Building Innovation Platforms Across Government
What a Healthy Digital Ecosystem Looks Like and Why It Matters
Digital transformation in central government has evolved beyond isolated projects and siloed technology upgrades. Today, real progress depends on something far more strategic: innovation platforms built across government.
For departments navigating complex reform agendas, tightening budgets, and rising citizen expectations, innovation cannot happen in isolation. It must be enabled by ecosystems, structured, collaborative environments where public bodies, SMEs, large suppliers, academia, and civil society co-create solutions.
This article explores what a healthy digital innovation ecosystem looks like in the UK public sector and why it is critical to delivering the ambitions set out in the Government Digital Service standards and the Digital, Data and Technology Playbook.
Why Government Needs Innovation Platforms — Not Just Projects
Traditional procurement models were built around defined requirements and fixed outputs. But modern digital public services operate in complex, fast-changing environments. Citizen needs evolve. Technology advances rapidly. Policy shifts.
Innovation platforms offer a different approach:
- Shared infrastructure rather than duplicated systems
- Open standards and APIs that enable interoperability
- Modular services that can be reused across departments
- Collaborative delivery models that integrate SMEs and specialists
- Continuous user feedback loops, grounded in UCD
In short, platforms move government from transactional supplier relationships to dynamic partnerships.
What Does a Healthy Public Sector Innovation Ecosystem Look Like?
A thriving ecosystem has five defining characteristics:
1. User-Centred by Design
User-Centred Design (UCD) is not a phase, it’s a continuous capability. Platforms are built around real user needs, tested iteratively, and informed by behavioural insights.
2. SME-Enabled and Market-Diverse
SMEs are often the source of:
- Niche technical expertise
- Agile delivery capability
- Rapid experimentation
- Emerging technology adoption
A platform approach lowers barriers for SMEs by:
- Creating interoperable technical environments
- Standardising security and compliance frameworks
- Enabling smaller, outcome-focused contracts
The Digital, Data and Technology Playbook explicitly promotes early market engagement and SME participation, not as a policy preference, but as a strategic enabler of innovation. A diverse supplier base increases resilience, avoids vendor lock-in, and fosters healthy competition.
3. Anchored in DDaT Capability
Innovation platforms are only as strong as the Digital, Data and Technology (DDaT) workforce behind them.
This includes:
- Product managers who prioritise outcomes
- Service designers who align policy and delivery
- Data scientists who generate insight
- Engineers who build secure, scalable systems
- Delivery managers who enable agile governance
The UK’s DDaT profession, guided by frameworks from the Government Digital Service, provides the structural backbone that allows innovation to move from idea to impact.
Without sustained investment in DDaT skills, ecosystems stagnate.
4. Built on Open Collaboration and Standards
Platforms thrive on:
- Shared code repositories
- Common data standards
- API-first architecture
- Cross-department knowledge sharing
Open collaboration accelerates reuse. Reuse reduces cost. Reduced cost increases capacity for further innovation.
Government has already demonstrated the power of platform thinking with services such as GOV.UK Pay and Notify, proving that common components can unlock transformation at scale.
5. Strategically Aligned to Central Government Priorities
Innovation must align with broader transformation strategies:
- Legacy system modernisation
- Cyber resilience
- AI adoption and data ethics
- Cloud-first infrastructure
- Sustainability and green IT
Innovation platforms help departments deliver against these priorities coherently rather than in fragmented silos
The Role of Ecosystem Partnerships
Ecosystems require deliberate orchestration. This is where specialist partners play a crucial role, not simply as suppliers, but as:
- Connectors between departments and SMEs
- Capability builders within DDaT teams
- Strategic advisors interpreting government playbooks
- Delivery partners embedding UCD and agile methods
The most effective partnerships operate on three levels:
Strategic
Focus: Aligning to transformation strategy
Outcome: Sustainable change
Operational
Focus: Delivering projects through multidisciplinary teams
Outcome: Quality and pace
Cultural
Focus: Embedding collaboration and continuous learning
Outcome: Long-term resilience
Moving from Procurement to Partnership
Central government is steadily shifting from transactional procurement toward relationship-based models. Frameworks encourage:
- Early market engagement
- Co-creation workshops
- Outcome-based specifications
- Flexible contracting
But mindset change is just as important as structural reform. True innovation platforms emerge when departments:
- Share risk appropriately
- Reward experimentation
- Encourage cross-organisational learning
- View SMEs as capability multipliers
The Strategic Advantage of Platform Thinking
For public sector leaders, building innovation ecosystems delivers:
- Faster service improvement cycles
- Reduced duplication across departments
- Increased supplier diversity
- Stronger digital resilience
- Better user outcomes
For SMEs, it creates a fairer and more accessible market. For citizens, it results in services that are simpler, faster, and genuinely designed around their needs.
Final Thought: Innovation Is an Ecosystem, Not an Event
Digital transformation in government is not a single programme. It is an ongoing evolution of capability, culture, and collaboration.
Innovation platforms provide the infrastructure.
Ecosystem partnerships provide the energy.
DDaT professionals provide the expertise.
User-Centred Design provides the compass.
When these elements align, government doesn’t just digitise services, it builds a sustainable, adaptive public sector fit for the future.
How can Hanover help?
At Hanover, our on-the-ground DDaT experts working with Public Sector identify optimisation and innovation opportunities feeding back valuable insights to end-clients. Find out more about our services.



















