Multiple public agencies, each with its own systems and processes, faced a common challenge: citizens experienced digital services as fragmented and inconsistent. Different logins, varying security levels, and duplicated identity checks created friction and increased operational costs.
By deploying a digital trust orchestration framework, the government introduced a single control layer above existing systems. Identity providers, signing services, and verification platforms were integrated once and reused across agencies. Policies for assurance, consent, and logging were defined centrally and applied consistently.
Citizens gained a unified experience: one identity, one login, and predictable security regardless of which agency they interacted with. Agencies retained autonomy over domain-specific applications, while relying on shared trust services for core functions.
The outcome was more than technical simplification. It represented a shift in governance — from isolated digital projects to a coordinated, strategic trust infrastructure capable of evolving with new regulations, technologies, and services.