 26. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 4. The New World of G-Cloud The G-Cloud, Government Applications Store and consolidation of existing public sector data centres are all components of the new model for delivery of public sector ICT services. The G-Cloud will provide a variety of infrastructure and application services for the public sector. The Government Applications Store will provide a “portal” to purchase G-Cloud services. The consolidation of existing data centres will provide both a modern and fit for purpose environment for the public sector ICT while at the same ensuring that excess data centre capacity is reduced to meet government cost saving and carbon emission reduction targets. These services will be offered both from a UK government specific cloud (G-Cloud) and from public clouds. Services from the public clouds will be used where the public cloud service offers appropriate levels of security, service levels and performance for public sector use. It is anticipated that the levels of security on the G-Cloud will support higher impact levels than on the public clouds. The vision is for G-Cloud services to be accessed via the Public Sector Network (PSN) from the strategic government desktop although in the short term other existing public sector networks and desktops may be used to access the G-Cloud. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 26
  • 27. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 4.1. G-Cloud G-Cloud: “bringing utility convenience to public sector ICT – shared, flexible, agile, transparent and efficient allocation of ICT when it’s needed, through sharing standardised resources to reduce costs” The G-Cloud is the delivery of Public Sector ICT by a shared secure “utility” style ICT services infrastructure, underpinned by a new commercial model enabling public bodies to have the option to pay only for the service at the time when they use it. This approach is now developing rapidly and is known as “Cloud Computing”. It is enabled by common standards, and by heavily automated secure business processes that enable substantial reductions in costs. “G-Cloud” is the Public Sector brand for the use of certified cloud computing. There will be 3 main categories of G-Cloud branded services:Software as a Service (SaaS) which includes managed services, common, utility and custom services, all of which can be configured for use by many Public Sector bodies; Platform as a Service (PaaS) will be will be used to provide a platform for creating new business applications based on shared re-usable components. The platform offered will be approved and overseen by the CTO Council; Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) will provide ICT infrastructure primarily computing resource and data storage. The G-Cloud will be a UK Public Sector implementation of “cloud computing” that will provide both secure, private cloud services and access to certified public cloud services, for example those provided by Amazon cloud services. These services will range from ICT infrastructure services through to application and information services and to ICT professional services such as service management. The G-Cloud will offer dedicated „private‟ services for public sector organisations, and trusted public cloud services. The range and sophistication of public cloud services is growing and more of the Public Sector‟s ICT needs will be met from public clouds as today‟s constraints are addressed over time. These constraints currently include:Information Assurance requirements e.g. data centres are outside the UK; End to end performance of services from public clouds may not be guaranteed; and Proprietary standards used by some public clouds create the risk of lock in. G-Cloud private cloud services will address these constraints, enabling earlier use of the shared utility model across the public sector. Private G-Cloud services will typically be provisioned by suppliers using an industry standard platform for example Microsoft Azure, VMware, or Eucalyptus - an Open Source platform that implements Amazon AWS standards. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 27
  • 28. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 The services offered by the G-Cloud will be defined in a Service Catalogue which any public sector organisation can use to purchase ICT services. Each service will be described in the Service Catalogue, its description will include details of the service, service levels offered, service reports provided, if relevant the increments of capacity offered, time periods or increments for which the service can be procured and the price of the service. Services provided by the G-Cloud will be up to security level IL4 only. In order to provide services in the G-Cloud a supplier will undergo a certification process for both their organisation and each of their services. This certification process will ensure that services meet the quality and information assurance requirements of the public sector and will provide consuming public bodies with the confidence that G-Cloud services are suitable for supporting provision of services to citizens. The information assurance certification will represent a partial accreditation, a residual element of accreditation which cannot be carried out centrally remaining with the consuming organisation. A public sector body will govern the certification process, overseeing and managing the approval of suppliers and their services. 4.1.1. Application and Information Services The G-Cloud will provide a variety of application and information services to the public sector. These services will vary from the purchase of software licenses to access to government stores of information where this is appropriate from a statutory and information assurance perspective. The focus will be on re-use of existing assets and use of commodity services. Existing common application services where possible will be offered so that public bodies do not need to develop or commission development of new application services. Application & Information Services - - - ERP Flex Desktop Gateway (Citizen and Business Authentication) Payment of Grants Government Banking Government Vetting - DVLA./IPS Verification Authentication Services Correspondence Handling Secure Data Handling (GCHQ) CIS (X) Procurement Strand and Crowd Sourcing 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 28
