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Introduction to collaborative working

Introduction to collaborative working. Workshop objectives. To explore the context and drivers for collaboration To identify the benefits, challenges and things that can help To explore structures and written agreements

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Introduction to collaborative working

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  1. Introduction to collaborative working

  2. Workshop objectives • To explore the context and drivers for collaboration • To identify the benefits, challenges and things that can help • To explore structures and written agreements • To enable you to make informed decisions about whether it suits your situation

  3. What is collaborative working?

  4. What is collaboration? Joint projects Informal networks Merger

  5. Drivers • Government • Public opinion • Charity Commission • Funders • Recession • Expectation

  6. Key changes in public services • Gershon Review of Public Sector Efficiency (2004) • DCLG’s Creating Strong, Safe & Prosperous Communities (2008) • Social Exclusion Task Force • World Class Commissioning • DWP Commissioning Strategy (2008) • Best Value

  7. Benefits of collaborating

  8. Benefits • New or improved services • Knowledge & information sharing • More efficient use of resources • Sharing risk in new projects • Stronger, united voice • Better co-ordination of activities Enabling a better service for beneficiaries

  9. Obstacles and challenges to collaborative working

  10. Obstacles • Personalities • Lack of resources • Competition • Cultural difference • Lack of information and experience • Resistance to change

  11. What can help?

  12. Things that can help • Trust and commitment • Early agreement • Recognition of different strengths • Open, honest communication • Steering group • Compatible cultures • Vision

  13. Structures for collaborative working

  14. Structures • New legal body • Lead organisation • External non-delivering lead

  15. Joint working agreements • Clarify the project • Define roles and commitments • Process of writing • Reference document

  16. Joint working agreements – what to include • Introduction • Roles and responsibilities • Costs and assets • Monitoring and evaluation • Communication and meetings • Branding and logos • Exit strategy

  17. Considerations for merger

  18. When might a merger be considered? • Very similar aims and objectives • Complementary activities • Rescue or survival • Increased efficiency • Funding of projects

  19. Benefits • Improved services to beneficiaries • Economies of scale • Reduction of confusion and duplication for supporters • Knowledge sharing

  20. Barriers • Staff dissatisfaction • Culture clash • Brand confusion • Loss of identity • Trustee board integration • Cost • Doubts whether merger is in the best interests of beneficiaries

  21. Key things to consider • Existing funding • TUPE • Planning and communication • Working group • Merging Boards • Interim arrangements

  22. Structures • Full merger • New organisation • Existing structure • Group structure

  23. What to look for • Previous history • Mission match • Resources – stable and sustainable • Reputation and reach • Good governance

  24. Deal Breakers • Weak business case • Incompatible objects • New board & Chief Executive • Name and structure of new organisation • Different organisational cultures • Pensions • IT systems • Properties • Restricted funding

  25. Due Diligence • Financial (e.g. financial history or accounting systems) • Legal (e.g. governing documents or contracts of employment) • Strategic and operational (e.g. organisational culture or IT systems)

  26. Is it right for your situation?

  27. Resources Email: collaborate@ncvo-vol.org.uk www.ncvo-vol.org.uk/collaborate Tel: 020 7520 2440

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