Below are a few comments from organisations who've received Pro Bono support:
Crimestoppers: ‘We've benefited hugely from your work and support in all areas of the project, and from an organisational perspective you've enabled us to take a highly professional approach to increasing the efficiency of our charity.’ (Performance Manager)
Participle: ‘I have just started to digest the work you did for us and wanted to say a huge thank you. This will be so critical to our growth and I am very grateful indeed for your time and expertise. The team have described you as "a joy to work with”.’ (Principle Partner)
The Cardinal Hume Centre “We valued the opportunity to work collaboratively and without doubt benefited from the analyst’s expertise and commitment to the project.” (Operations Director)
We currently have two projects under-way with the RSPCA and Harrogate & Ripon Centres for Voluntary Service and several other enquiries at various stages. We have 60 volunteers across the UK who are currently available to work on projects. This puts us in a great position to offer Pro Bono O.R. across the UK.
For more information please see my blog (http://probonoor.blogspot.co.uk/), twitter (@FMcLeister) or LinkedIn page (Felicity McLeister).
If you are interested in receiving pro bono support, becoming a volunteer or just want to find out more information, please write to felicity.mcleister@theorsociety.com quoting ‘OR in the Third Sector’.
Monday, 25 November 2013
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Explaining O.R. to a non O.R. professional
In a nutshell, operational research (O.R.) is the
discipline of applying advanced analytical methods to help make better
decisions.
By using techniques such as problem structuring methods (sometimes known
as 'Soft O.R.') and mathematical modelling to analyse complex situations,
operational research gives executives the power to make more effective
decisions and build more productive systems based on:
- More
complete data
- Consideration
of all available options
- Careful
predictions of outcomes and estimates of risk
- The
latest decision tools and techniques
Once a good or better way of proceeding has been identified, O.R. people
are often central to the implementation of the proposed change.
Organisations may seek a very wide range of operational improvements -
for example, greater efficiency, better customer service, higher quality or
lower cost. Whatever the business engineering aim, O.R. can offer the
flexibility and adaptability to provide objective help.
Most of the problems O.R. tackles are messy and complex, often entailing
considerable uncertainty. O.R. can use advanced quantitative methods,
modelling, problem structuring, simulation and other analytical techniques to
examine assumptions, facilitate an in -depth understanding and decide on
practical action.
O.R. Pro Bono is offering free support to Third Sector organisations in the UK. To find out more please email felicity.mcleister@theorsociety.com
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Pro Bono O.R. Update
I have now
been in post for almost 2 months so I thought it would be good to give you an
update on how things are going. I am
pleased to say, so far the project it thriving.
We already have one project under way with the RSPCA, another one about
to commence with Harrogate & Ripon Centres for Voluntary Service and several
other enquiries at various stages.
A big thank
you to all the volunteers who have signed up to the volunteer’s database. We currently have 60 volunteers across the UK
who are currently available to work on projects. This puts us in a great position to offer Pro
Bono O.R. across the UK.
The biggest
challenge now is continuing to increase the awareness of O.R. to the Third
Sector and promoting the Pro Bono O.R. project.
Since getting
started I have discovered the power of social media. Having never tweeted, blogged or been on
LinkedIn I wasn't aware what a useful tool social media in the work place
was. As I started my journey of discovery
I realised the potential that social media could tap in to. I have already has 6 potential enquiries from
LinkedIn, have been retweeted and followed by various organisations and have
had a blog published on Reach’s website (skilled volunteering charity). I have become a big fan and would recommend it
as a great networking/promotional tool.
If
you are interested in receiving pro bono support, becoming a volunteer or just
want to find out more information, please write to felicity.mcleister@theorsociety.com quoting ‘OR in the Third Sector’.
Twitter: @FMcLeister
LinkedIn: Felicity McLeister
You may also
be interested in our Third Sector Special Interest Group (ORiTS) http://www.theorsociety.com/Pages/SpecialInterest/ORThirdSector.aspx
Thank you for
taking the time to read this and I look forward to hearing from you.
