So you're looking for software to help you manage your public consultation process, or just generally for more efficient stakeholder data management. Or perhaps you're not sure if you really need specialised software, afterall there is always Excel, right? Then again, you might be a consultation manager who has already experienced the joys of managing multiple spreadsheets and you're ready to step up to a more specialised tool. Whatever stage you are in that process, here are three key principles to consider when designing the implementation approach and the structure of your stakeholder database.
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Your immediate need might be just to get one central up-to-date list of stakeholders that your whole team can use. With good consultation management software you're going to achieve that in no time at all. Especially if you can upload existing spreadsheets of contacts, push them from your email program, and have the system take care of managing duplicates and doing some basic clean up for you. The short term is covered, you need to design for the longer term. But here's the trick - you need to think about the long term, but design for the medium term. |
Implemeting any new software is always a change process in an organisation. Stakeholder management software is no different.
Stakeholder engagement and public consultation processes can generate large volumes of data, and the tendency is to try and capture it all. Asking more questions in a survey, tracking more issues, more data, more work. So much so that we stakeholder engagement practitioners often get 'lost' in the data and fail to see the important themes, because we are too busy dealing with the data instead of interpreting it.
Less really can be more. But you need to be strategic about it. Ask the right questions, instead of just asking lots of questions (which not only gives you less time wasting useless data, but is also more likely to get a higher response rate). For every element of data you want to capture, ask yourself "how will I use this information? What decisions/processes will it influence?". And importantly, also ask your team "how hard will it be to collect/update this information - is the reward worth the effort?". Simple questions, but when used effectively they can really help you streamline your data capture and record keeping processes. As we all know, a simpler/faster process is more likely to get your team members actually following it and entering data.
And at the end of the day, what use is a consultation management system if nobody will use it?
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