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ESeva Project Report PDF
ESeva Project Report PDF
GROUP 1 PARTICIPANTS
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ACKNOLWEDGEMENTS
We wish to express our sincere gratitude to T A Pai Management Institute, Manipal, EGPX Faculty
board for providing us an opportunity to do our study tour project work on eSeva Urban : A field
Analysis in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh.
This project bears the imprint of many dedicated people. We tender our sincere thanks to National
Institute of Smart Governance (NISG) for guidance, encouragement and facilitation in carrying out
this project work. We also wish to express our gratitude to the officials Mr Veerraju Naidu, NISG and
Mr Yedukundalu, Deputy Director, eSeva Urban and other eSeva staff members who rendered their
help during the period of our project work.
Place: Manipal
Date: 28th April, 2011
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The concept of shared serviced was initiated in 1998 when the Andhra Pradesh (AP) Government
zeroed in on Mr J Satyanarayana, then AP's commissioner, Commercial Tax Department to
spearhead the effort of creating a 'single window' for citizens' jobs. Here people can access different
government services provided by independent departments. Mr Satyanarayana assembled a team to
put the framework in place.
The aim was to identify a model that provides large volumes of routine services to people, identify
departments that provided services to citizens and bring them together. The team studied every
department since electricity, water, property tax, transport, telephone and land registration had
unique billing process. They did brainstorming sessions for six months and then narrowed in on a
framework. It allowed for multiple interfaces across the counters that offer large volumes of routine
services to citizens.
An on-ground study was conducted by Group-1 EGPX 2010-11 during study tour to assess the
current status of service delivery through eSeva. During the study, the study group conducted a
series of interviews with citizens, operators of eSeva, Deputy Director eSeva-urban and the Centre
Managers of Miyapur and Chandha Nagar eSeva Centres. The study found that almost all the
citizens are happy with the utility bill payment services provided by eSeva but are not satisfied with
the municipal services, passport services and EPIC card services. The study aims to analyse the
competition and future business prospects of eSeva and suggest recommendations to improve the
service delivery. The scope of study is only limited to eSeva- urban and specially the interviews are
conducted in thee centres namely Khairatabad, Miyapur and Chandha Nagar centres of Hyderabad.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................................... 5
OBJECTIVES OF THE PROJECT - e-SEVA ................................................................................................... 5
OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY ................................................................................................................. 6
SCOPE OF THE STUDY.............................................................................................................................. 6
METHODOLOGY ...................................................................................................................................... 7
FIELD OBSERVATIONS ......................................................................................................................... 8
FINDINGS ............................................................................................................................................. 9
ANALYSIS ............................................................................................................................................... 10
WORKFLOW OF e-SEVA..................................................................................................................... 10
TECHNOLOGY .................................................................................................................................... 11
STATISTICS......................................................................................................................................... 12
GROWTH OF e-Seva ...................................................................................................................... 17
EXPANSION PROBLEM AND ISSUES .............................................................................................. 17
ENHANCING REACH ...................................................................................................................... 18
GRIEVANCE REDRESSAL MECHANISM .......................................................................................... 18
CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS ............................................................................................................. 19
SWOT ANALYSIS ................................................................................................................................ 19
POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS ............................................................................................................... 20
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS................................................................................................................. 21
LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY ................................................................................................................. 22
CONCLUSION ......................................................................................................................................... 22
REFERENCES .......................................................................................................................................... 23
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INTRODUCTION
The project eSeva was started as a pilot in the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad, and was
thus called TWINS (Twin Cities Integrated Network Systems). It was started at a cost of Rs 10 million,
fully funded by the Government of Andhra Pradesh. The project provides services such as
registration of birth and death certificates, registration of vehicles and learners driving licenses.
After a successful pilot, 10 centres were started on 25 August 2001 and then the project was
renamed as e-Seva (Electronic Service in Hindi). On 10 October 2001, a portal http://www.esevaonline.com - was launched.
