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Is an equitable dialogue possible between smaller charities and commissioners?

Posted By Administration, 02 December 2021

As part of their Clore Social Leadership ‘Emerging Leaders’ programme, Gwendolyn Sterk, Sam Edom, Katie Potter, Becky Evans, Stephanie Woodrow and Claire Kofman reflect on the relationship between smaller charities and commissioners - and what can be done to improve conversations between the two.

For many leaders in the third sector, particularly those based within smaller communities providing frontline support and services, competitive commissioning processes can be a complex, uncertain and unequal space.

Smaller charities[1] are disproportionately impacted by inequalities inbuilt in commissioning regimes, further exacerbating and entrenching structural inequalities that impact the communities in which small charities are situated, for example institutional racism.[2] At the same time, there has been much praise directed towards the value of small charities[3] in their ability to meet the needs of the communities in which they are formed and deliver support.

Evidence has also shown that Covid-19 has further exacerbated inequalities across communities, which has had a disproportionate impact on smaller charities. However, Covid-19 has also offered opportunities for small charities to be flexible and responsive in meeting the needs of the communities they serve.

With the reality being both an inequitable struggle for small charities within commissioning structures but also an assertion and recognition of the vital work small charities do, that cannot be done by others, particularly at a time of crisis, it seems vital that a space for dialogue is created to enable the positive work to prevail.

With this in mind, we set out to speak to both small charity leaders and commissioners to answer the question: “What are the barriers to facilitating open conversations between small charities and statutory commissioners, and how might they be overcome?”

To begin with, after considering the existing research in this area, we had conversations with people within both the social sector and with commissioners we knew to explore the issue further. We found there were four impacts on the ability to have open conversations to consider - commissioning structures, Covid-19 and the cliff edge caused by short-term funding cycles, inequalities, and the lack of capacity within smaller charities.

Following on from these findings, we put together two different surveys - one for leaders in smaller charities, and one for commissioners. Although we had a reasonable response to the survey for leaders of smaller charities, we struggled to reach commissioners, only receiving a few responses. However, the responses we did receive gave a good indication of the barriers to be overcome.


The Barriers

1. Commissioners can be hard to engage in discussion

Interestingly, and as mentioned previously, throughout our investigation of this question we have struggled to engage commissioners in even discussing the question, with a few notable exceptions (which we are very grateful to).

This may be due to commissioners wanting to maintain an aspect of independence from charities as we come from charities ourselves, or that the engagement routes utilised by charities are not the same spaces where commissioners can engage. But it seems our experience is symptomatic of the difficulty of creating a dialogue between charities and commissioners. We struggled to identify informal spaces where commissioners engage in discussion, whereas charities were accessible to us via social media.

2. Inflexible systems imposed from above

The perceived inflexibility of procurement regulation and the belief that they implement an unbiased approach left commissioners acting in structures that did not allow for the values of small charities to be seen, or for engagement to happen within the commissioning process that was not strictly controlled.

Stringent and inflexible approaches to commissioning regimes left commissioners distant from the impact small charities have on communities, prioritising cost over value for money. It was recognised that commissioners were themselves restricted by higher level decision making and bureaucracy:

“Most of our commissioners see the need for change but change is blocked further up. Overall systems are inflexible and one size fits all. As a small charity, it feels like we're working in a system designed to get the cheapest deal on bulk buy toilet rolls.”

“In my experience commissioners usually genuinely want to listen and learn, however they often don't have much opportunity to change processes based on what they learn.”

3. Lack of understanding on the part of commissioners as to what small charities do, and often a lack of sympathy in their struggles

In our survey responses, commissioners spoke of the work smaller charities do as being innovative, agile, responsive to individual need, and embedded in the communities they serve.

However, 29% of the small charity leaders that responded to our survey said that they didn’t feel confident that commissioners understand the situation on the ground.

