managing demand – a collaborative approach dr henry kippin henry@collaboratei.com @h_kippin 20 nov...

Post on 20-Jan-2016

218 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Managing Demand – a collaborative approach

Dr Henry Kippinhenry@collaboratei.com @h_kippin

20 Nov 2015, CIPFA Annual North East Conference

Context: why are we talking about managing demand?

The Groucho Marx challenge for public services

What do we mean by managing demand?

Before we go further…five inconvenient truths?

1. We can’t manage what we don’t understand!

2. Demand isn’t always bad…

3. Effective delivery is vital, but it needs to be collaborative

4. Nudging is not enough

5. Devo won’t stick without building readiness…

Types of demand - a ready reckoner

Is demand rising as a result of public service failure or poor design?

Is service demand arising from certain behaviours that could be changed?

Is the state providing more than is needed, or inadvertently creating demand through dependency?

Are there opportunities to provide services that are a better fit with what is actually needed by citizens?

Are citizens accessing services they don’t strictly need?

To what extent is demand arising from causes which could have been addressed earlier?

To what extent is demand unintentionally reinforced by service dependence?

Excess Demand

Is the state providing too much?

Are citizens accessing what they don’t need

Are we inadvertently creating demand through dependency?

Avoidable Demand

Is demand arising from behaviours that could be influenced or changed?

Do we have the right level of insight about why this might be the case?

Failure Demand

Is demand arising as a result of service failure?

Are we creating demand through poor service design?

Are we experiencing demand through creating market failure?

Preventable Demand

Is demand arising from problems that could have been prevented earlier?

Do we contribute to demand through misunderstanding the root causes?

Are shunting demand through addressing symptom not cause?

Co-Dependent Demand

Is long-term demand being entrenched through service dependence?

Do we create demand through poor relationships between front line workers and service users?

Do we sustain demand through poor understanding of what communities can do?

Ways to Manage Demand - some organisational levers

Better use of data

Hard levers e.g. enforcement, compliance

Comms & ‘nudge’

New behavioural insight

Commissioning & procurement

PayMechs, co-payment

Co-design with citizens

Apply : What levers do we have or need to shape demand

Group 1:Levers in ASC/Health

Lever

Describe existing

lever

Is it working?Y/N

Existing lever but new to us

Lever we need to de-

velopY

N

Y

Y

N

What other levers could we use? What levers need de-

veloping?

For ‘N’ levers, how improve?

From emerging science to whole system, whole place: a long term approach

Cost

s

Current Demand ‘Real’

DemandOther

ways of meeting demand

Future demand

Eliminate excess

demand

Redesign services w customers

Early intervention, prevention, resilience

PPayback Short term Medium term Long termSystem change

Re-shaping the system – what will it take?

But remember: behaviour, culture & relationships drive delivery…

“Read my Lips: no new legislative and policy frameworks…”

“It’s the behaviours, stupid….”

Building readiness – what happens next?

Collaboration: no pain, no gain?

top related