• Thursday, May 02, 2024
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How Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation saved me from a difficult situation, Yemi-Esan

How Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation saved me from a difficult situation, Yemi-Esan

The Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs Folashade Yemi-Esan, has spoken of how the Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation saved her from unexpected difficulties associated with the passage of her budget by the National Assembly when she was appointed to the position in 2019. At a public event recently in Abuja, Mrs Yemi-Esan observed that, without the intervention of the foundation, she would have had a very difficult first year in office. “We have been able to do a lot in the last four years, but it was not easy initially,” she said in a sombre tone to a packed audience of Nigerians and foreigners.

She said, “I became Head of Service in 2019, just before the budget process closed, and so I went to the National Assembly to get our budget approved. But while waiting for our budget to be passed, Mr Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede came to see me in the office to congratulate me on my appointment. He briefed me on his foundation and its initial contacts with the office and the teething problems it had encountered, and he noted that the foundation was desirous of moving forward on the partnership. He then proposed to give technical assistance to the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation (OHCSF) and support the digitalisation of the office. “I just want to make a difference in the work you do’’, Yemi-Esan recalled Aig-Imoukhuede telling her in that meeting.

The Head of Service and her team and the foundation thereafter signed an MOU to digitalize the work of the OHCSF, and this involved the foundation providing the resources, funding, technical assistance, and the vendor to digitalize the operations and activities in the OHCSF. “I told Aigboje, ‘We don’t need your money. Don’t give us money. Just ensure that you implement the programme to the letter”, Yemi-Esan recalled. The foundation placed advertisements in the newspapers, selected vendors, and paid for the software, and thus began a complex and difficult process that sought to replace manual and paper-based operations with automation of the processes that enable civil servants to work online from any part of the world without dealing with physical files.

“So, with the support from the foundation, we were able to continue our work in spite of the difficulties we experienced in getting our budget approved. The foundation saved us from a very difficult situation’’, she said, adding that the digitisation programme has succeeded far beyond expectations and that the technical support from the foundation is huge. “Everybody around me has been touched, and the mentorship is superb. As busy as Aigboje is, he makes time to meet with us regularly’’, she recalled.

The foundation believes that only an automated public service manned by well-trained professionals can deliver development in Nigeria. Its MOU with the OHCSF therefore contains shared responsibility for reforming the civil service, with the digitalisation programme at its core. To achieve this, the foundation plays multiple roles, including providing funding, project planning and management, vendor management and capacity building, project quality assurance, and stakeholder management, while the OHCSF makes its staff available to participate in training and project implementation and provides devices, internet, and power to enhance digitalisation. A steering committee of both organisations is responsible for oversight and monitoring. It meets regularly to review progress and deal with hiccups.

An integral component of the programme is focused on changing the mindsets of civil servants to accept automation as a new way of life, and this entails advocacy, change management, project management, stakeholder categorisation, and management. The overall objective is to make the civil service more efficient and resilient to deliver quality service. As in many projects, there have been many hurdles, and these include a lack of standard operating procedures, insufficient devices, poor funding, a high level of digital illiteracy, poor internet connectivity, poor power supply, the absence of guidelines on the use of personal IT devices, a lack of official email addresses, and a poor email use culture for those who had them. But both parties have been determined to scale them up as they arise.

So far, the outcome has been outstanding. The digitalization programme has positively impacted the work of the 1,100 civil servants in the OHCSF, and in addition, it has impacted the work of the MDAs, who can no longer take physical files to the OHCSF but have to mail them electronically. Gushes Raymond Uwaenyi, Director, Human Resources Management at the OHCSF, ‘’The automation by the Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation has made my work faster and easier. It makes filing and references to materials in files far easier than they’ve ever been. I can easily track any file wherever it has gone; you’ll be able to follow up to know if there are any challenges right where you are sitting.’’ Uwaenyi recalled that even when he travelled out of the country recently, he was able to keep working “because the materials and information I need are always on the ECM (the enterprise content management system).’’

The multiplier effects are palpable across the bureaucracy. Chioma Njoku, the foundation’s director of programs, “Civil servants in the OHCSF and across other MDAs have had to learn to document their standard operating procedures, learn to use Microsoft software, get more comfortable with technology, and learn to use the ECM solution platform.’’

Last June, President Bola Tinubu sent a thank-you letter to the foundation for its contributions, but as Mrs. Ofovwe Aig-Imoukhuede, its executive vice chairman, says, the work is not yet done. She chimes, “Our long-term goal is improved efficiency in the civil service, both at the federal and subnational levels. We want to see Nigeria and Africa where automation drives governance, the public sector works efficiently and effectively, is responsive to changes, and the public is called upon to serve.’’ So far, the foundation has spent over N500 million on the digitalisation programme.