  • 29. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Applications available on the G-Cloud will vary from personal productivity tools through to complex departmental specific applications which are tightly integrated with their data. The services available for each class of application will vary. A large proportion of these applications will already be in use elsewhere in the public sector, so their provision to other public bodies via the G-Cloud will promote re-use of applications across government allowing the cost reduction for the public sector through both larger volume discounts and avoidance of new development costs. Applications will generally be provided as Software as a Service (SaaS), where the body using the application will pay using a pay for use model. Applications will be available on at least two different infrastructure platforms so that public sector bodies can transfer loads between infrastructure suppliers if required. The different classes of application are described below: 4.1.1.1. Personal Information Management These are personal productivity applications where data will be specific to the individual or body. Examples are Email, Calendaring and Contacts. 4.1.1.2. Interaction These are applications which support contact and interaction with others. Examples are Peer to Peer communications and Social Networking applications. 4.1.1.3. Collaboration and Simple Applications These are applications which either support collaborative working or provide support for common tasks. Examples are workflow and records management. 4.1.1.4. Resource and Management These are applications which support public sector staff in their daily duties. Examples are travel booking and expense claiming applications. 4.1.1.5. Departmental Applications These are applications with data specific to and useful to a department. Examples are computer based training or small departmental databases. 4.1.1.6. Data Services These are applications providing access to data. Examples are management reporting and access to geographic data. 4.1.1.7. Line of Business (LOB) These are applications which support the functioning of the public body; they will have data which is specific to that public body. They will require tuning for a particular department. Examples are a HR application or a CRM system. 4.1.1.8. Information Access These are applications provided by a department to other public bodies which give access to data held by the department. The data will generally be tightly coupled to an application. The 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 29
  • 30. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 G-Cloud will provide this service as a gateway using CTO Council endorsed G-Cloud services to connect the two public bodies. This service will only be permitted where statute allows the data to be shared with the requesting public body and information assurance requirements for the data are adequately supported across the G-Cloud. An example of this service is CISx from the DWP. 4.1.2. Infrastructure and Platform Services The G-Cloud will provide a variety of ICT infrastructure and platform services to the public sector. These services will be based on a layered architecture model, and are standardised to widen their applicability to multiple public sector consumers. IL Level Options Resilience Service Level Database Operating System CPU Processor Power Memory Capacity Disk, SAN or offline storage Environment (space, air conditioning & power only) A public body will be able to purchase services at multiple layers. For example on one occasion the body could purchase a server capacity service onto which the body loads its own operating system and database. On another occasion the body may choose to purchase a database service into which the supplier has packaged underlying operating system and server capacity. Data across the Public Sector continues to expand. A key infrastructure service offering will be storage services for data, such as SAN services. This offering will enable public bodies to access and store their data cost effectively in resilient, secure storage, with the ability to expand or contract the capacity without major capital investment in their ICT infrastructure. There is an opportunity for greater development of services for Data Management, Storage and Security separately from services provided for applications processing. This Data Capability can become a long-term asset in that applications can be chosen accordingly to meet a given organisations current business priorities. The G-Cloud will provide data services for storage and management of: Operational data; 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 30
  • 31. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Management Information data for analysis and reporting; and Archive data for storage. Database services are becoming common in cloud computing, so in addition database services will be offered as part of G-Cloud, providing structured storage of data. This service will enable public bodies to access and use data to support new business services. The GCloud will implement standards that will enable wider, but secure and legislatively permitted shared access to data resources with other Public Sector bodies where there is a policy decision to do so. More detail on G-Cloud data services are provided in Section 4.1.3 Data in the G-Cloud. In order to ensure that services in the G-Cloud are available from multiple suppliers the services available will conform to open and industry standards for ICT components. The capacity of services will be measured using industry standard units. Services will be defined so that varying levels of resilience, service levels and support allow consumers to purchase services to host business services of varying priority to the public body involved. In addition this differentiation will allow the purchase of services with high levels of resilience and superior service levels for production systems while more cost effective services with lower service levels are available for development and test services. Specific specifications of services for purposes such as Disaster Recovery will also be available. 