The Project is a tool to bridge the digital divide and has used Information and Communications
Technology (ICT) for providing access to various government services. The Project uses the opportunities
that the ICT offers in empowering the citizens. It offers a wide range of services from the issuance of
various certificates to getting information about various programmes and also networking citizens and
allowing them the flexibility and convenience of mutually beneficial transactions. It also allows access to
hitherto marginalised communities and helps in bridging the existing information gaps. It is, therefore, a
step towards digital unite. It provides the citizens with a clean, transparent, efficient, effective and
hassle-free administrative system through state-of-art electronic technology. It is a one-stop-shop for a
range of citizen-friendly systems.
e-Seva is probably one of the best examples of e-Government project in India. The eSeva center is a
one-stop-shop for more than 150* Government-to-Citizens (G2C) and Business-to-Citizen (B2C) services
including payment of utility bills; getting birth and death certificates, vehicle permits, driving licenses;
transport department services etc. Before the launch of the eSeva project, these services were available
at separate offices and were normally time-consuming for citizens. Citizens had to approach each and
every department and processing was slow.
The project breaks down obsolete structures and the "silo" thinking that has long characterized the
way government operates (departments working independently to meet their own goals instead of
together to co-ordinate customer interfaces and services). e-Seva is an integrated approach to deliver
G2C and Business-to-Citizens through the use of ICT .The watchwords of this e-Governance project are
efficiency, reliability, transparency and scalability which are possible through GPR and change
management. The uniqueness of eSeva has also been acknowledged by the World Bank and has cited
eSeva as one of the best eGovernance practices in the Government World.
*SOURCE: e-Seva Material from Mr.Yedukundalu, Deputy Director e-Seva Urban
Providing one-stop services to the citizens through a chain of Integrated Citizen Service
Centres.
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All the counters in all the service centres should provide all the services offered by eSeva.
The citizen can walk into any service center and experience the same quality of service.
Citizens should not be required to travel more than a kilometre to reach the eSeva center
nearest their home.
The architecture adopted should be scalable and secure.
The service time should be below 3 minutes per transaction and the total time spent by a
citizen including the time spent on waiting for ones turn should be less than 10 minutes.
All the services should be available at the centres for 12 hours a day and selected services,
24 hours over the Internet.
Citizens should not stand in queues.
The services that do not involve an inspection or attestation should be offered over the
Internet also, so that citizens can avail them from home or office.
The cost of transacting with government should be reduced.
The business model should be such that the operations are sustainable over long period.
The need for the citizens to go to government offices should be minimized over a period of
time.
ANALYSIS
To study the growth of e-Seva from its inception in 2001 in urban and semi-urban areas till
2011 which can be observed from the following
Number of Transactions
Number of Service Centers
Number of Services and
Number of Participating Departments
II.
SUCCESS FACTORS
To determine the major factors of success of e-Seva
III.
MANPOWER ISSUES
To study the challenges for the retention of employees in the e-Seva centers
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IV.
ECONOMICAL ASPECTS
To study the expansion problems and issues
To study the financial viable model of operations and maintenance
V.
SERVICE DELIVERY
To determine the quality of Service provided to the citizens using
Citizen Satisfaction
Employee/Staff behaviour
Ambience
Basic amenities and facilities
Service delivery time
Grievance Redressal
VI.
BUSINESS PROSPECTS
To explore the new opportunities for enhancing reach of e-Seva
METHODOLOGY
The proposed study is to ascertain the extent to which the intended outcomes of the project
e-Seva have been achieved that includes the qualitative, quantitative and factual analysis.
Qualitative Analysis
I.
II.
III.
e-Seva Website
e-Seva brochure and Material
Case study
Reference Articles
AP Online
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FIELD OBSERVATIONS
The observations that the team made while doing the study are:
FAVORABLE
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UNFAVORABLE
FINDINGS
1)
2)
3)
4)
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ANALYSIS
WORKFLOW OF e-SEVA
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Storing the cancelled transaction details and transaction code in the database at the ESEVA
data center along with a text explanation for cancellation
In case of Cheque Bounce, provision for reverse entry in Data base of eSeva and department
server. Provision to prepare refund claim statement for claiming refund from department.
Locking Customer account for payment through cheque till account is unlocked under orders
of EDS. Warning display to counter operator of such accounts whenever such customer visits
eSeva, to help recovery of amount.
