IBM iX

Canada.ca: My Service Canada Architecture

2020

About the Project

As part of the Benefits Delivery Modernization (BDM) initiative, I was engaged as a consultant through IBM, collaborating with IBM and Deloitte to envision the future architecture of My Service Canada...

Challenge

  • Research and insight reports from multiple engagements without one consolidated vision.

  • Fragmented benefits delivery systems, leading to inefficiencies, delays, and confusion for citizens.

  • Lack of centralized data integration, making it difficult to proactively inform users of their eligibility.

  • Complex regulatory landscape, requiring coordination between federal and provincial benefit programs.

  • Need for a unified digital experience, ensuring intuitive and seamless user interactions.

Solution

  • Developed service design blueprints, visually mapping technical and service integration for benefits delivery.

  • Structured data relationships across government platforms, ensuring a single, user-friendly touchpoint for citizens.

  • Envisioned AI-driven eligibility detection, allowing proactive benefit recommendations.

  • Designed a schematic representation of how systems like IBM Curam, SADA, and predictive analytics tools integrate into the broader digital landscape.

  • Collaborated across workstreams, aligning insights from prior BDM research and engagements.

Impact

  • Created a clear, scalable framework, enabling government teams to plan future benefits integration efficiently.

  • Bridged the gap between service design and technical teams, fostering cross-functional collaboration.

  • Laid the groundwork for a centralized MyServiceCanada platform, improving communication and proactive citizen engagement.

  • Enabled a proactive service approach, where citizens are informed of eligibility dynamically rather than through reactive applications.

Canada.ca: My Service Canada Architecture

The existing benefits delivery infrastructure is disconnected, inefficient, and reactive, making it difficult for Canadians to navigate available services. My role was to synthesize existing research, future-state concepts, and technical insights into a unified architectural blueprint, showing how AI, data lakes, and government software could be integrated.

I identified a gap in visualization—while previous engagements conceptualized a future state, they lacked a clear, large-scale schematic demonstrating the relationships between government benefits platforms, AI-driven insights, and citizen interactions.

By creating a structured blueprint, I helped articulate how individual benefits systems would be connected, where data would be centralized, and how provincial and federal programs could integrate for a seamless citizen experience. This included:

  • AI-driven automation to detect and notify users of eligibility.

  • A centralized platform, replacing fragmented applications with a unified user journey.

  • A scalable model, allowing iterative improvements without disrupting government operations.

The final output was a comprehensive visualization of My Service Canada’s future architecture, helping align stakeholders, guide technical teams, and ensure a proactive, citizen-first benefits system.

Sponsor Users

Key government stakeholders

Product Design Team

  • UX Strategists

  • Business Analysts

  • Technical Architects

My Contributions

  • Research Synthesis

  • Formulated North Star

  • AI-integrated experience blueprints for benefits access

Metrics

⏱️ Accelerated Decision-Making
🗻 Clear Product Vision

Tools

Mural Confluence Service Design Blueprint

How Can I Help You?

Let’s connect and find the human in your AI strategy.

hello@systemshift.agency

How Can I Help You?

Let’s connect and find the human in your AI strategy.

hello@systemshift.agency

How Can I Help You?

Let’s connect and find the human in your AI strategy.

hello@systemshift.agency

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