Title: More than Hope and Goodwill:
1More than Hope and Goodwill Workforce Models
for Integrated Service Delivery
Talia van Gils Integrated Skills Development
Strategy
2Workforce Models for Integrated Service
Can we rely on the hope that all understand and
are committed to the same ideals and prepared to
work seamlessly to achieve the (integrated
service) centres goals? From my experience
hope and goodwill is not likely to be sufficient.
- Kaye Colmer
- Multi-disciplinary Teams are Deliberately
Constructed
3Workforce Models for Integrated Service
4Workforce Planning Development
- Planning for the size and composition of the
workforce required to meet current and future
demand - Managing the supply of a workforce capable of
meeting demand - The attraction, recruitment, retention and
development of workers.
5Workforce Planning Development
Workforce Planning Development Work
Design Workforce Role Design Attraction /
Re-engagement Recruitment / Re-deployment Developm
ent Retention
6Collaboration
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- Networked practitioners
- May involve regular cross-agency case mgt
meetings - May then involve multi-agency approach to some
cases - This can be supported by common assessment
referral tools - Importance of lead practitioner or agency
- Examples
- Gold Coast Homelessness Network
- Canadian Regional Family Domestic Violence Teams
7Multi-Disciplinary or Cross-Agency Team
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- Workers are employed by their home agency and
seconded to or deployed within a multi-agency
team - Often strategic level steering team
- Dual line mgt supervision from home agency and
team leader - Examples
- Victorian Opening Doors - Local Area Service
Networks - Warrington Borough UK Behaviour Education
Support Teams
8Integrated Service Hub
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- Co-location of services and commitment to
multi-agency approach to each client - Governance and management structures are
redesigned to support this - Service delivery workers remain employed by home
agency (although corporate services such as IT,
HR and Finance are often shared) - Examples
- Frontyard Centre for young people Melbourne
City Mission
9Consortium or Partnership
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- Workers are contracted by a consortium of
organisations with a shared target group and
deployed in short to medium term roles within one
or more agencies at a time - Governance frameworks and policy/management
structures are redesigned to support this - Workers with specific skills and experiences can
be deployed and developed as required - Similar to MDT except for employment structure
- Partial Examples
- Organisational partnerships used in the
healthcare industry - Shared casual labour pool seen in disability and
in health
10Merger
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- Two organisations with compatible goals and
target groups become one - This is what small agencies fear when they hear
the words joined up service - Most of the corporate literature on workforce
integration is about strategies for making two
workforces one, often with little hope and no
goodwill!
11Conversation 1 Comparing the models
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- What are the likely strengths and challenges of
each model from a workforce perspective? - What strategies can you suggest to support
implementation of this kind of model?
12Elements of a Workforce Plan
- Work Design - How do new system and service
model/s change the work that will be done? How is
the work structured and divided? - Workforce Profile who is our current workforce?
Who might we be able to bring in? What are the
issues and strategies arising from the data? - Skill Analysis what is core and what is
critical? what do we have and what do we need?
Where do we need skills? How will we develop
skills? - Workforce Design Innovation How do we divide
the work into roles that are attractive,
sustainable and (at least partially) match the
current and future available workforce? What are
the staffing structures and models we need? - Attraction, Recruitment Retention How do we
work together rather than compete for staff? How
do we offer carer development pathways?
132. Workforce Profile for SAAP Services
- Demographics
- AGE 27 of QLD Community Service workers are
aged between 25 and 34 years. SAAP services have
a good spread across all age ranges. - GENDER Over 70 of QLD Community Service
workers are female. Just over 80 of SAAP workers
are female. Percentages of male workers are
higher in management and executive roles. - BASIS OF EMPLOYMENT - SAAP services have less
part-time, casual and fixed term contract
employees than industry averages. There are far
less volunteers.
142. Workforce Profile for SAAP Services
- Average staff turnover across all Australian
industries 12.6 - ACOSS 2007 survey showed turnover of 23
nationally for community services industry - Average turnover of 25 for QLD services surveyed
- 31 of SAAP services report an attrition rate of
51-60 of their direct support workers
152. Workforce Profile for SAAP Services
- Employee Satisfaction Survey (n395)
- Tenure 46 of respondents have worked for their
current employer for less than 2 years and 27
plan to leave within the next 2 years. 10 of
SAAP workers plan to leave community services
altogether. - Attraction exciting and challenging role,
ability to contribute to individual well-being,
and flexible work environment. - Reasons to leave to gain further experience,
inadequate salaries and lack of career
development opportunities. - Reasons to stay flexible work environment, team
oriented work environment, giving back to the
community, effective line manager - 47 do not believe their salary reflects the
level of their contribution to the organisation. - 60 believe they do not have opportunities for
career advancement.
162. Workforce Profile for SAAP Services
- Qualifications and job roles
- 38 of general respondents had a bachelors
degree. This was 40 for SAAP services. However
around 20 had Cert III or IV as highest qual and
another 10 Senior or Junior Certificate. - c.f. Workforce Capacity Review which identified
a degree as the minimum qualification for most
roles - Far more employees work within direct support
(rather than professional direct) roles than
expected - Implications for use of VET and other systems
for initial training
17Conversation 2 Implications of the Data
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- What surprised or interested you about the
workforce profile data we collected? - What are the implications of the data in
designing roles within an integrated service
system? - What are the implications for attracting and
recruiting new workers?
183. Skills Analysis
- Identification of core and critical skills and a
skill development plan - Warrington Borough Council UK
- Integrated Childrens Workforce Strategy
- Managers Toolkit for Service Workforce
Development - Core skills - Multi-agency working, Sharing
information - Critical Skills change mgt for leaders
- Domestic Violence Training Program South Africa
- Shared Training Program as the foundation of
integrated service - Core skills information sharing, interagency
cooperation - Symcor (integrating international workforces)
- Connect help desk staff with service design
staff - Redefine core processes and identify critical
workforces - Training/Planning program change mgt and
habituating - communication responsiveness
193. Skills Planning
- Rapid change and multiple new ideas cause
cognitive overload. This is not the same as
resistance to change - Staff response to cognitive overload is to
retreat to the known - (multi-disciplinary teams) will need to
undertake extensive planning to mitigate against
the human tendency towards allegiance to a tribe
Kaye Colmer - If we want people to work in new ways we need to
provide supports prompts, mentoring, resources
etc. that will facilitate transfer of new
behaviour to their regular workplace repertoire
204. Workforce Design Innovation
- What models of employment and deployment are
useful? - How do we design roles to fit systems and
service design? - Workforce Blueprint project identifies core
skills and skills needed for new work. We can
then think about how the work can be divided into
areas where workers have some skills (and may
need to develop others) - Important to consider roles that will be
attractive to existing potential workforce - May need to develop transition roles that
bridge the gap between skills practices workers
have now and skills practices they will need to
develop
215. Attraction, Recruitment Retention
Emerging Issues
- Change and innovation strategies building trust
- Attrition rates are likely to increase in the
first year of change implementation - Opportunities for planning career development
pathways and joint attraction and recruitment
strategies - Jointly planning implementing staff development
is essential to underwrite joined-up service
delivery - Managing boundary issues clients, workers,
policy, supervision - Differences in pay and conditions
- Explicit link between roles/tasks and outcomes
22Conversation 3 So how can we help?
Workforce Models for Integrated Service
- ISD is committed to supporting the SAAP sector to
plan and implement workforce changes and to
sustain and develop workers - What sort of support would you find useful?
- What needs to be state-wide and what needs
- to happen at a regional or local-area level?
23Steering the Future
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