UserCentriCities has delivered the planned outputs on time. In addition to the project meetings and high-level summits, a series of monthly meetings have been held. Website and communication activities are up and running and all outputs have been successfully taken over by bigger networks fostering municipal digitalisation ensuring the project legacy. As first step, the project published the baseline survey, a thorough assessment of existing approaches in measuring user-centricity. Later, the project published the gap analysis that identified a total of eighteen specific needs that should be considered in the development of indicators. At the same time, a comprehensive adoption of the Tallinn Declaration principles to the needs of local and regional administrations was published based on a broad co-creation process with regions and cities. Building on this basis, a set of 63 indicators (refined, after two iterations, to 41 in the final version) to measure user-centricity was developed through a co-creation process. Additionally, the UserCentriCities Toolkit and Services Repository were successfully launched and provide a solid basis for best examples in Europe. The project convened five peer-to-peer learning workshop on tools to design, develop, deliver and evaluate user-centric digital services. To move the issue of user-centricity higher in the political agenda, the project convened three annual UserCentriCities Summits (2021, 2022, 2023) to discuss the way a renewed focus on users could help deliver better public services – and to share real-world experience with advanced public administrations, with a high-level VIP participation. It also published three policy briefs focusing on specific applications of user-centricity: the first one addressed the state of the art in local municipalities in Europe, the second focused on the delivery of proactive services and the third showcased best examples of interoperability applied in the public sector. The project has its own website:
https://www.usercentricities.eu/(odnośnik otworzy się w nowym oknie) and published +40 articles and interviews with local leaders and experts. The project also created a visual identity and set up a LinkedIn group and Youtube channel. UserCentriCities also forged synergies with EU institutions, projects, networks and private companies. The project established a weekly meeting among WP leaders; convened four progress meetings with all partners; set up mailing lists for smoother internal communication, video conferencing tools and an internal documents repository. A decentralised management structure, with clear responsibilities was established and described in detail in the Project’s Handbook. The partners also established a quality management plan and made sure it was applied to all project deliverables as well as a risk management process that defined the risks and proposed mitigation measures and defined the impact targets of the project. The project’s Data Management Plan offered a summary of the data collected and reused and how it is stored and managed. To ensure ethics compliance, the project produced H-Requirement No 3. and the ensuing H-Requirement No 1.