A Committee-requested item on Transformation. Councillor Liz Leffman, Leader of the Council, Stephen Chandler, Executive Director (People), and Mark Haynes, Director of Customer and Culture, including Transformation (interim) have been invited to present the report.
The Committee is recommended to NOTE the report having raised any questions on its contents, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom.
Minutes:
The Committee had requested an item on the Council’s approach
to Transformation. Councillor Liz Leffman, Leader of the Council, Stephen
Chandler, Executive Director (People), and Mark Haynes, Director of Customer
and Culture, including Transformation (interim) presented a report on
Transformation to the Committee.
The Leader introduced the report describing how it cut
across the whole organisation and supported the Delivering the Future Together
programme. Staff had been worked with closely with regular well-attended
meetings fostering much positive feedback.
The purpose of the Transformation programme was to support
the nine priorities of the Administration as well as the organisation’s vision
to be the employer, partner, and place shaper of choice. The programme would
also help the organisation become more sustainable, one aspect of which had
already been discussed in the previous item. Partnerships and collaborations
were also an important part of the programme to deliver all the services the
Council wanted while embracing technology.
The Executive Director (People) and Director of Customer and
Culture, including Transformation (interim), presented the programme to the
Committee. Transformation was about large-scale strategic changes that would
help the organisation operate differently, focusing on culture, technology, and
business models within the organisation.
The Transformation programme encompassed five keys areas
which would help the organisation reach its overall objective to become a
sustainable and successful organisation. These included being leaner, fewer
buildings, embracing technology, collaborating with partners, and leveraging
commercial opportunities.
The agreed governance process was explained through the
workings and stages of the Strategic Transformation Programme Board (STPB),
also known as the Design Authority. The transformation route was also explained
throughout the five stages of: identify, define, design, deliver, and close. An
update was given of where various transformation projects were in this
transformation route, including the Commercial Strategy.
An update was also provided on the Delivery Hub Concept.
This included the Programme Management Office, which included the Change
Academy; Business Intelligence, including data and insights; and Communities of
Practice, where like-minded people came together to share knowledge and learn
new skills.
The Committee addressed the following issues:
·
Whether the governance structures were too
bureaucratic and time consuming, in terms of the number of meetings. It was
also unclear to the Committee, how one meeting, within the governance
structure, would affect or impact subsequent meetings. Clear lines of
accountability and governance transparency were recognised as essential.
Officers acknowledged that it was
always about finding a balance between robust governance without creating its
own industry of works. Technologies were being looked at to ensure systems and
processes were as automated and lean as possible, including the use of AI.
Sufficient rigour and governance would remain essential. The system was
constantly being evaluated, including by the Lean Team. This was to make sure
teams and projects were not stepping on each other’s toes, and program managers
were talking to one another with clear roles and responsibilities.
·
How much were consultants being used in
transformation program, and would transformation process leave the organisation
more or less reliant on consultants in the future to
carry out core functions of the organisation?
The Change Academy existed to
ensure OCC staff were properly trained to avoid the organisation needing or
relying on consultants, such as PwC. The support PwC provided in developing the
Transformation programme finished on 2nd April 2024. The programme
had since been operating without external support, though there remained
consultant involvement on a small, time limited piece of work concerning
automation. However, this did not close the door on the organisation taking
advantage of either the expertise or capacity a consultant could offer for a
short-term piece of work.
Officers highlighted their
commitment to ensuring the skills and abilities in the organisation are
developed and growing our own. The creation of a Director of Transformation and
Customer Service was intended to guarantee the capability and capacity within
the organisation grows and matures without the reliance on external
consultants.
The Change Academy graduates were
employees who had put themselves forward and wanted to make this difference to
within the organisation. This demonstrated a commitment to the ethos of
becoming an employer of choice where people could invest in their careers at
OCC. This formed a crucial part of the iterative process of transformation
which would reduce the Council’s reliance on consultants by ensuring people
were trained to continue the process and develop their career.
It was also explained that the term
‘consultancy’ had been used interchangeably. The £4m commitment to savings in
this area was largely focused on agency staff savings.
·
Members also requested an update on whether the
delayering process within the organisation was on track.
Officers were aware of potential for pushback against terms such as
transformation and its feared connotations of restructuring or job losses.
However, officers attempted to alleviate these fears and highlighted the
organisation’s attempts to reframe the concept of transformation as becoming
the employer of choice and being supportive of what OCC staff wanted to do.
The process of delayering had begun with the first tranche focusing at the Director level. Consultation was hoped to be finished
within the week and feedback received allowing the process to move on to more
junior levels within the Organisation.
Meetings
had also been held on a regular basis with staff to guarantee complete
transparency over the whole process. Unions had also been involved in
discussions, and they understood the intentions of the delayering process.
·
Could OCC be the employer of choice if roles
were constantly changing making it difficult to settle into a role? Could the
restructure encourage experienced members of staff to leave? What guarantees
could be given to stakeholders that the Transformation process would create a
more resilient organisation in the long term, rather than simply achieve medium
term financial targets?
Officers did not agree that the
Transformation programme and approach would make it harder to attract or retain
staff. It was argued that the workforce was aware employment is more fluid than
it had ever previously been. An organisation that allowed employees to grow and
develop was seen as a positive. Being the employer of choice was about allowing
this growth and development, by providing staff with opportunities to
experience new things within employment. Transformation would create and offer
these different opportunities. The Change Academy was highlighted as an example
of creating these opportunities.
There had been a tendency in the
past not to look to develop from within the Organisation. Instead, the
Organisation would look externally. This was seen as something the Organisation
had to learn to do and maximise the potential for staff to move across as well
as up and down the Organisation.
The Committee resolved to request the following actions:
· For a Gantt chart, relating to a Transformation project, to be shared with Members of the Committee as an example of the processes carried out.
Supporting documents: