| ActivePlan
is an application that facilitates space management in
a way not previously possible. Any location that has regular
changes in layout will benefit but in order to generate
a strong set of case studies, we will focus on four market
sectors Offices, Retail, Healthcare and Construction Sites.
Rather than try and sell an application, ActivePlan will
be offered as a constituent of solution that will deliver
value and we will offer the option for clients to pay
us as a percentage of the savings/improvement we create.
Facilities
Management means different
things to different people. A simple definition may
be the provision or services that enable the core activity
of a business to function; cleaning, catering, security,
IT, reprographics, reception, room and car park booking,
estates management, asbestos
management, space planning/management and the creation
and maintenance of the built environment are common
examples of facilities management.
The last 20 years have seen
the growth of specialist firms each offering to undertake
the provision of these services across many client firms,
using the economies of scale to reduce the costs to
the client whilst maintaining the (and hopefully improving)
the levels of service the client feels necessary to
support the core business.
Service Level Agreements (SLA) are widely used as a
contractual means of enunciating those requirements
and these can range from a prescriptive specification
that details how the service should be performed as
well as delivered through to the more modern "output
based specification" where the client sets down
the minimum resultant service he requires and the supplier
is given the freedom to innovate and find new ways of
carrying out the service as long as they deliver at
least the minimum standard. Where that innovation reduces
the cost of delivering the service, the savings are
sometimes shared between the supplier and the client.
Because in-house staff historically undertook these
services, they were simply seen as an essential overhead
and the value or contribution was not measured. Even
when they were outsourced, the measure was against the
in-house cost rather than the value they provided. In
addition, to simplify the procurement, services that
had previously been undertaken by cross-disciplinary
personnel as a single and relatively integrated service
were broken into discrete packages and managed separately.
Although this has helped client organisations to define
their requirements more clearly, communication between
the different service delivery teams is limited, reducing
the opportunities to innovate by taking a more holistic
view.
Although outsourcing is usually successful
in reducing costs - and often in improving levels of
service - there are drawbacks for clients that are only
now emerging:
- Loss of knowledge - Each supplier invariably uses
its own IT systems to plan and record work undertaken
and, though the client will may ask for reports to
be generated in a manner that allows them to automatically
update their financial systems, much of the detail
remains with the originating system or the people
who carried out the work. As a result, much valuable
information remains in the hands of the new teams
of suppliers, both in terms of the staff’s experience
of running the facility and any captured data that
is outside the scope of conventional reporting. This
knowledge will prove to be a valuable asset in the
future and one that suppliers will naturally use to
their advantage in future negotiations.
- The helicopter view - Because each sphere of activity
is managed and reported discretely, it is often difficult
to identify improvements to the whole business that
may come from process improvements that cross several
sectors.
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