The service must be usable by everyone who needs to use it, regardless of their circumstances or abilities. No one should be less able to use the service than anyone else.
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An effective communicator and business analyst with an inquisitive mind, strong analytical, problem-solving, and decision-making skills
Services in the internet age are not only defined by the user who’s looking for them but composed of ‘small pieces loosely joined’
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Similar ideas to Principle 11. A good service is usable by everyone, equally
A service should direct all users to a clear outcome, regardless of whether the user is eligible or suitable to use the service. No user should be left behind or stranded within a service without knowing how to continue.
Crucially, though, changes to expected ways of working in your service require a critical mass to be usable by all users. The bigger the shift from the norm, the more ubiquitous this will need to be for users to become familiar enough to be able to or want to use your changed service.
The service should encourage safe, productive behaviours from users and staff that are mutually beneficial. For users, the service should not set a precedent for behaviours that may put the user at harm in other circumstances – for example, providing data without knowing its use. For staff, this ...
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