“Leading Innovation ’n Collaboration through Facilitation”

The Impact of Facilitation

Facilitation Skills Increase Company Performance

Facilitation Training Improves your ROI

Why Group Facilitation Skills? Benefits of Training

"Companies have to look at how best to use their resources to improve productivity at work. Facilitators are in a position to help make the most of organizational resources – Facilitators add value."

Organizations are cutting back in resources, asking those who remain to do more with less, and cutting budgets for travel, training, etc. On the surface, this certainly makes the numbers look good – but is it the right approach? Organizations need to make the most effective use of their resources and human capital is the most important resource any organization has. 

  • Meetings – meetings are notoriously unproductive, yet an important part of every business. In 1986, Roger Mosvik and Robert Nelson surveyed Fortune 500 companies and found that managers lost 240 hours a year in unproductive meetings. This translates to an average of $71 million per company per year!

  • Projects – cost a great deal of money and most is spent on salaries. An IT project today easily costs more than $1 million and many are implemented with problems in quality creating poor relations between all parties involved.


What is a Facilitator?

The word "facilitator" has been diluted because so many people call themselves "facilitators" - teachers, contractors, moderators, etc. The dictionary definition is, "one who makes easier" and is so broad that it fits a wide spectrum of functions.

What is a Group Facilitator?

A Group Facilitator is one that has been well-trained in "how to" design effective processes, manage discussions, work with difficult participants, and guide groups to consensus. This is a highly skilled job.

How

Businesses and organizations work smarter through the use of facilitated workshops because employees are engaged creating new ideas, increasing commitment, and communication is greatly enhanced. This results in:

  • Saving money – using facilitated workshops result in a 20% to 40% reduction in effort required to gather requirements.
  • Saving time – reducing the time to complete projects to ¼ the time.
  • Increasing quality – fewer mistakes and changes down the road.
  • Enhancing communication between all stakeholders involved.


Metrics?

Yes, there are documented metrics proving the benefits using productivity measurements and I have participated in projects when productivity measurements were tracked. Also, the International Association of Facilitators (IAF) documented tangible benefits through their Facilitation Impact Awards.

What I found was:

  • Meetings work better; significantly reducing the $71 million wasted in poorly run meetings.
  • Projects complete the requirements phase of work in ¼ the amount of time.


A facilitated workshop produces 8 weeks of requirements work in a 3-day workshop. Translated into dollars and cents, this means:

  • If a Business Analyst makes $100,000 per year, then 8 weeks of requirements gathering costs $15,385. In a 3-day facilitated workshop, the cost is $1154. That means that gathering requirements in a 3-day facilitated workshop saves over $14,250 for the one Business Analyst. When you include the actual number of Business Analysts along with the clients involved during the 8 weeks to gather requirements the savings are even greater.

  • If an IT project costs $1 million and the requirements phase requires one-third of the effort, then requirements cost $333,000. Using facilitated workshops to gather requirements cuts the time to ¼, saving almost $250,000 out of the $333,000. That amounts to one-fourth the cost of the project – just for requirements!

  • In addition, because the requirements are consensus-based and more complete, development time is reduced and quality increases adding to the savings.


Using facilitated workshops brings additional benefits to any organization beyond financial benefits as the previous points illustrate. Using facilitated workshops provides intangible benefits such as engagement of their human capital. Engaging a greater portion of any organization:

  • Increases the number of ideas an organization has to work with - this enables tremendous innovation.
  • Increases morale – people feel more valued when they are engaged.


What

One of the least cost effective actions that organizations take is putting an employee in a job without training. It demeans the importance of proper training, it is unfair to the employee, it wastes the organization's money, and hurts the organization in the long run. Like any job skill, facilitation skills can be taught and learned. It is far more than "one who makes easier". An effective Group Facilitator needs to know:

  • "How to" present him or herself.
  • "How to" deal with a diverse group.
  • "How to" engage a group.
  • "How to” prepare to make workshops and meetings productive.
  • "How to” develop clear processes that enable a group to come together to accomplish a task.
  • "How to" actively listen.
  • "How to" not be in charge.


The result?

Well-trained Facilitators using facilitated workshops are proven to deliver significant value to any organization. It's proven that when organizations engage everyone and they learn to collaborate, the organizations thrive and grow.

Knowing the benefits, I can’t help but wonder why every organization doesn’t make facilitator and facilitation skills a core competency for every employee. 


Note: You will want to consider having your Facilitators assessed to become IAF Certified™ Professional Facilitators (CPFs). Our FoCuSeD Facilitator Academy, an IAF Endorsed™ Training Programme, covers the IAF Core Compentencies and what students need to do to achieve them.

The Value of Facilitation…

Companies Save Millions Through Facilitation.The International Association of Facilitators (IAF) conducts an award program, The IAF Facilitation Impact Awards (FIA) honors excellence in facilitation and its positive impact on organizations around the world.  This is a non-competitive inclusive award program.  The purpose is to demonstrate the value of facilitation by highlighting and celebrating organizations and Facilitators whose use of facilitation had significant, impact on their organization.  The combined financial impact (savings, cost avoidance, increased revenue, and increased outside investment) for awarded organizations not only was hundreds of millions of dollars, but more importantly, their culture shifted to be more engaged, empowered, and more creative in solving the organization’s problems that contributed to the overall well-being of the organization.  

