Jim Clifford

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Jim Clifford [email protected] 07860 386 081

National Housing Federation: Audit Committees 2011 Maximising Benefit: assessing the social return on investment

www.cass.city.ac.uk

www.cfps.org.uk

• Jim Clifford is Head of Non-Profit Advisory Services at leading Third sector advisors and auditors, Baker Tilly. • Jim has authored a range of high-profile Social Impact studies, and been instrumental in developing methodologies t o make them more accessible • He is a Visiting Fellow at Cass Business School where he is undertaking research into evaluative protocols for transactional decision making (linking Social Impact with conventional valuation and brand valuation). • He is a director of the Centre for Public Scrutiny, an independent charity which supports scrutineers and the development of approaches to scrutiny in public sector and other bodies . • The views expressed in this paper are the author’s own, and do not imply any corporate position by Baker Tilly, Cass Business School or its academic staff, or of CfPS. 2

Maximising Benefit: assessing the social return on investment • What is social impact, and why measure it ? • How does SROI work ? • Applying it effectively: balancing validity and credibility with knowledge transfer

• Examples • Applying it in social housing • Some questions to consider 3

Social Impact, and Outcomes measurement...... • SROI is increasingly being recognised • ..........and better understood

• Government moves towards project-based, or outcomes-linked payment • “Outcomes-based Government” report from CSJ

• Increasing recognition of • the need for clear measurement and • the acceptance of this approach

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Measuring outcomes Importance of financial measures: • to funders in Government • for prioritisation decisions • for delivery measures in contracts • to philanthropists • in competing for capital • ..and in public scrutiny.......have a look at www.cfps.org 5

Measuring outcomes • A view of your achievement.... • ....but whose view..... • ....and when and why ?

• Do you need: • • • • •

Past or future measures ? Qualitative or quantitative ? .....or financial ? To measure it all....or some of it ? To be measured, or to understand your measurement

• Only one tried and tested financial measurement model......... 6

SROI is being seen used in different ways..... Influence on funders

Alliance of SSCs and BIS Alana House and MoJ North Lanarkshire Leisure and Local Authority

Influence in restructuring the landscape

SSCs and the change in the White Paper in 2009 Foundation of feedback through UKCES on SfH and SfC for DoH consultation paper “Liberating the NHS: Developing the Healthcare Workforce” Somestic Adoption and Fostering

Influence on project managers seeking to increase impact (internal decisions)

Most of the studies done, for example Witney Children’s Centre

Influence on project partners

Various, inc SSCs, Princess Royal Trust for Carers, NLL

Influence in LA funders

Witney, NLL, and various others

Use as agents for change in policy influence networks

Adoption network around PACT’s SROI and BBC2 “A Home for Maisie” – see http://www.baaf.org.uk/node/3356

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Where do outcomes fit ?

Inputs to

Activities

to

Outputs to

Primary

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Outcomes

to

Impacts

Secondary

How does it work ?

Σ

Impact = Outcomes – (deadweight + alternative attribution + displacement)

Deadweight The outcome that would have happened anyway

Alternative attribution The outcome that arose as a result of other interventions – importance of recognising the work of others

Displacement The disadvantage or reduction in positive outcome, or social cost arising as a consequence

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...a developing protocol.... • Action research methodology • Life course analysis • Financial proxy development • Looking more widely (with others) at impacts: • Primary • Secondary

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Developing your theory of change..... •Identify the right perspective: whose view is it ?

Sound research draws the best from the evidential base ....

•In what terms will you define the change ?

and considers its validity in this context:

•Establish the change....from what to what ?

