govt
Thousands of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are now signed up to provide their digital, data and technology services to government, and public bodies are utilising their expertise to drive the UKs digital transformation.
And this quarters newly published sales data shows that were having an impact, with sales reaching 3.2 billion, with 48% of this being spent on SMEs. This means that 1.43 out of every 3 is going to SMEs.
The latest figures arrive not long after the 3rd birthday of the Digital Marketplace - created in 2014 by Crown Commercial Service (CCS) and Government Digital Service (GDS) to make government procurement easier and more transparent.
The platform hosts CCS frameworks including G-Cloud, Digital Outcomes and Specialists and Crown Hosting Data Centres.
Niall Quinn, Director, Technology Strategic Category for CCS says:
In the three years since Digital Marketplace was launched, we have overhauled the public sector procurement landscape, harnessing the expertise of innovative companies and giving thousands of SMEs the opportunity to supply to government for the first time. Were now planning the next steps of our journey, making the platform and processes more commercial, more flexible and better tailored to the needs of users - both buyers and suppliers.
Warren Smith, Director, Digital Marketplace says:
Weve started to bring the tools, techniques, technologies and culture of the internet to public procurement and contracting. What weve achieved so far is testament to an amazing team and the importance of user-centred, design-led, data-driven and open approaches, but weve only scratched the surface. The next 3 years, to 2020, will see a step-change where these approaches are mainstreamed across government.
In 2016/17 frameworks available through the Digital Marketplace contributed towards CCS delivering 725 million in savings including commercial benefits for taxpayers.
The Digital Marketplace website recorded over 1 million visits in 2017, compared to the same