Designing and Commissioning To Tackle
Demand
Simon Johnson
AdviceUK
Kate Kennard
Portsmouth City Council
Systems Thinking: a counter-intuitive approach
Doing different things
…Doing things differently...
When we want to improve performance...Performance
System
Thinking
Thinking governs performance
By helping organisations change the way they think…
…the system changes…
… and performance improves as a consequencePerformance
System
Thinking
It’s the System Stupid!
●30 – 40% of the demand for advice shouldn’t be there. It’s caused by the failure of public services to get it right for their customers
●Procurement of advice typically drives the wrong behaviour – eg activity targets lead to transactional services
●Pressure to hit activity targets cause cherry-picking of easier cases and a revolving door – clients don’t get their problems fixed so keep coming back
Purpose
“Help citizens to pay their rent and council tax by making a decision and paying benefit
quickly”
Portsmouth Approach:Background
• Portsmouth CLAC opened on 1 April 2008• Partnership between You Trust and Portsmouth
CAB – funded by PCC and LSC• LSC contract inflexibility meant service not
meeting residents’ needs• ‘CLAC’ partnership therefore dissolved
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The commissioning maze: where do we go from here?
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Understand what we want!
• 1st April 11: PCC awarded interim one year contract placed with previous providers;
• Interim service called ‘Portsmouth Advice Centre’, based at same location
• Interim contract period used to review service and better understand customers’ needs.
• Learning informed procurement process for new contract (which started Apr 12) as follows:
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Look at work a bit differently...
“The performance of anyone is largely governed by the system he works in.”
If we set targets and make people’s jobs depend on meeting them...
“...they will likely meet the targets – even if they have to destroy the enterprise to do it.”
Dr W Edwards Deming1900 – 1993
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Systems Thinking – Advice Services• Previous experience of systems-thinking approach in
Portsmouth:– Repairs– Rent arrears– Community Wardens
• Partnership with AdviceUK (Nottingham work)• May 2011 Interventions:
– Portsmouth Advice Centre (PAC)– PCC’s Tenancy Support (TS) and Money Advice Team
(MAT)11
Understanding demand: ‘getting in the work’
Understanding purpose as commissioners:•Listening to customers at front desk•Sitting in on interviews•Finding out what matters – really matters – to customers•Understanding the system•Realisation that the system was driving the work, not vice versa
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Waste Steps
Waste = Spending time doing things again which have not been done right the first time
Waste = Duplication of effort
Waste = Doing things which add no value to the customer or the organisation
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56% Value 44% Failure
205 - 345 per week
Take ticket from
machine Take a
seat
Called to reception &
handed green form
Take a seat
and fill in form
Hand in form to
reception
Take a seat
Form details entered on IT, ticket number on form, board
in back office updated and form placed in tray
Advisor picks up oldest form from
tray and calls client number
Advisor and client go to interview
room
Advice given
Client leaves
Average 69 minutes : could take 2 hrs 39
mins
Client enters centre
Avg 33% of clients leave
before adviser is free
Purpose: Give me the right advice and appropriate level of support to help me resolve my
problem(s)
On 56% of days we are open for less than 50%
of advertised hours
What we learned
Levels of need• Low level need – ‘Give me the information/tools I
need to solve my problem myself’ - 42%• Medium level need – ‘I need help/support to solve
my problem’ – 36%• High level need – ‘Sort my problem out for me’ – 24%Service needed ability to respond flexibly to each level
of need, designed around the high frequency demand we identified
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Defining purpose
Better understood our customers’ needs Defined purpose in customers’ terms Purpose supported by underlying principles Learning then drove the commissioning
process:
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Redefined Purpose:To provide an advice service that supports the people of Portsmouth to solve their problems.
This advice will be offered in the areas of: Debt* Money Welfare benefits* Employment* Housing* Consumer rights Family law
* Indicates those areas that are predictable, high-volume demand. However list should not be considered exhaustive and providers should assume that the needs of the citizen may change during the term of the contract.
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PAS – Principles
• Responsive• Enabling • High quality• Professional• Flexible• Collaborative
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Knowing what we didn’t want to commission:
• Understanding the customer journey and blockages in the system (mapping flow)
• Understanding what was value work (always back to purpose); leading to
• Understanding what wasn’t value work (failure demand – our own and other agencies – waste steps)
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Commissioning:
• Learning drove the commissioning and tender specification
• Purpose and principles overarching framework• Applicants presented with learning through
open day presentation and tender documentation
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Commissioning:Applicants required to demonstrate, against each principle•understanding of the continuous improvement approach•evidence of where they have designed and delivered services in a similar customer-focused manner•how they would apply the learning to the Portsmouth model 21
Commissioning:
How did the process feel?•Looked very different to previous tender specifications•Needed to get procurement ‘on board’•Element of risk (would organisations ‘get it’?)
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Commissioning:Did it work? Yes!•The framework used for submissions demonstrated clearly whether organisations understood the approach;•whether they could relate it to ways they had worked previously•and most importantly, whether they could think about the work in a new way, in accordance with our particular needs
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Measuring success• Number of people trying to access the service by type and
frequency• Number of people successfully accessing the service by type
and frequency• Number of people who abandon trying to access the service by
type and frequency• Number of repeat visits• ‘End to end’ measures i.e. length of time taken for customer to
receive service, total time taken for customer to resolve their problem
• % value and failure demand• % of people referred to other agencies
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Just the beginning• New transformed service launched beginning April • But still lots of work to do:• Deeper understanding of root causes to inform response• Exploring common areas of failure demand across the
wider advice services in order to switch it off• Building on the measures• Building on the partnership – shared
Risk Register, monitoring meetings ‘inthe work’
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