*** - e-Seva RFP Volume 1 dated June 23, 2007 from Internet
TECHNOLOGY
Clients at first-tier
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Centres) is chosen in tune with the Line Departmental compatibility and latest technologies available
in the market. Quickly adopting to emerging technologies and modifying the existing applications in
tune with the departmental and service requirements is being done regularly.
e-Seva Data Center works a HUB where in participating departments and all e-Seva Centres are
connected facilitating any centre, any counter any service approach with 64 kbps Leased lines of
Tele-operator BSNL. It is upgraded to the size based on the volume of transactions and % of
utilization. Connectivity is now at the size of 256 kbps. As the service requires high availability and
quick restoration from connectivity break down. It is further upgraded to 256 kbps MLLN
connectivity.
STATISTICS
eSeva
GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH
Monthly Transactions Chart for the Year: 2011 for ALL CENTRES
No Of Trans: 4864711
1451220
1434679
1261228
T
717584
R
A
N
S
JAN
FEB
MAR
MONTHS
APR
Monthly Transactions Chart for the Year: 2010 for ALL CENTRES
No Of Trans: 16277034
1314125
1256888 1312126
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
1483188
1315789 1330588
AUG
SEP
1301012
OCT
137286
9
NOV
DEC
MONTHS
Monthly Transactions Chart for the Year: 2009 for ALL CENTRES
No of Trans: 13587914
123779 123010
118411
9
2
9
106336
9
134469
4
130745
121263 123652
4
115521 111709
6
7
6
9
72613 77276
0
9
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
MONTHS
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC
Monthly Transactions Chart for the Year: 2008 for ALL CENTRES
No of Trans: 13706756
121415
121265 116729
120407
118641
114981 111288
112919
112016 116155
109651
5
9
8
2
5
3
4
3
9
6
5
95202
7
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC
MONTHS
Monthly Transactions Chart for the Year: 2007 for ALL CENTRES
No Of Trans: 14012859
JAN
FEB
MAR
126599
124527
121506
115331
5
113257 113103
112321 112668
0
110515
1
4
6
4
1
4
8
APR
MAY
MONTHS
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC
NO. OF TRANSACTIONS
2007
14012859
2008
13706756
2009
13587914
2010
16277034
2011
4864711**
** The figures in 2011 only includes the transactions for the months of Jan, Feb, March and till 18th
of April 2011
Transactions
18000000
16000000
13706756
16277034
14012859
14000000
12000000
13587914
10000000
8000000
Transactions
6000000
4864711**
4000000
2000000
0
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
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To book time slot for learners license and driving license and pay fee.
To issue fresh and renewal of trade license certificates of GHMC area.
To collect bills of private telephone operators such as TATA DOCOMO.
To collect licensing and renewal fee of Legal Metrology Department.
DEPARTMENT
BSNL
HMWSS
RTA
TRANSCO
NO. OF TRANSACTIONS
54263
120083
149179
887470
NET AMOUNT
42344849.00
74144537.94
1223487656.00
773026595.00
AMOUNT COLLECTED
OTHERS 8%
TRANSCO 31%
POLICE 1%
TTL 2%
GHMC 3%
BSNL 2%
HMWSS 3%
OTHERS
ESEVA
POLICE
TTL
GHMC
BSNL
HMWSS
RTA
TRANSCO
RTA 50%
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From the above Doughnut chart, it can be observed that the amount collected for RTA department
followed by TRANSCO (Electricity Bill) is high. The quarterly payments of vehicle tax are paid in the
months of March and April and the 50% contribution of the RTA department revenue is an indication
of this fact. Though sound conclusions cant be drawn with one month data, just an observation can
be made. This fact has been confirmed by the Centre Manager of Chandha Nagar e-Seva Centre,
Hyderabad.
GROWTH OF e-Seva
MEASUREMENT
Number of Transactions
Number of Service Centers
VALUE
50 per day to 1,40,000 per day
2 centers to 265 centers across the state (65 in
Twin Cities and Ranga Reddy District)
Number of Services
3 services to 150 + services
Number of participating Departments
3 departments to 30 departments
SOURCE e-Seva Material provided by Mr.Yedukundalu
The growth is due to several factors like the following:
Increasing awareness among the citizens of the convenience of using eSeva services.