The commissioners recognised that small charities could struggle within the commissioning process, however their responses focused on what small charities could do to ‘fit in’ rather than thinking about how the system may reduce bureaucracy so that small charities may equally participate:

“Bigger organisations are often more laissez faire with the frustrating bureaucracy, for example, late payments or disappearing professionals - maybe because of experience or a bigger financial cushion.”

“[Small charities should] make the commissioner's job easy.”

That being said, across both commissioners and small charities there was a desire to move towards better dialogue and talk about engagement that is meaningful.


So how might these barriers be overcome?

1. Develop a more flexible relationship

The response to Covid-19 demonstrated an opportunity for things to be different. Smaller charity leaders noted that there was greater recognition that they could respond in a needs-led manner, allowing for flexibility over KPIs and a greater recognition that smaller charities could provide grassroots information and evidence to inform swift funding decisions. There was a recognition that smaller charities needed to lead on the adaptation of their provision at a time of crisis within the resources provided:

“When commissioners have taken on board changes required as a result of Covid-19, they were very open to the changes that were needed to deliver the services, understood the changes needed and that we could deliver for the funds we had.”

It was clear from the survey that smaller charities believe they are more aware of the need and can respond better than larger charities or statutory services to community needs. This became a great advantage during Covid-19 and should be considered as part of the process in building back better.

2. Come and see it

Most of the survey respondents had an open invitation to commissioners to come and see their work and meet the people whose lives were being changed.

One survey respondent highlighted a scheme called Transition Pilots. The scheme saw commissioners working alongside the smaller charity to try a new approach:

“The idea is that the commissioner meets with us every six weeks and begins to implement the learning into their commissioning process - a commitment to commission for people and not for problems.”

The charity noted that this was happening in three spaces at the moment, however was not currently a system-wide approach.

Advice to commissioners is to visit the smaller organisations at their base of operations and allow time to understand them in an informal setting. Ideally, commissioners would then have the autonomy to implement learning from these meetings into their commissioning practices. If this isn’t possible, then at least a dialogue would be opened.

3. Take commissioners on the journey

Maintaining positive relationships with commissioners once they were successful in tenders was key for smaller charities: invite commissioners to review delivery, meet the people involved, and include service user feedback in any reporting. They noted that ensuring commissioners understand the challenges along the way can be key to maintaining a dialogue.

This can be hard when commissioners change roles or who to report to changes frequently. Relationship building takes time, and small charities don’t have the resources to engage regularly. So it is vital that commissioners also recognise smaller charities are exactly that and do not necessarily have lots of resources to attend multiple meetings. They should work in partnership with the organisation on equal terms, and that partnership shouldn’t depend on individuals from either side but be developed across teams so that a key partner leaving or changing role does not derail the relationship.

4. Focus on delivering long-term change

Thinking longer term and recognising the struggles of smaller charities and the need for flexibility was key for smaller charities to feel able to have equitable discussions with commissioners:

“We had a conversation about the long-term nature of change and they adapted by recognising how hard it is/being more flexible with outcomes.”

This will require being open to challenge and new ideas. Commissioners will need to understand that smaller organisations can struggle to be stable on short rounds of funding, and that multi-year contracts will result in more consistent, higher quality delivery.

5. Acknowledge that radical change is possible

The response to Covid-19 has shown that there can be different ways of commissioning work which can include simplified processes and allowances for the ways smaller charities work. Moving forward, it will be important for commissioners to consider wider questions of inequality and who gets to be involved when it comes to commissioning processes, particularly around issues like race where research shows time and time again that Black and Minoritised community organisations are unable to access the processes that larger organisations can:

“We need to take this argument back to the structure. The structure of funds, how they are set up. Who they are accountable to, where their accountabilities lie, what representation do they have of the community, do they look like the community and do they understand the lived experiences of the communities? A lot of those decision making boards can’t tick those boxes.”[4]




[1] Community based, local and/or target group specific, defined financially as under £2m turnover a year for the purposes of our survey

[2] https://www.ubele.org/booska-paper

[3] https://www.lloydsbankfoundation.org.uk/media/c2aphccs/the-value-of-small.pdf

[4] https://www.ubele.org/booska-paper

Tags:  challenges  collaboration  fellow  fellowship  funding  programme 

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Changing the way we work to respond to COVID-19

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 30 April 2020
Updated: 23 October 2020

Karen Tozer, Clore Social Fellow 2018 and Programme Manager at Groundwork inspires us with the organisation’s agile and strategic response to COVID-19.

