Resident Involvement Toolkit Issue 1 | Page 20

Success, Satisfaction and Scrutiny: the Resident Engagement Toolkit Introduce some fresh perspectives Capture lessons when residents leave Longstanding involved residents are typically highly trained, engaged, experienced, and knowledgeable. With a ‘foot in both camps’ many will also be tremendous advocates of your work. You need to weigh these qualities up, though, against the need to hear fresh perspectives and provide opportunities for others. Maximum terms can help. We feel we’ve struck an appropriate balance by introducing maximum terms of: There are valuable lessons to be learnt each time a resident decides to no longer be involved. Exit interviews can help capture personal reasons for dissatisfaction or any broader trends influencing the success of engagement. Even if a departure is down to reaching a maximum term, it’s still worth taking on board residents’ feedback. Their prolonged participation will mean they’ve valuable insights into what works and what doesn’t. zz nine years for Area Panels zz four years for chairing roles across our Resident Governance Structure. In applying such limits avoid forcing involved residents to leave en masse. Some continuity in membership means experienced residents can help guide, train and mentor new recruits before they leave. Our nine year rule applies to all new Area Panel members. We’ve granted members elected prior to August 2015 an extension of three years (taking their maximum terms to 12 years) to allow for a robust succession plan to be put in place.  Key Recommendations 99 D  emonstrate engagement is valued, meaningful and has tangible outcomes both for yourselves and residents 99 Establish a ‘talent bank’ of involved residents to help with succession planning 99 Make recruiting residents the responsibility not only of resident involvement staff, but of all their customer-facing colleagues 99 Offer ‘taster’ opportunities for curious residents to see what involvement is all about 99 Monitor the diversity characteristics of involved residents to ensure they’re representative of your broader resident population 99 E  ncourage underrepresented groups to participate by creating dedicated forums or targeting events 99 Tackle some of the practical barriers to attending meetings such as travel and childcare costs 99 Use financial incentives sparingly and particularly incentivise contributions which change the way you work 99 Introduce maximum terms 99 Capture lessons through exit interviews when residents leave. 20