Increase in the number of services offered.
Increase in the number of centers.
Shutting down of manual centers by the participating departments as the coverage of eSeva
increased.
Effective management of eSeva leading to a very high level of customer satisfaction.
I.
There is a need to create required monitoring base. There is need to establish more centres in
TWIN cities and districts. Presently services reach only 20% of the population looking for
convenient service.
Expansion demands investment in infrastructure such as Land, Buildings and Technical
Infrastructure at centres such as Computer systems and associated equipment, Man power for
operations and maintenance and monitoring force. There are currently 265 e-Seva Centres in
the state. The plan is to set up more number of centres (311 e-Seva centres) and which is on
hold now due to the above mentioned issues.
II.
Fixed transaction charges wage revision and escalation in market price of maintenance
investments in protection from obsolescence effects Quality of Service.
Presently, Contract Service Provider (CSP) selected through an open bidding process manages
operations in e-Seva Centres for a contract period (5 years) and is responsible for following
activities at his own cost.
a) Payment of wages to operators
b) Maintenance of all equipment
c) Development of software for all new services and enhancements to the existing services
including development required for new service channels, payment methods,
modifications forced by technology changes etc.
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CSP is paid per transaction in accordance with the contract. It is Rs.2.10 to Rs.5.00 for utility bill
payments and Rs.10 for certificate services. This quoted price stands fixed for entire contract period
but the wage revision, cost of maintenance, cost of protection from obsolescence increases and
affects the financial viability.
There is need to derive some financially viable model of operations and maintenance.
ENHANCING REACH
In order to combat the investment risks, financial viability and yet to reach the desired citizen in
offering services, Franchisee model with recently emerged technologies such as mobile devices can
be considered.
The transaction model would be
As the investment is very low and service can be offered in mobile center mode, by plugging the
operational risks if any, service can be made to reach all the desired citizens.
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Political will is must for such a large scale project to be successful. And that political and
bureaucratic support has been available for e-Seva since the conceptualization stage.
2) Citizen-driven
Citizens have trust and support in the system and the increasing demand for addition of
services indicates that e-Seva is a Citizen-driven system.
The 3-tier architecture permits adding more government agencies in tier 1 and more
service centres in tier 3 without having to disturb the existing infrastructure, as the
activity levels increase. New services can be added at the data center seamlessly and
effortlessly and make them available at all the counters of all the service centres
overnight. This scalable architecture has been the strength of eSeva.
The integration of federal, provincial and local services and their delivery through a
single counter has not been attempted anywhere and this is achieved through Public
Private Partnership marrying the strengths of public and private domains.
5) Project Components allocation between Public and Private and Procurement method (BOOT)
GOAP provided the basic infrastructure like land, buildings and furniture and the other
components are provided by the private partner.
Services can be availed on holidays except on Republic Day, Gandhi Jayanthi and
Independence Day. Bill payments can be made over the Internet.
DISTRICTS
9 am to 7 pm on weekdays
9 am to 3 pm on Sundays and holidays
SWOT ANALYSIS
STRENGTHS
WEAKNESSES
No helpdesk service
Inadequate manpower
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OPPORTUNITIES
Expansion of e-Seva Centres
Reach of Services
Addition of new services like Insurance Premium
Payment (LIC), bank loan application forms, loan repayments, scholarship application forms, application
form for white card for availing Aarogyasri Scheme,
Online Bus Ticket Booking
More delivery channels like mobile devices
THREATS
Growing competition AP Online, CSC,
Departmental website
Resistance of departmental staff to do process
reforms
Plans of AP TRANSCO to collect electricity bills
payment at the citizens doorstep
Cyber Crime
POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS
Payment Mode Telebanking
Payment can be made in modes such as Cash, Cheque, Demand Draft, Credit Card,
debit Card and Net Banking. It is suggested that Telebanking mode can also be
added as another mode of payment.
