benefits management

Benefits realisation - good projects in public sector

Benefits Cycle for Patients/Service Users, Staff & OrganisationsBenefits Management is a key priority for all public sector projects, and none more so than NHS. With nearly £100billion of investment, we MUST deliver value for money. This section focuses on what you need to change to realise benefits, and how to plan it. . . .

Creating Organisational Capacity for Benefits Management

APM_SIG_Thought_2.JPGAPM (Association for Project Management) released its second Thought Leadership Guide on Benefits Management.
It's entitled Delivering benefits from investment in change - creating organisational capability, and it describes how to make the next step from Strategy into capability.

This guide is the second of a series of four, pitched at a strategic level, on how to make Benefits Management actually work.  And its authors embody many decades of experience between them.

From the Bottom Up - Employees leading change

Employee EngagementThe relationship between employer and employee is at its most strained at the moment, as employers face difficult financial times and look to cut costs.  But now is the time that you most need input from your employees.

How to choose benefits to deliver

Cart - but where's the horse?

I was talking to a friend about a Local Authority (UK Local Government) recently, and they asked "how do you choose what Benefits you will deliver?"
it's an interesting question.  "What do you want?" doesn't really do it justice.  Read how you can answer this question and gain referrals and further business whilst doing so . . .

Benefits Management to support Public Service organisations

How to help people motivate themselvesMy mission is that everyone will enjoy and be passionate about what they do.

(with Haiku)

How to measure and report Public Good

AlternativesWe want to understand what's good, and what's not so good, in services paid for either by charity funding or through public money.  There are a number of alternative ways of describing value "for the public good", and I'll explore the advantages and disadvantages.  I'll use SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) tables for each one.

I've described this in terms of the Quality Checker report to give an example and bring it to life

 

Do it Yourself approaches to measuring social good

TSocial Impact - DIY approacheshis page on Do it Yourself approaches to measuring and reporting social good is part of a longer article on how best to measure and report social good.  I hope you enjoy it.  You can find out more at this page.

The DIY approaches are: Describing benefits, Putting your own value on benefits, and Using the Social Appraisal Toolkit

What is Social Return on Investment (SROI)?

Audit

Hopefully I've whetted your appetite, with the SROI audit of Quality Checkers. Now it's worth explaining a little bit about the SROI audit process (you can compare this with other ways of auditing social good on the next page).

WHY do an SROI audit?

 

SROI is a framework

SROI takes two forms, it can either be an evaluation, or forecast.

Can you apply the same "quick" approach to benefits management as you did with PRINCE2?

I thought you'd never askAnd I thought you'd never ask. People haven’t really come up with a standard for benefits management, so it is easy to get caught up filling in endless forms and documents.  But as I said in the last post, you can make PRINCE2 very simple so that it works for you, and you can do the same with Benefits Management.

Benefits management is a very simple, common sense, thing to do.  We do it all the time, subconsciously, usually very well, and sometimes badly.

So how can you do it well?

Why don't people appear to care? It's all about numbers

Care and Compassion - the Ombudsman's report on the elderlyThe Parliamentary Ombudsman for Health, Ann Abraham, today published a report containing 10 examples where care fails the elderly (jump to press release)

You can download a PDF of the Report "Care and Compassion" by clicking the title

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Recent Additions and Updates

The 10 Commandments in Professional Services (1-5)

Keywords:

Two greatest commandsThe Ten Commandments apply just as firmly in each aspect of our daily life as they apply to the whole of our lives.  I'm a management consultant, and on this page I explain how the first five of the Ten Commandments apply to management consulting and professional services.

Getting GPs involved in Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCG)

Life in the YearsMost healthcare providers, in UK the same as everywhere else, get paid for each activity they do.  If someone needs care, they get paid.  If someone is well, they don’t.  So there isn’t much incentive (for the healthcare provider) to keep people well, even though it is much better for the person, much better for the nation, and much lower cost.  Minney.org Ltd is working with one CCG to generate enthusiasm and involvement, and the results are fairly successful….

Clinical Commissioning Groups and the NHS

Commissioning Innovation

As we race forwards into clinical commissioning, there are lessons to be learnt from other people.  The latest book “The Innovator’s Prescription: A Disruptive Solution for Health Care” by Christensen, Grossman and Hwang points to some things we need to take account of. It makes good reading . . .

Getting GPs involved in GP Commissioning

Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCG)GPs know the most about the patients registered with them, and have the biggest incentives to innovate and to commission better services. So why aren't they embracing Clinical Commissioning and using it to improve healthcare right across the country?

It could be any of a number of reasons, and we believe it's about understanding.  What's more, with our experience of doing exactly this (supporting GPs to get engaged), we can demonstrate how we've made a difference, and how it could work for other CCGs.

The Politics of CCGs

Clinical Commissioning

Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCG), the organisations that will commission  healthcare for nearly 60million people across England at a value of around £70billion, are beginning to take shape.

They come in essentially three types, and if you want to supply healthcare to these CCGs, even if you are an established provider of healthcare, you need to understand what you are dealing with

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