Groundwork have been working in Hull over 10 years with communities and individuals that are often those most in need. The work we do builds the skills and knowledge of people through experiential learning and/or volunteering so they are able to begin to address some of the issues that impact on their lives.

We enable people to learn through hands-on participatory activities to grow food, cook healthier meals, learn crafts and DIY skills that help make their money go further and improve their physical and mental wellbeing. Our volunteering opportunities give people a sense of purpose and enable them to build their skills, confidence and social networks.

We also have managed Springhead Park Golf Club since 2014. We have worked hard to transform this former municipal facility into a hub for the whole community.

In Hull I am lucky enough to have a small but dedicated and creative team. Prior to 19 March we recognised that many of those we support were the most vulnerable and would have to self-isolate. We also studied what was happening in other countries and quickly realised that full lockdown was inevitable.

Myself and the team looked at how we could change the way we worked to ensure we were able to provide the best service possible to the communities we support.

Springhead Park – We shut down the course and Club House and transformed the Coffee Shop into a takeaway and home delivery service that runs on a skeleton staff and volunteer drivers. We immediately contacted all the local homecare providers and agencies supporting the elderly and vulnerable in our area. We sent them information on our new affordable meal service with free delivery for the elderly and most vulnerable.

Our Communities team were also quick to move and offer a virtual service on Facebook.

Groundwork Connect – A daily mix of quizzes, healthy recipes and useful information together with live stream and pre-recorded `how-to’ videos covering crafts, growing and up-cycling that utilise everyday items and things we might otherwise discard.

We also established a number of different Facebook Groups where people can meet virtually and interact.

The Virtual Shed – Here people post their lockdown up-cycling and DIY projects that use what others or they might normally throw away. People are able to inspire others and be inspired and we have found there is a massive appetite amongst all age groups. People have tried things they might never have tried and the ‘Likes’ they receive give them a much needed boost. One young mum who joined undertook her first up-cycling project and has now gone on to provide tips to others.

The Virtual Veg Plot – Excited by the success of The Virtual Shed we quickly developed The Virtual Veg Plot. Now more than ever we believe people need to be thinking about growing their own food. We provide tips on growing and how to make a planter out of everything from an old shopping bag to a pallet. To support The Virtual Veg Plot we are also sending seeds by post to those who live in our Growing St Andrews project area, around Hessle Road. I have also sought additional funding to expand this wider in the coming weeks.

The Virtual Kitchen –
For a long time Groundwork have delivered healthy cooking sessions. The Virtual Kitchen along with our daily recipes is a way in which we can still encourage and support healthier eating.

The Virtual Sewing Room – This is our latest addition in response to requests by our Facebook followers. The group provides tips and ‘how-to’ advice from sewing on a button to taking up a hem; skills that many people were never taught.

Hull Story Time – Ground Hull has a long established partnership with Hull Library Services. As soon as schools were shut down we began work on this joint project. Every Friday at 1.30pm live on YouTube we have children’s stories being read by local authors, performers and currently local celebrities and sports stars.

Groundwork Connect Radio Show – Growing St Andrews project had an existing radio show that went out to over 250,000 households across West Hull and the surrounding villages. We wanted to develop something that was more frequent and interactive to support those who may not have access to social media. Groundwork Connect now goes out via live feed three times a week on FM radio, internet and Facebook Live. This has enabled us to keep the community informed, interact with volunteers and connect isolated families and friends through song requests.

"It is important that we are continually looking for the 'How Next' so that we can respond quickly to the needs of local people..." 


