This months blog from HSA Canada comes from Jill Faber.
As promised from my blog in October, I want to share what I have
tried and learned in helping organizations strategically plan for
group homes and accommodation services.
Though my heart rests with the belief that every single person
has the right to their own home, as they define and with the people
they want… the reality is that accommodation services are still
plentiful. Why not make them better now..?
By using person centred strategic planning methods,
organizations can not only improve their present services, but can
plan for the future based on what the people who use their services
are telling them. They can plan for a more person centred future.
Sometimes that distance from what is to what
needs to be seems overwhelming. I believe this
kind of planning is the "bridge" organizations need.
By having a strategic plan, the re-distribution of resources can
be done over time and all with a clear and stated vision in mind,
with real information directing and prioritizing the journey.
The strategic process that I've been using is by no means
revolutionary. It merely uses what we already know about person
centered thinking and blends it with common elements found in every
strategic planning method.
Some of what I have used in this process was taken directly
from…
From Individual to Strategic Change: Driving Change With
Person Centred Information
Helen Sanderson and Max Neill
With Gill Bailey, Helen Smith, Lorraine Erwin, Alison Short and
Charlotte Sweeney
--Thanks for the guidance and inspiration!
There are 7 steps in the strategic planning process:
1.Preparation
At the beginning of a strategic planning process it is essential
that the strategic decision makers come together to clarify exactly
what information they want and how they will use this to inform
strategic decision-making.
1. What information do we want to gather from
people?
2. Who are the people?
3. How will we gather the information?
a. What tools will be used?
b. Who will gather the information?
c. How will we manage the logistics of the
process?
4. Who needs to be at the Strategic Planning
Day(s)?
a. Who needs to be looking at this information
to be able to use it to inform strategic decisions?
b. Who else would find this helpful?
2.Gathering Information
3.Transfer the information into a useable
format.
Some organizations may wish to use their own survey or
information gathering tool.
This, in combination with person centred tools becomes a highly
effective way of gathering the needed information.
The One Page Profile for home became the "useable format" in
order to think and plan how people wanted to live now and in their
future.
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4.Analyze
Depending on the mere amount of information and size of the
accommodation services, the actual strategic planning sessions
could range from 2-4 days.
Here is a meeting map of my last session in Hamilton, Ontario,
Canada.
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5.Action Plans
6.Sharing Information
7.Evaluate
You can't have strategic planning without the development of
action plans.
Usually action plans are developed in tandem for three
groups:
1- The person and their support network-
Strategic planning can bring up more questions than answers
sometimes. Therefore the first steps are to go back and ask further
questions from the people and their supports. Checking in to see if
we've got it right, share what was learned and involve people in
the next steps.
2- Teams- Good planning will bring issues of
support to light that require change. Teams leave with a plan of
how they can make the lives better for the people they are
supporting right now.
3-The Strategic Plan- This is the culmination
of all the group work and blue sky thinking that happens over the
two days. I encourage people to think about the immediate and the
long term. In addition, building the evaluation of progress right
into the strategic plan will ensure it happens.
If you want more information on my strategic planning adventures
and what I have learned, please contact me directly, jillf@hsacanada.ca