Door-to-Door Service
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The observation made earlier was that there is long waiting period for passport and
EPIC services. When asked about this, Mr. Yedukundalu commented
In case of Passport and Voter ID card service, eSeva has taken limited responsibility.
Applicants were compelled to stand in the queue at passport office right from this
evening for tomorrow's token to submit application tomorrow under TATKAL or
General. It has additional work of scrutiny of documents, entry, photo capture etc.
and successfully avoided middlemen in the process.
With reference to Voter card - Citizen has to come with Voter ID number. In the
absence, it takes time to search. In addition there is a work of printing, cutting,
affixing Hologram, affixing ERO facsimile, Lamination etc. When all these operations
are to be done across the counter, it takes some time. Under the old methods, citizen
is not sure of getting the card. No method to ensure delivery and it used to take few
months also.
It is great facility to citizen and introduced first time in the country.
KEY RECOMMENDATIONS
BUSINESS PROSPECTS
Mobile e-Seva can be introduced wherein a van with all processing equipment moves across
the city to collect payments at timings convenient to citizens for inclusiveness. Presently
services are reached to only 20% and still there is a gap of 80% population looking for
convenient service.
SERVICE DELIVERY
Announcement of token number and counters apart from the digital display will help the
aged people and the illiterate citizens not to miss their turns and wait consequently.
Citizens find difficult in filling up the forms and a Helpdesk service can be provided for the
same which will result in time saving for both the citizen and the counter operator.
It was observed in the Khairatabad center that it is located in the first floor and physically
challenged might find it difficult to climb up. Facility such as ramp can be provided or centers
can be located in the ground floor as in the case of other centers.
Basic amenities and facilities such as drinking water and public convenience need to be
provided for the benefit of citizens.
The revenue is collected to the tune of Rs. 20 22 crores per day across all the centers.
There is need for Trained Security Personnel at all these e-Seva centers.
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QUALITY OF SERVICE
Process reforms in all the concerned departments will help e-Seva to better serve the
citizens especially in the case of municipal services where there is passive support from the
concerned department.
Bar-coded identification of utility bills will help save time for the counter operators and
benefit the citizens.
There is a need for the government side to effective monitor the activities of private partner
such as the maintenance of infrastructure.
Wage revision and incentives for the employees of SPANCO will help in the betterment of
quality of service offered to citizens.
MANPOWER ISSUES
Improve coordination within the levels of the private organization SPANCO to solve the
issues.
Study covered only 3 centers - 2 Urban (Khairatabad, Chandha Nagar) and 1 semi-urban
(Miyapur) Centers
Our sample size is too small to arrive at conclusions and only inferences can be drawn
No Reports available to study the increase in revenue and increase in the consumer base of
e-Seva Centers for the years 2007-2011
Out of the 53 e-Seva Urban and Semi-Urban Centers in the TWIN CITIES, interview could be
conducted only with 25 citizens in the 3 Centers in Hyderabad.
Pay Mode wise Transaction Summary Report for the year 2011 has data available only till
18th April, 2011. Only partial conclusions can be drawn with the data available for the years
2007 2011 about the trends in the number of transactions.
CONCLUSION
The success of e-Seva depends on the financial viability, expansion of new centres, enhancing the
reach and adoption of emerging technologies. The e-Seva like projects can be merged with the
Common Service Centres (CSC) similar to the merging of the Community Information Centres (CIC) in
the North-East with the CSCs. The study strongly recommends the merger of AP Online and CSC
with e-Seva and e-Seva should be the face of the CSC in the state of Andhra Pradesh. This will make
e-Seva self-sustainable in the long run.
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REFERENCES
A. e-Seva Official website - http://esevaonline.com
B. Internet article - http://www.mit.gov.in/content/common-services-centrescsc
C. AP Online Website - List of Services provided
https://secure.aponline.gov.in/CitizenPortal/userinterface/citizen/ListOfServices.aspx
D. AP Online Website List of Franchise Centres
http://www.aponline.gov.in/MapsAPOnline/APOnlineCentersNew.aspx
E. e-Seva Brochure and Material (Courtesy: Mr.Yedukundalu)
F. Various Media articles on Internet
G. Reports provided by e-Seva Deputy Director Urban
H. Google Search Engine
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