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August 2016

Policy&Practice

33

Illustration by Chris Campbell

technology

speaks

By Debora Morris and Sean Toole

Three Digital Technologies Reinventing Human Service Delivery

I

magine a vision for human services

where digital technologies make

service delivery more proactive, client

centric, and outcome driven than ever

before. The possibilities are exciting,

affordable—and within reach.

As human service leaders build

digital strategies and attempt to move

up the Human Services Value Curve,

they must shake common misper-

ceptions. Digital is not solely about

technology, and it is not unaffordable.

It is about empowering people and

enabling manageable change. Three

digital trends in human services can

unlock data insight so agencies shift

from a transactional output model to a

client-centric outcome model.

Analytics: Real-Time

Data Insight Gets Real

Human service agencies use data for

compliance and operational reporting

every day. However, outputs may not

be outcome oriented or predictive and

don’t typically inform service delivery

practices. Those agencies that want

to use customer data insight to make

programmatic decisions often wonder

where to start. They are overwhelmed

by enormous amounts of data, but lack

a structured approach to drive insight

from that data. Attempts to manage

big data are confusing, expensive,

and slow to provide insight. Instead,

starting with smaller data and smaller

projects using flexible technology can

move agencies from wrangling data

to solving problems using meaningful

real-time data.

What if agencies could use real-

time data analysis to optimize service

delivery—getting results in weeks,

not years? It is possible with a new

breed of predictive analytics solu-

tions—solutions that don’t require

large investments in data warehouses,

but, instead, purchasing the tech-

nology as a service.

Agencies can use analytics to

identify high-need or high-cost popu-

lations such as families with multiple

challenges and needs for services.

Granular segmentation clusters indi-

viduals and families with shared

characteristics. Agencies then develop

targeted, insight-driven practice

models to solve focused problems

for those groups. This fast, flexible

approach can change the game for

health and human service programs,

enabling incremental value and invest-

ment with existing funding.

From Catching People When They Fall

to Lifting Them as They Rise

See What If on page 49

agencies used real-time data

analysis to optimize service

delivery—getting results in

weeks, not years?