4.1.3. Data Services on the G-Cloud Data is one of the key assets of the Public Sector. As it develops, the G-Cloud will become the repository of a significant portion of Public Sector data. Data also persists beyond an application, with migration between applications being required as the application stack changes. Cloud providers are addressing the new challenges and opportunities management of data in a cloud environment offers: Microsoft has implemented cloud-based data platforms which seek to provide a database service which meets the needs of primarily network based application access; Cisco are offering SAN consolidation services and security approaches for multiple organisation use of SANs; Amazon offers database services including tools which are scalable to meet the needs of cloud services; and Other suppliers are developing data and database services for the cloud. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 31
  • 32. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 The continuing expansion of data is a key challenge for Public Sector ICT. The G-Cloud will provide access to a cost effective, secure and resilient data storage capacity which can be expanded or contracted rapidly in accordance with business needs of the Public Sector. In addition the G-Cloud can provide database services which will allow access to structured data which can be used to support new business services. The Public Sector will draw on G-Cloud data services for storage and management of: Operational data; Management Information data for analysis and reporting; and Archive data for storage. The management of this data by the G-Cloud will encompass its complete lifecycle including: creation or migration onto the G-Cloud; monitoring of growth including provision of additional storage capacity as needed protection through appropriate resilience and security; migration to cost effective storage facilities as full operational use ceases; and archival or secure destruction at end of life. The G-Cloud will offer data services which enable wider, but secure and legislatively permitted access to this resource across the Public Sector. The development of data standards for the G-Cloud will support widening of access and ease of data transfer at contract termination for public bodies. Data is currently often tightly coupled with a business application within a public body‟s ICT estate. However as data usually persists beyond the life of the application, transition from a legacy application to a new or enhanced application can involve an expensive and time consuming activity of data transfer including data structure changes to fit with the new application‟s requirements. The definition of data standards for G-Cloud which recognise data persistence has the potential to reduce the amount of effort to migrate data. In addition the G-Cloud offers the potential to make existing data assets more widely available across the Public Sector. Capitalising on this potential will require the G-Cloud to define data standards and a data strategy. A Data Strategy will be developed in Phase 3 of the programme. The G-Cloud will offer data services which are compliant with the security and the legislative constraints that data held in the Public Sector must operate under. The Public Sector is already adopting standards to make Public Sector data more available in line with the objectives of bodies such as the National Archives and with the launch of data.gov.uk. G-Cloud data strategy and standards will be aligned with the existing public sector work. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 32
  • 33. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 However data obtained by the Public Sector must only be used in the manner allowed and specified by the associated legislation, the strategy for data and the operational controls of the G-Cloud will ensure that data is not accessed or shared in violation of this principle. This will require the storage of data in separated infrastructure storage areas. The G-Cloud will data tools to permit the wider sharing of appropriate data in a controlled manner. 4.1.4. Professional ICT Services A number of professional services will be provided to support the delivery of G-Cloud components and to aggregate services from components available on the G-Cloud. 4.1.4.1. Service Management Services Both suppliers and larger public bodies will offer service management services on the GCloud. This service will manage the overall delivery of services from the G-Cloud so that an integrated and consistent operational service is provided. These services will include the service management of operational services such as change management, incident management and service reporting. The service management will be based on a common industry accepted framework such as ITIL. This will enable suppliers of service components to use a standard method for interaction with the service integrator and public sector consumers. These services will be of particular value to smaller public bodies with limited ICT expertise available in their organisation. 4.1.4.2. System Integration Services These services will provide public bodies with services which will integrate G-Cloud components into coherent services which can be consumed by a public sector body. 4.1.5. Exclusions from G-Cloud Scope The G-Cloud will provide a wide range of ICT and business services across all of the Public Sector. These services will be made available over time in line with the G-Cloud roadmap. The initial G-Cloud services will therefore be limited in range and coverage across Public Sector compared to the end Vision for G-Cloud. However even in the final Vision the scope of G-Cloud and Government Applications Store does not include: Services which are not ICT services or business services not supported primarily by ICT systems, for example - Facilities management; - Catering services; - Stationary procurement; 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 33
