cBrain is advancing our business in France and we have employed Benoit Thieulin as our new regional manager, to engage with French public sector in their digital transformation progress.
Digital technologies increasingly place new demands and expectations on the public sector. Realizing the full potential of these technologies is a key challenge for governmental organizations. Effective e-government can provide a wide variety of benefits including more efficiency and savings for both governments and businesses. It can also increase transparency and openness.
The Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) monitors Europe’s overall digital performance and tracks the progress of EU countries in their digital competitiveness. In their 2020 edition, France ranks 15th out of 28 EU Member States, scoring better, based on data prior to the pandemic and compared to the previous year. France further improved significantly in the integration of digital technology dimension. France further performs well in the Digital Public Services dimension, gaining one position, thanks to the high number of e-government users and showing progress in the provision of digital public services for business.
These improvements are good news for France, and at cBrain we see this progress as a great opportunity to support French public sector and government in their digital transformation efforts.
Based on Danish public-private partnership and extensive research cBrain has developed a fundamentally new approach to government digitization based on formalized methods and standards. Digitizing all types of work processes and services, from internal to citizen-facing, it is based on executable process libraries and a new combined process-driven and data-centric software architecture designed for digital bureaucracy.
To learn more about cBrain´s role in the Danish public-private partnership and our approach to government digitization, please contact our French team.
cBrain is registered on UGAP framework agreement for the purchase of software-as-a-service. Learn more here.