Notify Acas about making a claim to the employment tribunal beta reassessment

Service Standard assessment report Notify Acas about making a claim to the employment tribunal 25/05/2023

Service Standard assessment report

Notify Acas about making a claim to the employment tribunal

From:
Assessment date: 25/05/2023
Stage: Beta re-assessment
Result: Met
Service provider: ACAS

Previous assessment reports

Service description

This service allows claimants or their representatives to notify Acas of a workplace dispute and choose whether they want early conciliation or to get a certificate to the employment tribunal for a judge to decide. It is a statutory service, and claimants cannot access the employment tribunal without first making a notification to Acas. Acas receives up to 120,000 notifications a year.

Early conciliation is a largely telephone-based service that involves speaking with individuals and organisations in the dispute. Highly trained conciliators help parties understand relevant legal principles and assist them to reach a resolution.

If a resolution cannot be found, or the claimant does not want conciliation, then Acas provides a certificate that allows parties to take their dispute to the employment tribunal.

Service users

  • Claimants 鈥� individuals with a workplace dispute.
  • Representatives 鈥� solicitors, legal advisors, trades鈥� union representatives or family members/friends who speak to Acas on behalf of a claimant.

Assessment scope

The service was re-assessed by correspondence against points 4, 9 and 10, which were not met at the original beta assessment on 7 February 2023. This report sets out the outcome and recommendations of the re-assessment only, save for point 4 which includes a public beta recommendation carried over from the original report. The team will need to consider the recommendations in both reports during the public beta phase.

4. Make the service simple to use

Decision

The service met .

What the team has done well

The panel was impressed that:

  • the team investigated the save and continue feature used by two other government services (Employment Tribunal 鈥楳ake a claim鈥� form and 鈥楢pply for a Blue Badge鈥� service), which offer the feature early in the user journey. The team tested and iterated removing the 鈥榤emorable word鈥� option and moving the 鈥楽ave and Return鈥� call to the Task List page, which was positively received by test subjects, but they also raised concerns about feature visibility and exiting the service. Further opportunities for investigation have been identified, which will be further tested in public beta, but not before October 2023
  • the team has reviewed the incidence of multiple questions relating to multiple reasons and the effect this has on users. Findings indicate most users choose two jurisdictions or less and there are clear usage patterns with multiple jurisdictions. Two design options showing questions within a jurisdiction subsection are to be tested in public beta
  • the team has signed up for cross government Get Feedback sessions and intends to present their 鈥楽ave and Return鈥� findings and recommendations at the next available session in Autumn 2023

What the team needs to explore

Before the next assessment, the team needs to:

  • test prototypes without the 鈥楽ave and Return鈥� feature and Task List, with users who haven鈥檛 seen previous versions of the form to evidence user need

  • explore alternatives to marking questions as 鈥榦ptional鈥� throughout the form, consider using questions which allow the user to state whether they wish to answer the question or not, and engage with Legal on making the process simpler to use
  • continue to review internal processes to enable quicker updates to the form
  • review service content to ensure it is in line with WCAG 2.2 guidelines, when published

9. Create a secure service which protects users鈥� privacy

Decision

The service met .

What the team has done well

The panel was impressed that:

  • Acas has implemented a cookie compliance mechanism across both the Acas website and the Notify Acas service, which is compliant with the Information Commissioner鈥檚 Office 2020 guidance on cookies
  • technical changes are risk assessed by the Acas Change Advisory Board ahead of deployment, which then undergo automated and manual testing before entering production

10. Define what success looks like and publish performance data

Decision

The service met

What the team has done well

The panel was impressed that:

  • Acas has implemented a cookie compliance mechanism across both the Acas website and the Notify Acas service, which is compliant with the Information Commissioner鈥檚 Office 2020 guidance on cookies
  • the team has reviewed core user needs and iterated the performance framework, retiring one metric and adding two new ones to better measure success
  • the team has used MS Dynamics and Power BI to track and analyse data from the legacy Notify Acas service allowing them to monitor usage and questions with low uptake, and test resulting changes
  • the team has created an evaluation template for use ahead of new iterations enabling them to consider what will be measured and success criteria, before implementation

Next Steps

This service can now move into a public beta phase, subject to implementing the recommendations outlined in the report.

The service must meet the standard at a live assessment before:

鈼徛犅犅犅犅犅犅犅爐urning off the legacy service

鈼徛犅犅犅犅犅犅犅爎educing the team鈥檚 resource to a 鈥榖usiness as usual鈥� team

鈼徛犅犅犅犅犅犅犅爎emoving the 鈥榖eta鈥� banner from the service

Updates to this page

Published 11 December 2023