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The Whitehall Effect John Seddon

The Whitehall Effect von John Seddon

The Whitehall Effect John Seddon


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Zusammenfassung

John Seddon is back with an uncompromising account of Whitehall's effect on public services. It's a damning read. He explains how successive governments have undermined our public services and the devastation that three decades of political fads and bad theory have caused. Then he sets out unprecedented opportunity now available to us.

The Whitehall Effect Zusammenfassung

The Whitehall Effect: How Whitehall Became the Enemy of Great Public Services - and What We Can Do About it John Seddon

John Seddon is back. This time with an uncompromising account of Whitehall's effect on our public services. And it's a damning read. 'The Whitehall Effect' chronicles how the Whitehall ideas machine has failed to deliver on a monumental scale - and what we can do about it. We have a breathtaking opportunity to create public services that truly serve. But only if Whitehall changes. --- Why don't public services work very well? One key reason is that they have been 'industrialised'. Part 1 explains why call centres, back offices, shared services, outsourcing and IT-led change almost always lead to service failure. It explains, in particular, why 'economies of scale' are a myth. Part 2 proposes a better (and tried-and-tested) alternative to the alienating and unresponsive experience of industrialised public services. Good services are attuned and sensitive to peoples' needs. Where the 'industrialised' approach tries to drive down costs but invariably drives them up, the better approach - managing value - drives costs down significantly. Part 3 challenges conventional thinking and received wisdom about public services. Targets, inspection and regulation have to be part of the solution, don't they? Seddon explains why they're actually part of the problem and shows that the most effective lever of change and improvement is to stop 'managing' the people (public sector staff and managers) and start managing the system they work in. Part 4 discusses some of the current fads in public-sector reform: 'choice', 'managing demand', 'nudge' and 'lean'. Politicians pursue them because they are plausible and fit their narrative, the story they like to tell about reform. But these fads only make public services worse or, at best, detract from the opportunity at hand. The opportunity John Seddon describes is breathtaking. We can undo the costly debacle of public sector 'reform', but only if we first change Whitehall. In Part 5 he describes how Whitehall is systemically incapable of listening to and acting on evidence and finally turn to how Whitehall needs to change if we are to turn away from the mistakes of the last 35 years and realise the profound opportunity open to us.

Über John Seddon

John Seddon is visiting professor at The University of Hull Business School and Managing Director of Vanguard Consulting. Service organisations following his ideas are achieving profound improvements in service, efficiency and morale. John has been a long-term critic of the UK's public-sector 'reform programme', arguing that reforms (targets and other specifications) make performance worse. He has repeatedly attacked current management thinking where it supports economies of scale, quality standards like ISO9000, the use of targets, inspection and centralised control of local services, and areas of public sector reform including 'deliverology'. He is well known for having adapted the Toyota Production System and the work of Deming and Taiichi Ohno into 'The Vanguard Method' for improving service performance. He describes the Vanguard Method as a form of systems thinking. John Seddon makes an important distinction between 'failure demand' - demand caused by a failure to do something or do something right for the customer and 'value demand' - what the service exists to provide.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Foreword - Lord Victor Adebowale Introduction 1. Prelude: Ministers enter management Part 1: The industrialisation of public services 2. Call centres 3. Back Offices 4. Shared services (economies of scale) 5. Outsourcing 6. Information Technology Part 2: Delivering services that work 7. A better philosophy 8. Effective change starts with 'study' 9. Better thinking, better design 10. 'Locality' working 11. IT as pull, not push Part 3: Things that make your head hurt 12. Targets and standards 13. Inspection 14. Regulation 15. It's the system, not the people 16. Incentives Part 4: ideology, fashions and fads 17. Choice 18. Personal Budgets 19. Commissioning 20. Managing demand 21. Nudge 22. Procurement 23. Risk management 24. Lean 25. IT: features over benefits Part 5: Change must start in Whitehall 26. Beware economists bearing plausible ideas 27. Whitehall doesn't do evidence 28. Getting a focus on purpose Index

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR006540517
9781909470453
1909470457
The Whitehall Effect: How Whitehall Became the Enemy of Great Public Services - and What We Can Do About it John Seddon
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Gebundene Ausgabe
Triarchy Press
20141105
216
N/A
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