As a result of the changes we have implemented, Springhead Park is now producing approximately 100 meals a day, ensuring the elderly and vulnerable can receive a home cooked meal for just £3 and our Coffee Shop social media following has soared to almost 900.

Our virtual community engagement and activity has also grown our already strong Facebook following by over 200% and this is still increasing daily. Our post reach is now regularly over 7,000 and our first Hull Story Time was viewed by over 4,000 families on YouTube.

My team and I are now thinking about the next phase of COVID-19. The way of life and working we knew before will not return for quite a while. Social distancing and other measures may stay with us for many months, perhaps into next year, with a potentially longer lasting impact on the communities we work with.

It is important that we are continually looking for the 'How Next' so that we can respond quickly to the needs of local people and the challenges and opportunities the 'New Normal' present for us as an organisation.

------------------------

Karen Tozer, Clore Social Fellow 2018, is Programme Manager at Groundwork, an organisation that positively changes places and people's lives, in partnership where possible. Visit @GroundworkHull on Twitter & GroundworkHull on Facebook.

Tags:  casestudy  covid  fellow  fellowship  future  team 

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Seek to understand, think, and then respond

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 10 February 2020
Updated: 23 October 2020

Blog by 2019 Cobseo Emerging Leader Fellow, Katherine Lawrence, Head of Operations at the SCiP Alliance

The Cobseo Emerging Leader programme gave me so much more than I expected. When I plucked up the confidence to submit my application in the hope of expanding my narrow network in the military charity sector, I had no idea how transformative it would be, not only professionally but also personally. I felt welcomed, supported and part of something special and I would advise anyone else considering or starting on this journey to embrace it with openness, curiosity and a willingness to be vulnerable.

With a background in education, I’m used to supporting young people to know themselves, to identify the paths to their goals and to have the confidence to go for it; until now I hadn’t thought how to apply these lessons to myself. The programme provided time to reflect and a safe space to take on challenges and step out of my comfort zone, learning both with and from my fellow participants.

"The programme provided time to reflect and a safe space to take on challenges and step out of my comfort zone."


Some elements of the programme were familiar to me but previously hadn’t deeply touched me; now they were delivered with a thoroughness that was transformative. There were some real ‘oh dear!’ moments as I realised things about myself and my way of interacting that I’d never let myself look at before.

The programme didn’t just make me face these, it gave me tools, motivation and peer accountability which enabled me to change habits of a lifetime. One powerful aspect of the programme was the training in identifying the type of response needed in a situation; I learnt to think about what sort of person I would like to be in an interaction and have been trying, with various degrees of success, to act as that person rather than in my default mode.

I have developed my own leadership identity; I feel more comfortable leading with conviction and am buoyed by a clarity of purpose I have never felt before, confident to take action, take responsibility and handle difficult situations head on.

"I feel more comfortable leading with conviction and am buoyed by a clarity of purpose I have never felt before." 


So, to sum up, I certainly did gain those contacts I had hoped for but so much more; true friends and deep understanding of the context they work in. I have a better understanding of not only my own sector but the wider social sector. I am really excited to be part of the new Clore Social South Central chapter – an opportunity to feel again that challenge, reflection and exhilaration I enjoyed on the Cobseo Emerging Leader programme.


Tags:  challenges  collaboration  fellow  fellowship  future  skills 

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The importance of continuous learning: Ed Tytherleigh’s Experienced Leader journey

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 17 October 2019
Updated: 23 October 2020

Experienced Leader participant, Ed Tytherleigh, Chief Executive of Stoll, writes about his journey through the programme.

My career in the charity sector began as a volunteer 23 years ago. I absolutely loved that first experience – it was in a Drop-in Centre for homeless people in Manchester. Since then, I have led three charities, and after 13 years’ experience of being a Chief Executive, I now appreciate the importance of continuous learning.

I joined the Experienced Leader Programme to absorb as much knowledge as possible. I already have an MBA, and I wanted to keep learning and challenging myself.

