This remarkable example of innovation concerns Portsmouth City Council’s housing management service and the organisation of repairs on its housing stock. The council provides social housing to over 17,000 tenants and as you can imagine that also involves responsibility for an awful lot of repair work and repair workers.
From a tenant’s point of view if a repair needs doing on your council house such as a leaking roof or a faulty heating system, you want the repair to be carried out in one visit , at a convenient time, and you want it fixed properly i.e. for repair workers: “ to do the right repair at the right time”. Not unreasonable!
Alarmingly, the start to finish time for a repair was a lengthy 24 days, and some repairs required 4 or more visits before the job was complete. Despite tenants complaining bitterly about the service, “the service was praised by inspectors” and was meeting government targets and budget constraints. This was achieved by:
- fragmenting a single job into many smaller jobs and setting targets at this level
- patching up problems rather than allowing tradesmen to fix the root cause.
This emphasis on short term targets contributed to a loss of focus on the fundamental purpose of the repair system and a major re-think was needed.
Systems Thinker John Seddon and his colleagues worked with the council staff and their contractors to enable them to think about the repair management service as a whole:
- What is its purpose?
- Who are the people involved?
- What are the processes?
- How should the service be measured?
. . . and most importantly how do the people, processes and structures relate to each other?
. . . and how should they work together to achieve the purpose of the system?
Using the knowledge gained the council set about a major re-design of the service placing the tenant at the centre within an idealised three step process:
- Ensure access to property
- Diagnose the problem
- Complete all necessary repairs
Tradesmen diagnose the problem and decide on the best way to solve it, and all necessary materials are brought to the property to complete the repairs i.e. “to do the right repair at the right time”.
As a result the start to finish time for repairs has been reduced from 24 days to 7 days, over 90% of jobs are completed right first time and a customer satisfaction rating of 99% achieved.
The innovation illustrated by this case is one of a public sector organisation adopting a new way of thinking that fundamentally affects how they operate. The Council’s housing management service took the bold step of examining the way they work at present, seeing the shortcomings and being ready to adopt a totally new holistic and systems way of thinking.
For further information about the Portsmouth City Council Case see below, all quotations are taken from this article:
A Systems Approach to Housing Repairs, by John Seddon and Brendan O’Donovan
Also see the video at the end of this interesting article, it illustrates the problem faced by the repair service using a different case i.e. repairing holes in roads:
“We were so busy, we just didn’t know” Seeing the whole system always comes as a surprise”
Reference for General Concept of “System” (Schoderbek et al., 1990)
Comments or observations are most welcome. I would love to hear of similar cases.