To answer this question, you would need to know how many civil servants can use these websites for their work and how many are needed to manage them properly. It is also interesting to know what these websites cost in total on an annual basis. This analysis will most likely require weeks of research and it is very questionable whether the necessary data is even available.
But you can also ask yourself whether such an analysis yields anything sensible. You can endlessly discuss whether figures and statistics are correct. Let me therefore ask another question: should the central government have as poland telegram data few websites as possible? And to be honest: I have my doubts. I will explain why I have different ideas and am very curious about your opinion.
Actually, it is not so strange that the number of websites is growing. There are 3 important reasons for this:
The starting point of communication is increasingly 'Digital, unless…'
For service provision, the Internet is positioned as the preferred channel: 'click, call, face' (usually with the aim of saving costs on service provision via the counter or a telephone call centre).
“Eighty percent of the work of policymakers consists of communication. This involves picking up signals from the environment and translating those signals into policy and communication. Factor C is a vision that states that policy can also be created 'communicatively', that is to say: in contact with the environment. The result is policy in which signals and sounds from the environment are incorporated.”
Perhaps we will then end up with a total of more than 1,000 websites, but hopefully 1,000 that are used more specifically for both the policy maker and the user!
What do you think?