We represent and support 500 organisations working with homeless people in the UK
We represent and support 500 organisations working with homeless people in the UK
Understanding the commissioning process is crucial for homelessness organisations. It can be a challenging process. However, there is a wealth of information regarding commissioning and tendering to support the third sector.
The introduction of the Supporting People (SP) Programme shifted funding for most homelessness services from the former Housing Benefits/grants-based package to commissioning at a local level. Initially the focus was on stabilising existing provision, raising quality and demonstrating strategic relevance. Over the last two years a range of supported housing services have been under review and re-commissioned.
Commissioning is very important issue for Homelessness organisations, as a significant part of their income is gained from providing commissioned services. Some of the concerns are that:
In response to these concerns about the commissioning process, Homeless Link has responded by running a member survey to understand the main issues and collect evidence.
Overall the results show that respondents’ experiences of many of the aspects related to the commissioning process are mixed. Experiences of forming consortium bids and the increased focus on outcomes were both mainly positive.
Conversely, experiences relating to application timescales, the knowledge and expertise of commissioners in public bodies, and the increased focus on price rather than quality, were all mainly negative.
The London Housing Foundation commissioned Supporting People and small homelessness organisations reporting in early 2008 in response to similar concerns. The report found that commissioning was yet to have a major impact due to the first wave concentrating on floating support, but found there was concern about future developments. It reports fears that smaller providers will be at a competitive disadvantage due to a lack of expert bidding capability, a perceived lack of capacity and issues over the value of the tender in relation to their turnover.
Commissioning, when undertaken with expertise and based on a robust analysis of need and understanding of market, is intended to build services around the needs of the service user and to deliver outcomes in the most efficient and effective way. Although, the question has been raised around whether procurement is the best method of providing homelessness services, there is no obvious alternative. The contracting/tendering process can work for homelessness organisations that position themselves to take advantage of it.
To adapt, organisations providing homelessness services need to learn new skills and there are resources that can support them to do this. Organisations need to be able to provide services that are understood by others and demonstrate the outcomes of their activities, develop negotiating skills and work with other partners.
Under Government proposals, Area-based Grants (ABGs) will bring together all local authority and some health budgets into a single pot, including SP, but joint budget partnerships will take some time to develop locally. It is likely that services will be increasingly commissioned from pooled resources and it will be vital that housing and homelessness services can demonstrate that they offer quality services, demonstrate impact and outcomes and are responsive, efficient and cost-effective.
What is Commissioning and Procurement?
How organisations can prepare for the Commissioning process
Acevo's Full Cost Recovery website provides information and support around implementing full cost recovery, including a full cost recovery toolkit.
Improving Support brings together resources, evidence and good practice to strengthen support services available to third sector organisations.
The Social Enterprise Coalition has produced a free guide: More for Your Money - A Guide to Procuring from Social Enterprises which explains why you should consider procuring goods and services from a social enterprise, and what you can do to encourage social enterprises to successfully compete for contracts.