Submit.com logo
Cork City Council Case Study | Submit.com

From 1,000 to 22,000 online applications
in a single year

How Cork City Council digitised grants, permits, awards, and licensing workflows with Submit.com, reducing paper-based administration to under 5% and growing to more than 14,000 registered users.

Summary: Cork City Council deployed Submit.com's submission management software to digitise end-to-end application workflows across multiple departments. Online application volume grew from approximately 1,000 in 2019 to 22,000 in 2020. Paper-based applications fell to under 5% for high-volume processes. The council now manages over 100 active forms and has more than 14,000 registered public users. Use cases include parking permits, road licensing, arts and community grants, freedom of information requests, and the Cork Lifelong Learning Awards nominations and judging process.

22x
Increase in online applications year on year
14k+
Registered public users on the platform
100+
Active forms across the organisation

The challenge: managing a paper-based council at scale

Cork City Council is one of Ireland's largest local authorities, serving a population across the city and its extended region with approximately 1,300 employees across multiple departments. Before digitisation, the council managed grant applications, parking permits, road licences, and dozens of other administrative processes through paper forms, shared drives, email threads, and in-person queuing at public offices.

In 2019, the council handled approximately 1,000 online applications across all departments. The majority of activity arrived by post or over the counter. Finance staff manually reconciled payments. Award judges received nominations by email and met in person to deliberate. When the Covid-19 pandemic arrived in 2020, these processes became unworkable almost overnight: public offices closed, staff moved to remote working, and the council had to keep essential services running while maintaining data protection standards and serving residents who could no longer visit City Hall.

"We had to go from first into fifth gear. Being a public body, the onus was on us to be leaders in this and to facilitate remote working while keeping services running."
Ian O'Sullivan, ICT Projects, Cork City Council

The council needed a submission management platform that could handle complex, multi-step workflows across radically different departments, from arts grants to road licensing, with strong role-based permissions, integrated payments, and the security standards required of a public sector organisation.

Cork City Council and Submit.com case study

Starting with a pilot: parking permit applications

Cork City Council chose parking permit applications as the pilot for Submit.com. This was a deliberate decision: parking was a high-volume, resident-facing process with genuine demand for a digital solution from both staff and the public. It was also technically demanding, involving online payments via Stripe, document uploads, and real-time communication with applicants throughout the application lifecycle.

The council's ICT team worked closely with Submit.com during the pilot, configuring workflows and using the experience to develop a rollout model replicable across the organisation. The results were rapid. Within the first few months, 80 per cent of parking permit applications arrived digitally. Paper submissions fell to under 5 to 6 per cent at their lowest and have remained low even as pandemic restrictions have eased, indicating genuine behavioural change rather than a temporary response.

"If you live in Ballincollig or Douglas and you need to apply for a parking permit, you don't want to come to City Hall. From home, you can interact with staff and they receive the application immediately, ready to process."
Ian O'Sullivan, ICT Projects, Cork City Council

The Stripe integration also removed significant manual work for finance staff, who had previously entered payment data into the council's financial systems by hand. With the integration in place, teams perform reconciliation from Stripe statements rather than managing individual transactions.


Scaling across the organisation

Following the success of the parking permit pilot, Cork City Council expanded Submit.com across departments through a centrally led ICT rollout. Rather than allowing individual departments to adopt the platform independently, the ICT team managed configuration, permissions, and onboarding. This gave the council consistent governance, reduced the risk of misconfigured access controls, and meant departments without specialist technical staff could benefit from the platform without managing it themselves.

The range of workflows now running through Submit.com reflects the breadth of a large local authority:

  • Parking permit applications with integrated Stripe payments
  • Road licensing for contractors placing cranes, hoarding, and scaffolding
  • Arts, sports, and community grant applications
  • Freedom of information request management
  • Customer service request forms
  • Environment and planning-related submissions
  • Cork Lifelong Learning Awards: nominations, judging, and scoring
  • Commercial vehicle permit applications and corporate affairs workflows

The council has deployed more than 100 active forms across the organisation. Registered public users number over 14,000 and continue to grow by hundreds each month.


Managing a complex awards programme end to end

One of the most operationally demanding deployments was the Cork Lifelong Learning Awards. Previously, nominations arrived by post and email, were manually organised by staff, and reviewed in person or via shared files. The process was time-consuming, difficult to audit, and poorly suited to remote working.

For the first fully digital delivery, the council used Submit.com to accept hundreds of nominations with multiple attachments and video links, sort submissions into categories automatically, configure 23 external judges as limited-access reviewers with visibility restricted to their assigned category only, apply five configurable scoring criteria per application with automated score calculation, and restrict overall results to internal staff only, protecting the integrity of the process.

"Before, judges might have met in a room or emailed things around a shared drive. With Submit.com, we set up 23 external judges with very limited access -- they saw only their folders, scored each application, and added comments. The scores calculated automatically and it worked very well."
Ian O'Sullivan, ICT Projects, Cork City Council

Security, single sign-on, and multi-factor authentication

For a public body managing sensitive personal data, security is non-negotiable. As part of the Submit.com deployment, Cork City Council implemented single sign-on (SSO) and multi-factor authentication (MFA) to meet internal security standards and satisfy GDPR obligations. Staff on the internal network sign in automatically via SSO; when working remotely, a second authentication layer is required. The council completed a data protection impact assessment (DPIA) covering forms that handle sensitive personal data.

"Cyber security is only going to become more important. The SSO and MFA were extremely important to us and gave us peace of mind given the sensitive data some of our forms handle."
Ian O'Sullivan, ICT Projects, Cork City Council

Results: measurable outcomes across volume, efficiency, and adoption

22,000
Online applications in 2020, up from approximately 1,000 in 2019
14,000+
Registered public users on Submit.com, growing by hundreds monthly
<5%
Paper applications remaining for high-volume processes such as parking permits
100+
Active submission forms across eight departments, up from a single pilot

Beyond the headline numbers, the council highlights qualitative improvements that are harder to measure but equally significant: reduced backlogs, staff freed from manual data entry, and residents able to complete applications from any device including mobile, at any time.


Advice for other local authorities considering Submit.com

Ian O'Sullivan offered practical guidance to any public body evaluating submission management software.

  • Begin with a high-demand pilot. Choose a process where both staff and the public want a digital solution. The built-in buy-in makes the pilot more likely to succeed and gives the rollout team a strong case to expand.
  • Map the full workflow, not just the form. Think through how applicant communications, internal review phases, scoring, and notifications will all live in one place. Digitising only the intake form misses most of the efficiency gains.
  • Let ICT lead the rollout centrally. Departments benefit from expert support on permissions, data protection, and configuration without needing to manage the platform themselves. Central control also maintains consistency at scale.
  • Use the payments integration. Stripe automation removes significant manual effort from finance teams. Staff moved from inputting individual transactions by hand to simple reconciliation from Stripe statements.
"Map your process from the moment an application arrives to the moment the end user receives what they need. The thought you put in before you start will really pay off."
Ian O'Sullivan, ICT Projects, Cork City Council

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this case study and Submit.com for local government and public sector organisations.

How did Cork City Council increase online applications from 1,000 to 22,000 in one year?
Cork City Council deployed Submit.com across multiple departments, beginning with a parking permit pilot in 2019. The platform digitised end-to-end workflows including application intake, payment, internal review, and automated communications. When the Covid-19 pandemic forced office closures in 2020, digital adoption accelerated sharply. By the end of 2020, the council processed 22,000 online applications, up from approximately 1,000 the previous year.
What types of forms and workflows does Cork City Council manage through Submit.com?
Cork City Council manages over 100 active forms through Submit.com including: parking permits with Stripe payment integration, road licensing for contractors, arts and community grants, sports grants, freedom of information requests, customer service requests, environment submissions, and the Cork Lifelong Learning Awards nominations and judging process.
How does Submit.com handle external judges and review panels for award programmes?
Submit.com's external reviewer feature allows organisations to give judges access only to submissions in their assigned category. For the Cork Lifelong Learning Awards, 23 external judges received limited-access accounts. They scored applications against five configurable criteria; Submit.com calculated results automatically. Overall totals were visible only to internal staff, protecting process integrity and meeting GDPR requirements.
Does Submit.com support SSO and MFA for public sector organisations?
Yes. Submit.com supports single sign-on (SSO) and multi-factor authentication (MFA). Cork City Council configured staff to authenticate automatically on the internal network, with a second verification layer for remote access. The deployment included a data protection impact assessment (DPIA) to satisfy GDPR obligations for forms handling sensitive personal data.
Is Submit.com suitable for local authorities and other public sector bodies?
Yes. Submit.com is used by local authorities, universities, foundations, and nonprofits to manage grants, permits, awards, and other application-based programmes. Its role-based permissions, SSO and MFA support, Stripe payment integration, external reviewer functionality, and GDPR-compatible configuration make it well suited to the complex and regulated workflows typical of public sector organisations.

Ready to digitise your application workflows?

Submit.com supports local authorities, foundations, universities, and nonprofits to manage the full programme lifecycle in one secure platform.