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Policy&Practice

August 2016

30

technology

speaks

By B.J. Walker and Tiffany Dovey Fishman

Transformational Human Services

Moving to a New Paradigm

Graphic courtesy of Deloitte University Press

A

lthough its core mission is to

improve the trajectory of people’s

lives, human services has long been

more transactional than transforma-

tional. Success is defined primarily by

the timeliness and accuracy of transac-

tions rather than their results. This has

led to a model in which “outcomes” are

in fact merely outputs: Did we issue

food stamps in a timely fashion? Did

we respond to 95 percent of our hotline

calls within 24 hours?

But transactional measures alone

cannot effectively support the kind

of outcomes for which human service

systems were created. When human

service systems experience their worst

failures, where it matters the most, it

often becomes obvious that traditional

performance indicators do not guar-

antee meaningful, mission-critical

outcomes for the people who rely on

these services.

Moving beyond a strictly transac-

tional business model to one that is

also transformational requires action

on three fronts (see Figure 1).

Principle 1: Accelerating

the Value of Self-Service

Through Automation

Caseworkers are the front line,

and often the people best situated

to improve the trajectory of clients’

lives. Too often, however, they are

shackled by paperwork and kept from

the hands-on work that actually trans-

forms lives.

Thanks to technological advances,

agencies can dramatically reduce

the paperwork burden through more

robust self-service models that enable

caseworkers to redirect their time and

energy to the work that draws many to

social work to begin with.

Many states are pursuing "no-touch”

or “low-touch" eligibility systems that

automate medical-assistance applica-

tions and processing. The systems use

data exchanges and real-time verifica-

tions requiring minimal caseworker

intervention. The time and cost savings

from increased automation can be sig-

nificant. One state realized a time and

cost savings equivalent to a 230 full-

time equivalent staff workload.

As these systems expand to other

means-based programs, human service

agencies can benefit from additional

time savings accruing from automated

application processing and other time-

consuming tasks such as processing

renewals and re-verifications—time

that can be redirected to more trans-

formational work.

Principle 2: Redesigning

Programs to Serve Unique

Customer Segments

Rather than simply identifying

for which programs an individual or

family is eligible, agencies are begin-

ning to probe the circumstances that

bring individuals and families into the

Figure 1:Three Principles for Moving from a Transactional

Busines Model to aTransformational One