•External sources:

•Identify how that change comes about ...from which activities ? •Test your findings

• Similar studies • Related work • Relevant source material and statistics

•Internal sources: • Existing research • Opinion of managers and others involved • New research with service users and other stakeholders

...doing the numbers • Compare what will happen against what would have happened

• Typically six stages of logic: • 2 internal validated data • 2 external validated data • 2 reasonable, conservative assumptions

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Action Research in practice • An iterative process, based on the knowledge of representatives of five carers’ centres

• Four working group meetings interspersed with one-to-one calls with participants • Allowing the answer to emerge from debating realistic case studies • Staying close to the data

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Some detailed measurement – Example 1 ATSW Efficiency savings

Assumption Benefits (£m)

Saving per site (£) Total acute/independent theatres Proportion adopting ATSWs project in year 1 Proportion of benefit due to development partner Projected annual cost saving achieved post roll-out Duration of savings (years) Discount rate Annuity factor Present value of savings for year 1 roll-out

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367,000 381 5.5% 7,690,485 35% 5.0 10.0 3.5% 8.3 41.6

Some detailed measurement – Example 2 Summary Table for PACT Adoption

NPV(£)

Additional capacity achieved per annum

17,135,903

Incremental gain on replacements for State approvals from reduced disruptions Increased eduational attainment Reduction in NEET population Displacement: Loss of tax revenue from fostering Total evaluated

1,351,233

Supporting data on numbers "Phone call list" of applicants

Incremental gain on replacements for State approvals from reduced disruptions

262,586

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Less: initially declined as unlikely to place Less: declined because of lack of capacity or lost 2,832,987 during early stages of process

-2 -18

Adopters accepted and taken to approval Less: additional parents that would not have been -1,022,805 approved by Local Authorities through lack of capacity or otherwise Net additional adopters

Couples taking two children

50%

20

-17 3

£20,559,903

Equivalent multiple to get number of children placed

150%

4.5

5%

-0.225

Less: disruptions in PACT placement (assumed)

4 The evaluation is focussed on the completed placements from those that would otherwise have disrupted assuming State adoptions disrupt in

40% of cases, that is an incremental disruption rate of

35%

....and the quicker placement for the whole population 1.4 Incremental disruptions (care costs) assuming an age at placement of

4 years

assuming an age at disruption of

6 years Giving:

0 years of the

under 3

band of

0

2 years of the

Age 3-8

band of

62,707

4 years of the

Age 8-12

band of

264,144

6 years of the

Age 12-18

band of

623,458

Aggregate per child Less:

950,309

Incremental costs of placement supervision

0

Present Value per child

950,309

Cost for whole cohort of incremental disruptions

1,330,433

4 quicker placements than would be possible in State system

10 weeks

Additional LAC care costs age

15

Total for alternatively sourced placements

4

at giving:

5200 for each child 20,800 £1,351,233

Some detailed measurement – Example 3

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Measurement in Housing Associations....some thoughts to start yours.... Finding the difference......... primary effect

Finding the difference..... secondary effect

Reducing chaos in lifestyle for parents, leading to a number of effects

Children are cared for and supported; they stay in school, achieve more and have a foundation for adult life that involves access to employment

Access to employment Parents have a better track of health and mental health Reduced need for third party support for the family

Reduction in crime

Managing debts, either generally or in relation to housing; reduced crime

Longer-term escalation of debt and need avoided; economic loss; mental health aspects

Access to employment: productivity

Demonstrating a work ethic to children, wider access to supportive networks; ability to self-support; mental health gains

Ability to find, and engage in a local community to which they can contribute

Children better supported; families more engaged; health and mental health effects

Supported or easy access to health services : better use at an early stage

Ability to care for children and sustain employment Reduced crime, NEET-ism,

Access to home-based care provision: sustaining better health and lowering the risk of escalation

Ability to care for and support the children; violence and marital breakdown risk reduced

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How we do it........

......then think........ • Effects on policing • Effects on the Fire Brigade • Effects on environment • Effects on local traders and employers (from negative to positive ?) • Healthy eating • And others............ 18

...the non-profit’s choice.......... • Be part of it, and its development • ...or wait until someone else requires it of you......

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Questions and next steps.......... • How have you evaluated and presented outcomes to date • What do you need, and what do those working with you need ? • Now or later ? What will happen if we delay ? • How, and with whom, can the results be used ? • Should you club with, lead, or reference another organisation ? • Which projects (units of research) ? • How best to make it happen - practically, and for credibility?

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