As the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) swept across Europe in March 2020, entrepreneurs had to close their businesses overnight. They needed financial help quickly to survive.
In response, the Government of Flanders implemented the Corona Hinderpremie program, which includes a €4,000 contribution to each business impacted by COVID-19. The Flanders Agency for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, known as VLAIO, needed to distribute the funds to the businesses as rapidly as possible. The agency worked with DXC Technology to roll out a new web application in less than 2 weeks to help Flemish entrepreneurs.
“I feel less and less like a customer and more like a real partner of DXC.”
Mark Andries VLAIO Administrator-General
Mark Andries, VLAIO administrator-general, says the DXC application development team performed exceptionally well under pressure. He and other VLAIO employees met with DXC at 7:30 p.m. daily to track the status of the project. “I feel less and less like a customer and more like a real partner of DXC,” Andries says. “I feel strongly about that. This happened almost entirely as a co-creation. Given the circumstances, this was the only way.”
“The application had to be very fast. It had to be simple and easy to access for small businesses and — above all — the applicants had to see the money quickly in their account.”
Mark Andries VLAIO Administrator-General
The need for speed
On Friday, March 13, the day that the Flemish government enacted Corona Hinderpremie, VLAIO turned to DXC for help. As a long-time partner, DXC understood the government’s needs and could support Flanders under the existing framework contract.
“We would have looked for other ways if DXC hadn’t convinced us that they could handle this,” Andries emphasises. “The application had to be very fast. It had to be simple and easy to access for small businesses and — above all — the applicants had to see the money quickly in their account.”
Normally, the development of new applications takes several months. In this situation, it was done in 10 days.
Reusable web applications support automated system
The long relationship between the Government of Flanders and DXC helped ensure the project’s success. Previously, DXC had built the highly successful MAGDA platform, which enables Flemish citizens to enter their data only once to access all public services. The platform consolidated millions of transactions for 200 government entities, saving citizens €97 million in administrative costs and improving security.
DXC had also developed a web application for an earlier Hinderpremie government program to give bonuses to entrepreneurial businesses that had to close due to unexpected events, such as road closings by the public works department.
DXC used these existing applications as reusable building blocks to create a highly automated system that would process the flood of applications with minimal manual work.
“There was no way we could look at them all individually,” Andries explains.
DXC built the cloud-native application to run in the AWS cloud, with the ability to rapidly scale to meet demand. The new system includes application monitoring by DXC partner Dynatrace and network management by Proximus.
Responding to delivery pressure
Rarely had VLAIO been under such enormous pressure to deliver a new service. For many entrepreneurs, especially self-employed owners of small businesses with no financial buffers, contending with the crisis was a matter of survival.
The biggest risk was system overload due to the anticipated high demand. To prevent this problem, a queuing mechanism was implemented to control the flow to the application. At peak times, up to 1,000 users simultaneously accessed the system.
Applicants also were given the opportunity to register in advance through the VLAIO website. Initially, about 80,000 entrepreneurs a day were given access to the application before the launch. The moment of truth came on Friday, March 27, when the application went online for all. It worked: VLAIO processed 50,000 applications in the first 4 days.
“It was a great moment when lots of appreciation came in from customers,” Andries says. “Minister Hilde Crevits for Economy and Innovation has praised the agency on several occasions.”
An additional advantage of VLAIO is its ability to serve new clients. VLAIO was well known to startups and companies focused on innovation, but less well known in industries such as retail and hospitality. These entrepreneurs will likely continue to make use of the agency’s services in the future.
“It was a great moment when lots of appreciation came in from customers.”
Mark Andries VLAIO Administrator-General
Monitoring system load and customer satisfaction
For the first time, VLAIO was able to use robotic process automation (RPA) to help employees process files more quickly. RPA automated a number of manual tasks associated with handling files that required additional verifications. Once again, it meant time savings. VLAIO also gained efficiencies by automating the submission of files for entrepreneurs who were entitled to Hinderpremie payments but were previously unable to submit applications digitally.
The agency can now gauge the satisfaction level of its customers with each request through a central Dynatrace dashboard. The dashboard enables VLAIO to continuously monitor the stability of the high-load system and usage of the system across Flanders, as well as the efficiency of submitting applications into the system. No surveys needed to be completed: Based on indicators, Dynatrace automatically estimated a satisfaction rating of 95 percent.
“The coronavirus crisis is, of course, terrible for the personal lives of citizens and for the economy, but the way in which we have been able to respond was evaluated positively.”
Mark Andries VLAIO Administrator-General
The next challenge related to the coronavirus crisis will be compensating companies that have suffered large-scale losses. VLAIO will once again partner with DXC to deliver a solution that will quickly support the affected companies.
“The coronavirus crisis is, of course, terrible for the personal lives of citizens and for the economy, but the way in which we have been able to respond was evaluated positively,” Andries adds.