In December 2019 it was revealed that some of the computer systems being used
by the public sector were so old and out of date that replacement parts were
having to be bought on eBay.
Some of the Island’s top civil servants told the JEP at the time that some of the IT software and hardware being used was woefully out of date, needing huge investment to be updated.
Now the government has announced it has appointed Keytree, which is part of Deloitte, to lead the delivery of a new programme of work aimed at modernising systems.
To deliver the programme Keytree will team up with Sysdoc, an independent transformation consultancy that specialises in large scale business transformation, and local company Web Administration Resource Management (WARM).
The deal is worth £19.3m over four years to Keytree and £4.9m to SAP, which will provide the new technology solution.
Full story in tomorrow’s JEP.