  • 34. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Development of services which are already provided by other strategic Government projects such as PSN or common desktop, although these services may be purchased through the Government Applications Store; IL5 IL5 and above are not provided in the G-Cloud, although such services may be co-located in the data centres from which G-Cloud services are provided. However only those elements of an application which are at IL 5 and above are excluded from G-Cloud, lower security rated components of the application can be hosted within the G-Cloud; Legacy services of limited life or applicability which would not justify cost of migration to G-Cloud; Making G-Cloud services available to the private sector, eg commercial firms except for the creation of composite services for resale to the Public Sector, for example providing infrastructure services to a software house so that it can provide a complete application service to a set of public bodies; and Making G-Cloud services available to foreign governments. There are no exclusions to the Data Centre Consolidation at this stage, However as detailed design and planning continues it may be necessary to exclude overseas locations due to reliance on network capacity and information assurance considerations. 4.2. Government Applications Store Government Applications Store: “enabling faster, more cost-effective and more consistent certified ICT enabled solutions to business challenges through reusing and sharing applications and services” The Government Applications Store is the Public Sector ICT marketplace to readily source, share and promote Managed Services, Utility Services and Common Services. It will include Infrastructure components and services aswell as application and business solutions. Only where existing services cannot meet a public body‟s requirements will Custom Services to create a new service be available. The services available will include private G-Cloud services, certified public cloud and other ICT Services (eg COTS); and other public sector ICT services such as PSN services. Services available through the Government Applications Store will be certified to demonstrate their compliance to Public Sector standards and requirements. The commercial framework of the Government Application Store will allow purchasers to buy certified services from an on-line catalogue under a cross public sector framework contract. The scope, service levels, security accreditation and price of the services will be available for review and comparison by potential purchasers. Services will be paid for on a per use or subscription basis. The latest price achieved for the service will be shown to purchasers, however if subsequently a lower price for this service is achieved by another organisation then this will be made available to all subscribers of the service - from the point at which the new lower price is achieved. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 34
  • 35. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Home About Managed Service Utility Services Common Services Custom Services FAQs Contact us UK Govt Applications Store What do you want to do? Type in query Search Featured Apps Featured Apps Featured Apps Please choose your required service below Managed Services Utility Services Featured Apps Common Services Custom Services The Government Applications Store will provide a portal for public bodies purchasing services from the G-Cloud. Open Source software and services will be available in the Government Applications Store encouraging cost effective services to be provided in this market. While the Government Applications Store will have a centrally managed „master catalogue‟, there will be the capability to configure views of the catalogue for specific communities, for example to enable focus on services most relevant to a particular type of organisation, or to „gray out‟ services which are not funded by the user‟s organisation. There will also be the ability to support „Communities of Interest‟, encouraging public sector organisations and individuals to innovate by creating/configuring and then sharing locally generated applications. „Closed loop‟ feedback will provide visibility of what‟s working, enabling future trial and purchasing decisions to be informed by others‟ experiences. Certification of a service will include review and approval of its information assurance, service management and commercial elements. In order to avoid “lock in” to a particular infrastructure provider there will be a choice of at least two infrastructure providers for each application. In principle purchasers will be able to transfer their chosen application service to another infrastructure provider if required at some future point, although this may involve some data migration activity. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 35