I can safely say, I feel more confident and accomplished after taking part in the programme. It made me step back and look at my own leadership, influence and approach more objectively. I now spend more time discussing my team members’ leadership journeys and have definitely experienced a step change in terms of how I empower those around me.

"I can safely say, I feel more confident and accomplished after taking part in the programme."

One particular theme which resonated with me was that of modern leadership. How it is increasingly about relating to others, about understanding what fulfilment means to them and aligning work to wider personal aspirations.

Effective leadership is so much about being true to yourself, and credible and open with others – it is by its very nature an individual journey. As a result, I would advise anyone starting out to consider which areas of their leadership to focus on. The programme offers a very safe space to explore weaknesses along with strengths, so I would urge them to focus on what is right for them at that time.

"Effective leadership is so much about being true to yourself, and credible and open with others."

This is why I would definitely encourage others to take part in the programme. There is so much to learn and explore. So much so that we each benefited from the programme in our own personal way.

--

The Experienced Leader Programme is a 12-month curated leadership development journey designed for social leaders with 6 or more years' experience, which includes 6 fully-funded places for the Armed Forces Charity sector.


Tags:  casestudy  change  fellow  fellowship  future  skills 

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Project Xroads: Bridging the Generation Gap across Businesses

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 29 January 2018
Updated: 23 October 2020

In August 2017 as part of my Clore Social fellowship, I embarked on a four-month sprint with a group of professionals working outside of their day jobs at Marks & Spencer and Unilever to prototype Project Xroads, an intergenerational support network and skills-sharing programme.


Building leaders

The programme was supported by Collectively, who bring together businesses, innovators, activists, facilitators and change makers to explore issues of inequality, and create action plans to address them. As a social sector leader, I wanted to work in the business sector to extend my leadership experience. There was a huge amount of energy and talent in the team - together we grew as leaders as we worked out how change could be achieved.

Multi-generational working

What interested us was the pace of change in the workplace and how it affects people of different ages. People are living and working longer than ever before and today modern offices can house up to four generations.

In the workplace we identified generational differences in digital skills, confidence and legacy. We found a huge opportunity to bring new entry and long career service employees together to exchange life and business skills.

Developing the prototype

We talked to people across the businesses as well as age, youth and volunteering agencies to gain insight on these issues. We spoke to over 200 people through an online survey, face to face interviews and focus groups with long service and new entry employees, learning that 64% of people would be interested in a cross-generation programme.

Our research findings showed that new entry employees would like a safe space to share every day work issues outside of line management discussions. Their workplace challenges include finding information, navigating office politics, and they would like more decision making and presentation skills to help them grow in confidence. They are concerned about the increasing focus on academia to get a job: ‘All that seems to matter is how you do at school - it would be good for people to define success in a different way.’

Long service employees have a desire to share knowledge and benefit others as they felt they could offer support for younger colleagues with self-management. They recognise the pressure of those entering the workforce today to be financially independent. Their workplace challenges include access to technology and worries around financial security and legacy. They would be excited to be part of something new. ‘I'm increasingly concerned with my 'legacy' and whether my work has made a difference’, explained a long service employee.

To pilot the programme, we teamed up employees who had struggled to find work and had already been on a programme to help them enter the workplace, and those who had been in their careers for over 20 years. We found that the digital savvy newer workforce were keen to exchange their skills with experience and a deeper understanding of the business from longer serving colleagues.

Next steps

We want to develop a six-month skills sharing programme with sessions on connection, digital, wellbeing, empowerment, sustainability and community that could be run in every workplace. Our aim is to build solidarity across generations and create platforms for new thinking. Xroads could increase wellbeing at key points across our working lives - it has the potential to initiate a global step change in intergenerational relations. If you are interested in helping develop the programme do get in touch with me via Twitter.

Jane will be talking about perceptions of ageing at an RSA Ideas event on 30 January.

Tags:  casestudy  change  collaboration  fellow  fellowship  skills 

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