Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Is this diagram something that you can identify with?
If you are a Third Sector organisation based in the UK, Pro Bono O.R. can help. Please get in touch for further information.
Monday, 27 January 2014
Could you use your skills to help third sector organisations across the UK? Find out how to become a volunteer.
I have now been
managing the project for four months and momentum is really starting to
build. We have completed one project,
have four projects underway and several others that are about to commence. It is a really exciting venture to be a part
of and to see how O.R. can really benefit third sector organisation. As the word spreads about Pro Bono O.R. the
demand for it increases and as such I am writing to see if you would consider
becoming a volunteer.
The aim of OR Pro
Bono
·
To help
third sector organisations to do a better job, impacting upon desired outcomes,
and build capacity by using the skills of volunteer O.R. analysts and
consultants both established and student.
·
To
promote awareness and understanding of the benefits of O.R. across the third
sector and to wider audiences.
·
To give
O.R. analysts an opportunity to practise in a wider arena and develop their
knowledge and skills.
The role of a volunteer:
·
Work with potential
users to specify projects;
·
Undertake projects,
either individually or in teams;
·
Write up and/or present
their work wherever appropriate;
·
Mentor junior volunteers
who need help
Requirements to become of volunteer:
·
Member of The OR Society
Or,
·
Studying in HE and with
Tutor endorsement for the project? Or,
·
Min 1st degree in O.R.
related subject? Or,
·
Practitioner with a
track record? Or,
·
The OR Society
accreditation? Or,
·
Part of the O.R.
Community
If you are interested in becoming a
volunteer, send an email to felicity.mcleister@theorsociety.com or visit http://www.theorsociety.com/Pages/Probono/Probono.aspx
For further
information please see my blog: http://probonoor.blogspot.co.uk/ or connect with me on LinkedIn
(Felicity McLeister) and Twitter (@FMcLeister)
Wednesday, 22 January 2014
Pro Bono O.R. partners with BVSC
Pro Bono O.R. is proud to be a provider for BVSC's SkillsXchange programme.
'SkillsXchange Birmingham is a one-stop shop for voluntary and community organisations in Birmingham to access pro-bono business support services from local companies.'
http://www.bvsc.org/transform/skillsxchange
Looking forward to helping more even more third sector organisations
'SkillsXchange Birmingham is a one-stop shop for voluntary and community organisations in Birmingham to access pro-bono business support services from local companies.'
http://www.bvsc.org/transform/skillsxchange
Looking forward to helping more even more third sector organisations
Tuesday, 21 January 2014
Tuesday, 14 January 2014
Unlocking the Value of Data for Charities and Other Voluntary groups. Free event. 26 March 2014 @3pm London - venue tbc.
The OR Society - OR In the Third Sector
Unlocking the Value of Data for Charities and Other Voluntary groups
With the advent of fast computers and the internet, the total amount of world data is forecast to grow 50-fold in the next decade, yet only 1% of this data is currently used productively.This event will explore how charities and voluntary groups can use data to improve their impact and make better decisions.
Our speakers will describe their real life experiences of using data and demonstrate the benefits that effective data analysis has brought to their organisations. The list of speakers includes:
Mat Ilic is the Policy and Research Director of Only Connect. Mat will talk about how to use data analysis to produce useful evidence in charities
Colin Stewart is a consultant Analyst at Caversham Analytics. Using maps of data and analysis to support local decision making using quantum GIS and Microsoft Excel.
Tracey Gyateng is the Project Manager for NPC’s "Data for Impact" stream of work. Tracey will talk about increasing access to government administrative datasets to measure the impact of the voluntary and community sector.
Date: 26th March 2014
Time: Start time 15:00 hrs
Venue: NPC, 185 Park Street, London, SE1 9BL
Price: Entry is free of charge
To book your place please e-mail John Holt at jholt@danielholt1992.com
Tuesday, 7 January 2014
How to make bolder decisions with less gut feelings
No matter what size or at what stage your organisation is, no matter what
kind of decision, problem, or opportunity you face, there's probably a way for Pro Bono Operational Research (O.R.) to help.
O.R. consistently
delivers significant value – strategic to tactical, top-line to bottom-line –
to the organisations and executives who use it. Benefits from O.R. include:
- Business insight: Providing quantitative and business
insight into complex problems.
- Business performance: Improving business performance by
embedding model-driven intelligence into an organisation’s information
systems to improve decision making.
- Cost reduction: Finding new opportunities to decrease cost
or investment.
- Decision making: Assessing the likely outcomes of
decision alternatives and uncovering better alternatives.
- Forecasting: Providing a better basis for more accurate
forecasting and planning.
- Improved scheduling: Efficiently scheduling staff,
equipment, events, and more.
- Planning: Applying quantitative techniques to support
operations, tactical planning, and strategic planning.
- Pricing: Dynamically pricing products and services.
- Productivity: Helping organisations find ways to make
processes and people more productive.
- Profits: Increasing revenue or return on investment;
increasing market share.
- Quality: Improving quality as well as quantifying and
balancing qualitative considerations.
- Recovery: Gaining greater control and achieving turn-around.
- Resources: Gaining greater utilisation from limited
equipment, facilities, money, and personnel.
- Risk: Measuring risk quantitatively and uncovering
factors critical to managing and reducing risk.
- Throughput: Increasing speed or throughput and
decreasing delays.
Here
is what a few of the organisations who’ve received Pro Bono support had to say:
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 three projects
underway with the RSPCA, Work for Us and
Harrogate & Ripon Centres for Voluntary Service and a further project
about to commence. 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. the third sector organisations across the UK.
For more information please
see my webpage, blog, twitter or LinkedIn page.
@FMcLeister
Felicity McLeister
Monday, 6 January 2014
Tweet chat about Pro Bono O.R. (Operational Research)
Third sector?
Find out how Pro Bono O.R. can help. Just interested to find out more? Join me
for a tweet chat from 2-3pm on Mon 13th January #chator. Please share this
information.
Operational
Research (O.R.) is the discipline of applying appropriate analytical
methods. By using techniques such as problem structuring
methods 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
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.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Pro Bono OR moving elsewhere
Pro Bono OR projects can now be found here: https://www.theorsociety.com/get-involved/pro-bono-or/open-pro-bono-projects/ This blog will no...
-
Pro Bono O.R . is a scheme that was launched by The OR Society in 2013 (a pilot scheme started in 2011) that places skills-based volunteers ...
-
Pro Bono OR projects can now be found here: https://www.theorsociety.com/get-involved/pro-bono-or/open-pro-bono-projects/ This blog will no...
-
As those who work in the O.R. field know, if you are talking to someone outside the field it is quite likely that they will look at you with...