  • 36. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Following selection of the application and infrastructure provider, the purchased service will be provisioned through an automated process in the public body‟s infrastructure and data context. The Government Applications Store will continually be updated with new services. It will be an open marketplace encouraging new suppliers to join the existing community of ICT suppliers to the public sector. In order to support new suppliers joining a prototyping facility will be available on the Government Applications Store. The prototyping facility will allow a supplier to offer free for a period a new service without complete certification. If this service is taken up by public bodies the supplier will be able to subsequently “upgrade” the service to certified and chargeable. This will provide an agile way for new and smaller suppliers to trial new services and join the Government Applications Store. Services that add new value will be welcomed into the portfolio provided they meet the minimum assurance requirements – the approach will be „light touch‟ and will emphasise validating service outcomes rather than auditing the detailed implementation approach. The Government Applications Store will also list requests for new services from public bodies. Suppliers and other public bodies will be able to review these requests and decide whether they wish to provide the suggested service. If new services are created in response to the requests they will be required to undergo certification before being made available on the Application Store. The public sector body will be responsible for identifying in advance: which services users in the body can purchase; which users are allowed to purchase services; and which disallowed services can be seen by users. So that if necessary a user can raise a request/justification for a currently unapproved for purchase service to be made available for purchase within their public body. The Government Applications Store will be designed so that potential purchasers of services are directed to existing managed services, then common and utility services only if these sources do not yield a satisfactory option will the purchaser be able to commission a custom solution, which must meet G-Cloud certification standards. This approach will encourage reuse of existing services, thereby reducing cost for the public sector by preventing unnecessary development of new applications and maximising volume discounts with existing Suppliers. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 36
  • 37. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 4.3. Data Centre Consolidation Data Centre Consolidation: “delivering public sector ICT services from the optimum number of high performing, energy-efficient, cost-effective and standards-based data centres” Existing data centre space and infrastructure will be rationalised into a smaller set of secure physical data centres – these will host both the G-Cloud and existing legacy applications during the migration period. The outcome will be a significantly smaller footprint in highly virtualised shared data centres which meet government standards for resilience, security and sustainability at an overall lower cost. Consolidation can commence through inviting suppliers that currently operate multiple data centres for the public sector to consolidate to two each, with the savings achievable through estate and virtualisation rebated to their public sector clients. As existing contracts expire, replacement G-Cloud services can then be sourced from the Government Applications Store where available;- where not contract renewal can be used to drive provision of additional GCloud services as the preferred choice. During the transition period some unique residual needs will need to be sourced via a conventional procurement exercise. All services delivered from existing facilities will be analysed to identify those which may be discontinued, combined, re-engineered or replaced in order to improve service delivery efficiency and lower the risk exposure on delivery of public sector ICT services. Consolidation will focus on removing data centres with significant issues: Lack of resilience; Security concerns; Lack of capacity (space or power); and Situated in areas of risk eg sited on a floodplain so at risk of flooding. Consolidation will include implementing the Phase 1 recommendation that a set of mandatory minimum standards for data centre security and resilience across government are produced and that the consolidated data centres adhere to these standards. Substandard data centres will be addressed either by improvement of the facility or transition of its load to a more appropriate facility. Adoption of a transition approach will only be carried out where transition costs do not outweigh benefits of the transition. The data centre consolidation will provide a set of modern, resilient, secure data centres. The data centres will be a mix of private and government owned but will be managed to meet requirements across government and provide services to the G-Cloud. They will make services available to government and application providers on a fair and flexible basis. This approach which fosters competition will be underpinned by appropriate technical and commercial arrangements. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 37
  • 38. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 A set of the data centres will remain outside the G-Cloud to provide specific non commodity type services that the G-Cloud is not designed to provide. An example of these services would be where a public body requires services at IL 5 or IL 6 security level. It is intended that Data Centre Consolidation will be progressed through three parallel projects which will; Consolidate Public Sector owned Data Centres Consolidate Private Sector owned or operated Data Centres Procure new services from the market both for infrastructure and Data Centre facility services A standard benchmark (e.g. Rack as a Service) will be established to enable the comparison of the cost and quality of facilities from the various sourcing routes. 4.4. Organisation and Governance in the world of G-Cloud The G-Cloud involves substantial change from today‟s ICT delivery model; - public sector CIO teams will shift from managing the whole ICT lifecycle, to the selection and integration of relevant services. Retained ICT organisations will be able to increase focus on business engagement and achieving value adding outcomes as less effort will be needed on infrastructure management. Technical standards for the G-Cloud will be controlled by the CTO Council through the cross government Enterprise Architecture (xGEA). A regulator/authority will be responsible for: Maintenance of standards applicable to services including security Certification of suppliers and supplier services The delivery of services on the G-Cloud will conform to a comprehensive service management framework based on ITIL. This framework will cover the management of processes such as: Change Management Incident Management Service Reporting Larger government departments may interact directly with suppliers on the G-Cloud, however for many public sector bodies a Service Manager will provide a service management service which ensures that the body has an integrated set of services from the G-Cloud and that delivery of these services is managed. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 38
