"It's encouraging to see these high-scoring government websites taking the lead in sectors that are still relatively immature from an Internet development perspective," said Dr. Claes Fornell, Director of the National Quality Research Center at the University of Michigan and founder of the ACSI. "Health care and benefits administration are two key sectors where delivering higher levels of customer satisfaction online can help temper upward pressure on costs by attracting consumers to the cost-effective web channel for information and customer support."
ACSI satisfaction scores are based on a 100-point scale and are calculated through a sophisticated formula based on surveys of site users that measure the impact of increasing customer satisfaction on future consumer behavior, such as likelihood to return to the website and recommend it to others.
"E-Government has been making incremental improvements on a consistent basis, and over time these incremental improvements continue to add up," said Larry Freed, president and CEO of ForeSee Results and author of the report. "Online government is nearly keeping pace with the private sector, but government is doing it with much more limited resources. Measuring customer satisfaction is the first step in identifying where improvements are needed, but some government sites may not have sufficient budget to make changes that will result in customer satisfaction increases."
The Social Security Administration (SSA) broke into the e-Government top ten with the addition of three new sites to the Index. The sites -- SSA's Help With Medicare Prescription Drug Costs, Internet Social Security Benefits Application, and Social Security Business Services Online-- each do a good job of meeting the specific needs of its user base. This is very good news for the senior population, who are an important audience for the SSA. According to The Media Audit, seniors make up the fastest growing demographic on the Internet.
The SSA's overall strategy of measuring specific sites targeted at distinct audience groups has proven successful. The agency runs multiple ACSI surveys, both at the high level portal site and on targeted sub-sites and on-line applications including the sites that have scored so highly in the latest Index.
Also this quarter, the ACSI E-Government Index introduced a new metric, likelihood to use the website as a primary resource. This metric of future behavior shows how likely users are to consider the e-government site as their primary resource for information compared to other ways they would obtain the information. Depending on the type of site, the competition could be another channel offered by the same agency (e.g. contacting the IRS via telephone) or an alternate resource (e.g. receiving medical information from your doctor or WebMD, even though the same information may be available on MedlinePlus).
The Primary Resource metric offers government agencies another measure to gauge success of their web sites in terms that impact the agencies' bottom line. As citizens turn to government web sites as their first choice to find what they need, it decreases the demand for call center and in-person interaction with the agencies.
Participation in the ACSI E-Government Index grew 16 percent this quarter for a total of 81 sites.
"Participation in the ACSI e-Government Index keeps growing, and that's good news for citizens and for government," said Anne Kelly, CEO of the Federal Consulting Group. "Citizens benefit from improved service reflected in rising satisfaction scores, and federal agencies offer citizens a convenient and cost-effective channel to provide feedback to agencies, which can improve efficiency and their cost structure."
Quelle: Public CIO, 20.09.2005
