“Identifying Replicable Projects” put the spotlight on e-governance that actually travels—from one district or department to many—without losing quality. The summit argued that India’s greatest operating challenge is diversity: different capacities, contexts, and constraints across states. Replication, therefore, isn’t copy-paste; it’s disciplined adaptation that protects the end-customer experience while flexing to local realities.
Discussions framed a simple test for what deserves scale: does the project measurably improve service delivery, can its processes be standardised, and are data and workflows transparent enough to audit? By treating standards, documentation, and field validation as non-negotiables, the summit moved the conversation from “best practices” as showcases to playbooks that administrators can lift and deploy with confidence.
At its core, the summit recast e-governance as civic plumbing—interfaces, records, and accountability loops that survive the journey from pilot to platform. It championed replication as the fastest route to citizen impact: when what works is made portable, good governance compounds instead of remaining an isolated success.