  • 39. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 Department C Department B Department A Service Management Service Management Service Catalogue Regulatory or Authority Body responsible for Standards and Certification G- Cloud Application Services Infrastructure Services Professional Services The options for organisation and governance in the G-Cloud are being developed by the GCloud Phase 2 programme. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 39
  • 40. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 4.5. Roadmap The implementation of the Data Centre Consolidation, G-Cloud and Government Applications Store will cover a period of 5 or more years, but an objective of the roadmap will be that the achievement of benefits will commence early. The approach to building the GCloud will be to build blocks of ICT services to support Public Sector digital capabilities and then roll these out through the G-Cloud across the Public Sector. The identification of and prioritisation of services to be built will be based on the requirements of Public Sector bodies and communities. For example if secure email facilities is identified by a group of Local Authorities as a service they require urgently then this would be an early service made available on the G-Cloud. The roadmap for specific services and their sequencing on the G-Cloud will be a deliverable of Phase 3 of the programme. However in the remainder of this section the approach to developing this roadmap is described and a potential roadmap is outlined. Where appropriate the approach taken to implementation will be to identify public bodies with existing plans to procure or implement a service suitable for inclusion on the G-Cloud, this public body will then lead on the procurement of the service for the G-Cloud ensuring that the procured or developed service meets the security, technical and contractual certification requirements of the G-Cloud. The new service will then be available to all public bodies for sharing and re-use via the Government Applications Store. This approach will minimise the need to fund central development and procurement of services, in addition it will ensure that each new service already has a committed market providing confidence to private sector suppliers that participation in the procurement is worthwhile and will result in genuine new business. Risk management of the G-Cloud will also dictate the sequencing with which new services are introduced. In the early stages – years 1 and 2 of the programme, private cloud, lower criticality services with moderate service level and security requirements will be added. Example services could include existing services such as Government Gateway or DCSF collaborative working. As confidence in the G-Cloud brand grows and the Government Applications Store becomes a dynamic and vibrant market place, services which are critical to Public Sector delivery and have higher service level and security requirements will be incorporated into the G-Cloud. Public cloud services will also be enabled at this time. Early candidates for inclusion on the G-Cloud will include the „Champion Assets‟ endorsed by the Government CIO Council‟s. Subject to funding approval, the programme will be initiated in Spring 2010 to startup the delivery of Data Centre consolidation, G-Cloud and Government Applications Store. However, once the operational management and regulatory functions of the G-Cloud become mature, the programme will transfer further development of the G-Cloud to these bodies and itself be wound down. The programme will be responsible for those aspects of the G-Cloud implementation will require central control for example the procurement of the Government Applications Store. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 40
  • 41. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 The programme will manage the organisational and cultural activities required to transition public bodies to use of the G-Cloud. The G-Cloud will require a cultural change in the ICT departments of public bodies. In the G-Cloud identification of business needs and matching re-usable assets rather than procurement and management of custom solutions will be critical to cost effective delivery of ICT. An approach to equipping the ICT department with the structure and skills to successfully move to this G-Cloud way of working will be provided by the programme to participating public bodies. While the definitive approach to implementation of the G-Cloud will be delivered in Phase 3, a potential approach is outlined in the succeeding paragraphs: A planned engagement programme across public bodies will identify the „early adopter‟ public bodies for creation and re-use of G-Cloud services. A small group of early adopters across Central and Local Government in year 1 will pioneer use of the G-Cloud. The GCloud will be extended to larger groups of public bodies in further years, with existing adopters expanding the percentage of services they draw from the G-Cloud over time. In order for the G-Cloud to deliver its benefits it must become a trusted brand. This will be enabled by the risk managed approach to delivery of the G-Cloud but could also be supported by the