Service Designer
Location: Remote
Rate: 575/day Inside IR35
Duration: Initial contract until October (extension likely)
Clearance: Active SC
Overview
We're looking for an experienced Service Designer to join a growing team supporting central government programmes. You'll be working within a multidisciplinary delivery team on complex, user-centred services, helping to improve the design and delivery of digital services across the portfolio.
This is an opportunity to contribute to high-profile government programmes that support critical public services.
Key Responsibilities
Design and improve end-to-end user journeys across complex digital services
Work collaboratively with Product Managers, User Researchers, Business Analysts, Developers, and Delivery Managers Facilitate workshops to understand user needs, pain points, and service improvements
Produce service blueprints, journey maps, process maps, and design artefacts
Apply user-centred design principles to shape service improvements
Support discovery, alpha, beta, and live delivery phases Ensure services are designed to meet user needs while aligning with business and operational objectives
Collaborate across multiple teams to identify opportunities for service optimisation and continuous improvement
What We're Looking For
Strong experience as a Service Designer within complex digital transformation programmes
Experience working within multidisciplinary Agile teams
Ability to map and improve end-to-end services and user journeys
Strong workshop facilitation and stakeholder engagement skills
Experience producing service design artefacts including service blueprints and journey maps
Excellent communication skills with the ability to simplify complex problems
Comfortable working in large, fast-paced organisations with multiple stakeholders
Nice to Have
Government or public sector experience (particularly GDS environments)
Experience delivering services within Home Office, Asylum, Borders, Immigration, or Citizen Services programmes
Familiarity with GDS Service Standard and user-centred design methodologies