1 / 21

Disruptive Forces: Driving a Human Services Revolution

Disruptive Forces: Driving a Human Services Revolution. United Methodist Association National Convention March 2012 Susan Dreyfus, President and CEO Alliance for Children and Families. Disruptive Forces: Driving a Human Services Revolution.

ura
Download Presentation

Disruptive Forces: Driving a Human Services Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disruptive Forces:Driving a Human Services Revolution United Methodist Association National Convention March 2012 Susan Dreyfus, President and CEO Alliance for Children and Families

  2. Disruptive Forces: Driving aHuman Services Revolution • As the Alliance approached its 100th anniversary, a goal was to develop a corollary to the IBM Global CEO Study for the human services sector • Part of the Alliance’s value proposition to its members is to help them see the future and position their organizations for it • Alliance’s Strategy Counts initiative is creating a laboratory for new ideas and strategic positioning

  3. Disruptive Forces: Driving aHuman Services Revolution • To fully appreciate and maximize this report for its real potential, we must embrace the ambiguity it creates. Within ambiguity lies the space for creativity and innovation.

  4. Significant Environmental Trends • Reset of government and the economy • Demographics (aging) • Immigration • Cultural shift

  5. Significant Sector Trends • Social contract being renegotiated • Move from program outcomes to community impact and root causes • Health care reform − beyond access • A focus on home and community-based care − and systems of care principles − across systems • Knowledge advancements • Move from linear to dynamic relationship with funders, partners, and communities

  6. Six Disruptive Forces • Purposeful Experimentation • Information Liberation • Integrating Sciences • Uncompromising Demand for Impact • Branding Causes, Not Organizations • Attracting Investors, Not Donors

  7. Force #1: Purposeful Experimentation • Increased and purposeful experimentation will be required • Culture of innovation must be created and intentional • Active participation in continuous learning and knowledge development • Take calculated risks and be willing to embrace failure

  8. Force #2: Information Liberation • Information sharing will be a key aspect to improving delivery models • Move from linear service delivery to dynamic integration for results • Fullest engagement of those we serve and their access to us will be key • What is our “Facebook” for effective case management?

  9. Force #3: Integrating Sciences • Advances in science and technology are evolving rapidly and are impacting us today! • Health care reform is at a critical point for creating sector relevance and advancing health care sciences • Successful human service organizations in the future will: • Leverage advances in sciences for policy and practice • Create deeper partnerships with the research community

  10. Examples of Integrating Sciences • Neurostimulation treatments • New technologies for diagnoses • Online treatment programs • Video e-health • Consumer tracking technologies • In-home support technologies • Virtual reality applications for behavioral problems • Technologies for cognitive assistance and brain retraining • Consumer self-service, self-assessment, and self-monitoring with new technologies • Robotics deployed to provide disability support services Source: Open Minds

  11. Force #4: Uncompromising Demandfor Impact • Funders and communities will expect greater impact at a lower cost • Competition will be cost based with return on investment • Successful organizations need to view themselves − and be viewed − as highly relevant to impact beyond program outcomes

  12. Force #5: Branding Causes, Not Organizations • In the future, it will be much more effective for organizations to create movements and support based on issues that create emotional connection • It is imperative for human services organizations to speak about their programs and services in a transformational versus transactional frame • It is time for us to fully embrace and lead civic engagement Example: Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD)

  13. Force #6: Attracting Investors, Not Donors • Attract and work with donors as investors • Funding shift to an investment paradigm • Successful organizations will collaborate with funders to co-create more complex models of accountability

  14. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap

  15. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Understand and Frame Core Competencies • What are your organization’s core competencies beyond clinical and programmatic expertise? • Is everyone thinking creatively about how to leverage your core competencies both internally and externally? • Are there organizations that complement where you are not strong?

  16. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Capacity to Perform Within Networks • Move to managed care • Person-centric models • Changing payment models • Focus on outcomes

  17. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Lead, Inspire, Build Partnerships • Is your organization committed to collaborating widely and partnering deeply for larger system advancement • Can you find opportunities to partner with others to purposefully experiment and build new knowledge? • Are there nontraditional organizations you should be partnering with? Do they see you as relevant to their work?

  18. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Maximize Organizational Excellence, Efficiency, and Productivity • Are you creating a lean culture for continuous process improvement across your organization? • Are you nimble enough to change longstanding beliefs or organizational practices?

  19. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Diversify and Identify New Funding Sources • What new relationships across sectors can create new funding opportunities? • Are you ready for new ways human services will be financed? • Should you further diversify your funding and increase your charitable giving as percent of budget?

  20. Micro-Level: Organization Roadmap Market Success • How effectively (frequency, reach, message) do you articulate your goals, vision, and impact to investors, clients and the community? • What do you do to report out on how you are doing, and the difference you are making, to volunteers, community members, and investors? • What modern communication methods are you using to tell your story and be visible as a leader in the community? • Which broader movements, alliances, or networks do you align with or link with to increase your reach and impact?

  21. Thank You! Susan Dreyfus President and CEO Alliance for Children and Families Milwaukee, Wisconsin 414-359-6546 sndreyfus@alliance1.org www.alliance1.org

More Related