publicising of G-Cloud successes for example an annual G-Cloud Award could be initiated. Potential milestones in year 1 include: Setup of management function for G-Cloud including regulator Procurement of Government Applications Store Initiate a consolidation programme for Public Sector owned Data Centres Initiate a consolidation programme for Private Sector owned or operated Data Centres Procurement of new infrastructure and Data Centre facility services for ICT services Implementation of some G-Cloud services by at least two central government departments Implementation of private G-Cloud services for a local authority Key achievements in year 2- 3 Front line “innovation culture” established First G-Cloud Awards ceremony held Launch of public cloud services Early adopters will now have 40% of relevant ICT services from G-Cloud Consolidation and closure of more data centres across Public Sector and suppliers G-Cloud becomes self funding Early adopters have 70% of relevant ICT services from G-Cloud During succeeding years, the G-Cloud could continue to expand by: Completion of data centre consolidation Adoption of G-Cloud across remaining public bodies Public Sector retained ICT departments complete transition to new model 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 41
  • 42. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 During this period the G-Cloud becomes a trusted and reliable brand for Public Sector ICT services. Suppliers will use the G-Cloud as the primary route to market for providing ICT services to Public Sector. Digital services of high criticality to citizens and Public Sector will become established on the G-Cloud, re-use of digital assets will be the predominant model in Public Sector ICT. The approach to delivery of ICT services in Public Sector will be based on an established culture of sharing assets. 4.6. Transition The approach to transition to the Vision of the G-Cloud must meet a number of requirements: Transition must take place in a manner which ensures that public sector services are not disrupted; Individual G-Cloud services are made available as soon as suitably available and certified rather than when all planned services are ready so that the resulting savings can begin quickly; Public bodies moving to the G-Cloud must not incur unnecessary costs by terminating existing contracts early; and The public sector must have the skills and governance in place to purchase and manage services provided by the G-Cloud. These requirements mean that the transition to the Vision will take place in a phased manner. Phasing of the transition will affect both the implementation of the G-Cloud itself and its adoption by individual public bodies. Services will be introduced to the G-Cloud by suppliers over time. The initial Service Catalogue for the G-Cloud will reflect those services which are technologically feasible to provide over the G-Cloud today, as suppliers and public sector understanding of the potential of G-Cloud develops both parties will make new services available. In addition the types of services available will evolve with technology, as new technologies appear the potential services and their economic feasibility for provision through the G-Cloud will change leading to new services continually being added to G-Cloud. This approach to implementation of the G-Cloud will ensure that its initial use is not delayed while large numbers of services are developed for deployment in a “big bang” launch. An individual public body will adopt the G-Cloud in a phased manner also. This will allow the public body to purchase services from the G-Cloud as existing ICT contracts for those types of ICT services terminate. This means that the public body will not need to terminate contracts early and incur termination charges unnecessarily. Another advantage of this phased approach is that it avoids the risk of a “big bang” implementation of G-Cloud at a public body where potentially all its services are at risk of failure at go live. It also allows the public sector to develop the skills required for managing G-Cloud services over time. 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 42
  • 43. Data Centre Strategy, G-Cloud & Government Applications Store Programme Phase 2 A detailed approach to Transition is being prepared as part of the G-Cloud Phase 2 programme. 5. Principles The Vision has been developed based on a number of principles which cover Commercial, Technical, Operational and Transition aspects of the G-Cloud. The principles govern the extent, outcomes and structure of the Vision. 5.1. Commercial Principles The commercial principles will support the creation of a commercial framework to support a transition to cloud computing and cloud sourcing enabling sustained lower costs, improved agility and better service. Ease of Change: Creating a marketplace where purchasers can switch easily between providers at the end of contracts and establish the principle of contract migration and make provision for it by: - limiting the term of contracts - Minimise termination clauses - Open standards for connecting - Allow the market to determine the best approach to term contracts - Transition (see later) Comparable Pricing: Pricing should reflect total cost of service and be priced on a utility model by a measurable unit (transaction, user, month, capacity). Pricing should incorporate and make visible all additional service charges, or costs of change. The ultimate aim is for no term contracts. Different business models may exist for different parts of the stack (IaaS, PaaS, SaaS) and for different IL levels Ease of Transaction: To minimise the transaction cost for purchase of service through the cloud. Transacting should be standardised, simple, and low cost for both parties by: - Frameworks should be designed for categories of service to incorporate simplified legal requirements - Single standardised version of Ts & Cs would be optimal incorporating legal concepts determined by the framework 01 FINAL G-Cloud Vision v0 35.doc5 UNCLASSIFIED 43