The Situation
The Solution
The Department identified a solution in the form of a mobile application that could crowdsource information from children. The application had to be robust enough to accommodate a large number of users feeding multiple data points – perceived dangers along their route to school, for instance. The next challenge was to build an interface that was clear, simple, and user-friendly enough to be operated by third-seventh graders.City of Oslo entrusted Capgemini with the design and development of this unique application, aimed at improving road safety of its young pedestrians. Mobile Solutions is a global service line within Capgemini, comprising over 4,000 experts across the world, helping hundreds of clients in a wide range of areas – from solution design to testing. Capgemini Mobile Solutions draws from its Design & Experience talent network and the Group’s Mobile Factory, which works with organizations to accelerate the delivery of mobile apps, websites, and Internet-of-Things solutions. The Design & Experience approach reduces time from innovation to delivery by addressing both rapid prototyping and critical solution design. It puts user experience and user interface requirements at the heart of the development process, ensuring consistency in design, functionality, integration, and security.
Leveraging its Rapid Prototyping Methodology, Capgemini was able to deliver an iOS prototype of the application within two weeks. The application not only exceeded the Department’s expectation, it was also welcomed by its target audience. Grade-3 students were able to seamlessly navigate through its interface without any assistance, validating Capgemini’s focus on functional simplicity in user-experience.
The Result
Capgemini’s Mobile Solutions team built a prototype iPhone app using reusable templates and generic buttons, and then let the children play with it. The result was an app that went into trial with students at the Ullevål and Korsvoll schools in Oslo. Students were asked to log on with a unique identification code and provide traffic inputs. Additionally, they could choose between nine categories, including fastmoving traffic or heavy traffic on a particular route shown on the app.To get a bigger picture, more than 43,000 primary school students will soon use the app to provide information on dangerous road intersections and other traffic problems.
How Capgemini and City of Oslo Worked together
Key to the success of the project was Capgemini’s rapid prototyping methodology – it enabled a test sample of users, third-seventh graders, to experience the application quickly. The methodology also involved the Department, end users, and developers from the word go, ensuring an agile, open approach. The Capgemini Mobile Solutions team interacted extensively with young pedestrians to understand their expectations from such applications. The user-experience experts acted as a connecting link between developers, the Department’s officials, and process-oriented architects. They added the cognitive parts that seamlessly captured the requirements of all stakeholders.”Capgemini’s collaborative approach and Rapid Prototyping Methodology enabled delivery of an iOS prototype within just two weeks. The functional simplicity of the app’s interface was validated by the ability of Grade-3 students to use it effectively”