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Monday, 4 November 2013
Third Sector Special Interest Group: Pro Bono experience from both the volunteer providing analytical support and the social enterprise he worked with.
Ian's Pro Bono assignment with Participle got this response from their Principal Partner: 'I have just started to digest the work you did for us and wanted to say a huge thank you. This will be so critical to our growth and I am very grateful indeed for your time and expertise. The team have described you as "a joy to work with" so I do hope that we might be able to persuade you to collaborate with us again in the future.' So when Ian talks about success factors for a pro bono project, covering how a pro bono assignment differs from a paid one and sharing some lessons learnt, he knows what he's talking about.
Tips for pro
bono OR projects
The Third Sector Special Interest Group met in October to hear about the
experiences of a pro bono O.R. project from both the volunteer providing
analytical support and the social enterprise he worked with. Ian Seath of
Improvement Skills consulting and Amanda Briden of Participle both offered
lessons learned from their pro bono O.R. project, providing some useful tips
for those offering and receiving pro bono O.R. support.
Three top tips from Ian were:
·
Give the same commitment to pro bono
projects as you would to your day job.
Ian says: “I believe it’s important not to treat these projects as “free
consulting” and something to be fitted into a busy schedule if there’s
time. These are “proper” assignments and
need to be managed in the same way you would any other client engagement. Sticking to deadlines agreed with the client
are particularly important, otherwise you might send the signal that you are
just “fitting it in” around other projects.”
·
Don’t overload the pro bono work with
excessive project management.
Ian says: “In my experience, some of the organisations I’ve worked with have
been relatively “immature” in their management thinking and therefore a light
touch approach to project management is called for. More informal approaches and regular
communication about progress tend to work better than the use of project
templates and formality.”
·
Be clear about the nature of the
volunteering role.
Ian says: “It’s really important to have a discussion early on about the type
of role the client expects you to play.
Do they want you as a “pair of hands”, an “expert”, or do they want to
work collaboratively and work out joint solutions? That discussion can help avoid any
misunderstandings or mis-matched expectations.”
Ian also
reflected that pro bono O.R. brought benefits to the analyst providing support
as well as to the organisation being supported: “I really enjoy working with
people who both need and want help, and who are very appreciative of the sort
of support they wouldn’t normally be able, or prepared, to pay for. The diversity of the Third Sector also makes
it fascinating and offers an incredibly broad range of opportunities to work
with interesting people on worthwhile projects.”
Ian’s
presentation is now available on the Third Sector SIG pages of the OR Society
website.
Three top tips from Amanda were:
·
Work with the right volunteer.
Amanda asks herself: “Will this person be flexible? Can they handle changes to the scope of the
work and moving deadlines? Are they
willing to travel to meet you? Do they
want to participate in your service to better understand the work that they are
helping move forward? Are they motivated
to produce a final product and document the key decisions that were made to
reach it?”
·
Provide the right incentives.
Before they start, Amanda likes to ask volunteers: “What do you want to get out
of the experience?” She makes an effort
to deliver on this in order to ensure that the experience is not only valuable
to the organisation, but also to those offering pro bono support.
·
Build in lead time.
Amanda says that in the future, she’ll coordinate earlier and more consistently
with internal and external stakeholders so that their inputs and feedback can
be captured in a timely fashion. She would
like to minimise the amount of time volunteers are put ‘on hold’ waiting for key
decisions to be made.
Note:
Participle is a social enterprise
based in London which works with and for the public to create new types of
public services that make a real difference in everyday lives - designing,
developing and taking to scale innovative solutions to social challenges.
Improvement Skills is a
consulting firm which encourages its employees to offer one day a month as pro
bono support to third sector organisations.
Case studies
See how Pro Bono OR has helped several Third Sector organisations.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/feow3cmvxskithm/About%20O%20R%20%20and%20Case%20studies%20Mar%202014.ppt
https://www.dropbox.com/s/feow3cmvxskithm/About%20O%20R%20%20and%20Case%20studies%20Mar%202014.ppt
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Pro Bono OR moving elsewhere
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