Some Examples of Award Recipients…

  • Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) – The Defense Intelligence Agency used facilitation to engage employees and resolve unit and departmental issues in addition to making the goal of the organization to have managers and analysts collaboration-competent.  As a result, facilitation is now used at all levels of the agency, is used to develop the strategic direction of the agency, and, using facilitation to work through workplace issues, has saved the agency $500,000 by avoiding formal resolutions.  In addition, facilitation has transformed interagency collaboration between DIA and other intelligence agencies.  Over 1000 employees at DIA have been involved in facilitated workshops and to date, DIA has trained over 85 employees in facilitator and facilitation skills.
  • Hydro One – Hydro One used a cadre of facilitators to enable change management and engagement of employees, particularly in re-engineering Central Scheduling process.  This involved management and union workers along with significant resistance due to concern over job changes.  As a result, the organization resolved dozens of issues, engaged hundreds of employees in facilitated workshops, improved scheduling and utilization of equipment resulting in hundreds of dollars per hour in savings, and facilitation is now a core competency of managers at Hydro One.
  • KLA-Tencor Final Wafer Inspection – KLA-Tenco, used facilitated workshops to help generate ideas for new products and cross-divisional sharing in the wafer inspection group.  Millions of dollars are at stake in product development in this high-tech industry.  As a result, technology research was focused, new creative ideas went into research for long term development, computer performance improved over 25%, employee satisfaction improved, management confidence improved, and facilitated workshops are now commonplace.
  • Newport City Renaissance Corporation –The city of Newport, Vermont, was dealing with a drastic change in demographics, loss of jobs, struggling economy, and limited resources.  They hosted a Regional and Urban Design Assistance Team program to revitalize the city.  Using facilitated workshops engaging city officials and the community they completely transformed the city of Newport through neighborhood projects, brought in over $250 million in investments, added 2000 jobs (out of a city of 5000), and built the needed momentum to maintain the engagement.
  • Northwest Territories Department of Finance – Northwest Territories is a remote part of Canada with remote residents, limited access, largely indigenous groups, and 11 different official languages.  The Minister of Finance engaged a facilitator to facilitate dialogues with the territory residents to get input regarding priorities for government investments.  Over 140 people from around the territory participated in workshops using mixed media, to assist with different languages and cultures.  As a result, residents now understand the complexities of government funding, feel empowered to set priorities, and are engaged in their future.
  • Oxford Properties – Oxford Properties, one of the largest shopping centers in Canada, a change in management after almost 20 years prompted the new Property Manager to investigate ways to improve customer service, improve relations between management and employees, and develop a plan that everyone felt part of.  A facilitator was hired to facilitate workshops engaging all employees in workshops to set standards, create a vision for the shopping center, generate recommendations from employees for motivation and professional development, and break down barriers between management and employees.  As a result, employee grievances dropped by 50%, 13 employees were promoted, 79 new recognition awards were given, and customer satisfaction has improved 5 times.  Intangible benefits include commitment, change in attitude, improved collaboration, and improved morale.
  • UIL Holdings, Inc. – Safety – At UIL Holdings, safety is critical and involves both management and union.  UIL hired a facilitator to facilitate workshops involving both management and union to develop ways to improve safety while improving the relations between the parties.  As a result, safety incidents dropped by almost 80%, the company has implemented a Safety Strategic Plan with commitment and ownership by all parties involved, all levels of the company are involved in workshops, Joint Problem Solving is now a core process, and facilitated After Action Reviews are commonplace.  

None of the organizations participated through a few selected members.  Every organization engaged many, if not all, of the management and employees in facilitated workshops and most involved cross-functional areas as well.  Numerous people within the organizations were trained in facilitation skills to help sustain the momentum and broaden the reach of the program.  Creative tools, such as Lego towers to help indigenous people communicate, helped engagement, communication, and ideation.  In every case, facilitation was used not as a quick fix to a problem but as a new way to approach problem solving and business in general moving forward.  Facilitated workshops became a cultural change.

What is the real significance?  Facilitated workshops have now been proven to deliver significant value to organizations.  The millions of dollars saved by the Award recipients is small when you look at the overall savings achieved by all the recipients combined.  It proves that when organizations engage everyone and they learn to collaborate, the organizations thrive and grow.  

The use of facilitated workshops has engaged, empowered, and motivated all levels of the organizations.  Creative new ideas have been developed and significant financial savings have been realized.  Most importantly, the cultures of the organizations have changed to become collaborative.  

The IAF conducts this Award Program annually.  Check out the IAF website – www.iafworld.org for more information.

After reading what the award recipients gained, I can’t help but wonder why every organization doesn’t make facilitator and facilitation skills a core competency for every employee of their organization.  

Are you interested in transforming your organization and saving millions of dollars?

How have you seen facilitation help your organization?

Contact Gary

Interested in having Gary Rush IAF CPF | Emeritus facilitate your meeting or train your people?  Bring the value of facilitation and its Return on Investment (ROI) to your organization.

What students are saying…

“Thank you again for such a great class.  I leaned a ton and really valued the time in class.” - Melissa, Texas Department of Agriculture

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