U.S. Public Sector Sharpens Focus on Modernizing Work

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AI plays growing role as agencies adopt new technologies for hybrid work, collaboration, constituent services, ISG Provider Lens? report says

STAMFORD, Conn., October 21, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Public-sector organizations in the U.S. continue to explore and adopt new workplace technologies as part of broad digital transformations to meet new operational requirements, according to a new research report published today by Information Services Group (ISG) (Nasdaq: III), a leading global technology research and advisory firm.

The 2024 ISG Provider Lens? Future of Work Services report for the U.S. Public Sector finds that state, local and educational (SLED) agencies are now better equipped to carry out rapid workplace changes after navigating the chaos triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. However, many are still investigating the new capabilities they will need to meet the changing expectations of employees and constituents.

"Emerging technologies are reshaping collaboration and workplace management in U.S. public agencies," said Nathan Frey, partner at ISG. "Moving away from legacy systems is crucial to fulfilling their missions, but it requires careful preparation and often outside assistance."

SLED organizations are facing the need to support increasingly remote and hybrid workforces while giving constituents more ways to reach agencies and receive services, ISG says. Due to the nature of their services, many agencies’ workplaces have effectively expanded to include their constituents. Modern tools must be integrated into IT estates that in many cases are still dominated by decades-old systems. Impending deadlines for federal funding offered in the wake of the pandemic make these efforts more urgent.

Agencies are exploring or implementing a wide range of services and technologies to prepare for new and future requirements, the report says. These include workflow automation to streamline routine tasks, advanced data analytics to improve decision-making, and unified communication and collaboration (UCaaS) platforms to help employees work together regardless of location. Cybersecurity needs to be integrated across all systems for user authentication, threat prevention and data protection.

AI is becoming an important tool for building out these capabilities, ISG says. Organizations are tapping AI-enabled tools for secure collaboration, risk analysis and mitigation and personalized constituent services. Generative AI (GenAI) may accelerate modernization through copilots, voice assistants and private large language models (LLMs) that automate workflows to resolve issues more quickly. However, public agencies may need to comply with strict regulations on GenAI covering data privacy and other issues.