Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

HMCTS

Digital Reform Programme

Summary

From 2017 to 2018, I worked via PWC on the HMCTS Digital Reform Programme. This was a part of the £1bn budget set out by the MoJ aimed at modernising the justice system.

"HMCTS is responsible for the administration of criminal, civil and family courts and tribunals in England and Wales – and non-devolved tribunals in Scotland and Northern Ireland. We handle about four million cases a year, operate from around 350 courthouses and hearing centres and employ more than 16,000 people, most of whom are frontline, operational staff"

Team

  • x2 Gov User Researchers
  • Gov Project Manager
  • Gov SME / Project owner
  • Lead UX / Researcher (Me)
  • PwC Senior Manager
  • PwC Manager
  • x2 PwC Senior Associates

What we did

There were multiple teams and workstreams across the reform programme. We ran 3-week lab sprints on each of these workstreams. We were tasked to find insights and build current and future journeys along with prototypes to test new solutions.

Prototype on an iPad
Relationship Diagram

Understand

The team ran user interviews, surveys and focus groups on building a solid foundation of empathy for the users of the legal system, from judges and legal professionals to witnesses, litigants and vulnerable victims of crime.

Our team then created insight packs, service blueprints, empathy maps and personas. We also designed and ran workshops with different people from the service.

Personas
Personas

Workshop HMW
HMW & Service Blueprint


Explore

Outputs from the workshops helped us improve our insight packs, blueprints and empathy maps. After synthesizing the data, we started to explore solutions and create testable hypotheses and validation experiments.

Pre-hearing - All parties can easily navigate the building and access information relating to their hearing.

"Giving all parties access to up to date information, appropriate meeting, working and waiting facilities will enable effective preparation and reduce the burden on court staff."

Features

  • Support and respect
  • Effective navigation
  • Appropriate space and facilities
  • Up-to-date hearing start times

Measurements

  • Qualitative feedback
  • Updates of digital information
  • Average hearing duration

Sketches in a notebook
Solution Sketch of Self Check-in

Materialise

Once we had our validation experiments ready, we went to the courts and tested them out with previous customers of the court system.
We set up a self-check-in app just after security to automate the check-in process. Customers could also find out information about the hearing, see estimated waiting times, access a map of the building facilities and see the status of other hearings.

Ticket Check-in
Ticket style check-in card

Prototype on an iPad
Self-check-in prototype

We set up new signage to help customers navigate. We also set up an announcement board in the waiting room that provided estimated time and current status of each case, courtroom numbers, time and name of the Judge.

GOV.UK jury summons
Background photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

Conclusion

Some of the prototypes have been taken forward and are now live and a part of the customer services. Send me a message if you would like to learn more.

Feedback

Steven MacLellan
Steven MacLellan
Senior Manager at PwC
"I've worked with That Product Studio on a few different things covering product strategy through to delivery and I can't speak highly enough of the team. They are all, dedicated, boundlessly creative and experts at what they do.

This bunch are a pleasure to work with - you feel supported and trust that they have your back and there are always plenty of opportunities to have a laugh along the way."