Resident Involvement Toolkit Issue 1 | Page 7

Success, Satisfaction and Scrutiny: the Resident Engagement Toolkit Get buy-in from board, senior staff and residents Case study two: The foundation for successful involvement is an organisational culture which welcomes resident insight and challenge. That’s why getting buy-in from board and senior staff is absolutely crucial - they’re the ones capable of enacting culture change. Strategies for convincing them should focus on the links to corporate goals identified above, recognising that the ‘carrot’ of financial savings and satisfaction rather than the ‘stick’ of regulatory compliance may be more compelling. Working as ‘One Team’ At AmicusHorizon involving residents is all about delivering excellence and efficiency. It means we can tailor services to residents’ preferences. We neither over- nor under-serve our customers. So while residents may lack directly relevant professional expertise, they have a huge amount to offer. To fulfil this potential we recognised it was important to create a sense of parity and equal-footing between residents, staff and board. And don’t forget the residents. Involve them in discussions from the very beginning. Why? One, because it’ll set a precedent to show their contributions will be valued. And two, it’ll help hugely in designing your resident involvement ‘offer’ (see page 10). We’ve done this by introducing the concept of ‘One Team’. It’s to show board, staff and residents are all working together towards the same goals. We also offer meaningful opportunities for residents to influence our strategy. Make it everyone’s job If involvement is to be genuinely effective it needs to be embedded in your culture. It should be something all staff are responsible for rather than “the prerogative of specific employees or a particular section of an organisation” (Tenant Services Authority, 2010). Senior staff must: Practical steps we’ve taken include:  zz Allocating board members to resident Area Panels to ‘flatten’ our Resident Governance Structure (see page 24), providing a useful reality-check for board members and helping panels escalate issues when needed zz Requiring board, staff and residents to undertake joint training zz Introducing a single code of conduct zz Presenting the Strategic Executive Team’s roadshow to all parties to explain the shared aim of being the best performing large landlord in the UK zz Having four resident members on our board and involving residents in board recruitment zz Including residents on interview panels for all customer-facing and senior staff roles zz Organising joint away days with our Resid ents’ Council and board. i. Clarify the reasons for engaging residents more and the realities of the new way of working Staff may feel their professional expertise is being undermined if increased weight is attached to residents’ perspectives. Senior staff should communicate the virtues of a more balanced approach. Resident input will help staff and board make better-informed decisions, which in turn will help achieve corporate goals… 7