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Eric Scorsone, Ph'D'

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Opportunity Cost is what you must forego to consume something of value ... Measures foregone next best opportunity of resource use by community or society ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eric Scorsone, Ph'D'


1

Return on Community Investment (ROCI) Strategy
  • Eric Scorsone, Ph.D.
  • Director, State Local Government Program
  • Department of Agricultural Economics
  • Michigan State University
  • scorsone_at_msu.edu

2
ROCI Framework
  • General concepts that structure the analysis

3
The ROCI Philosophy Accountability
  • ROCI measures the value your community enterprise
    delivers to its constituents
  • ROCI is about being accountable to the community
    and constituents you serve
  • ROCI is the tool to translate accountability
    theory into action

4
Return on Community Investment-Accountability Link
  • Constituents expect community enterprises to be
    accountable and deliver value
  • Value is defined as having a measurable community
    impact
  • ROCI is a set of tools for translating the
    concept of accountability into reality (measuring
    value)
  • Specifically designed to address multiple
    constituency viewpoints

5
Steps in the ROCI Framework
  • Identify and prioritize constituencies
  • Measure your return on investment or value
    creation
  • Communicate to these constituencies
  • Create a process to voice feedback
  • Build management systems to respond to feedback
  • (Emerson, 2001)

6
ROCI in Pictures
Feedback Process
Identify Constituents
Measuring Return on Investment (Value) Cost-
Benefit analysis
Management Response system
Communicate Results
7
How do we use ROCI Information?
  • Treat donors as social investors
  • Base your arguments on solid evidence of program
    effectiveness
  • Seek out a marketing or advertising firm to craft
    message
  • Pro-bono community work

8
Do We Have Management/Staff Support?
  • Do staff and management know what ROCI is and how
    it works?
  • Do they know why they should care?
  • Need buy-in from frontline staff
  • Navigators, disease managers, etc
  • Best data collection entry points
  • How and where will information be used?

9
Who should be involved?
  • Health Community
  • Hospitals, clinics, physicians, county or city
    health officials, hospital association groups,
    other nonprofit groups
  • Business and Economic Development Community
  • Chamber of Commerce, City and County government,
    local foundations

10
Building a Team
  • ROCI Deal Team should have a diverse set of
    members from collaborative and community
  • Make sure everyone is on the same page
    regarding ROCI process and needs
  • Keep team engaged and motivated with short term
    goals and tangible results

11
Implement Quickly
  • Delay can cause team to lose momentum
  • If data needs to be gathered, engage in monthly
    meetings and report progress
  • Set a goal to produce first ROCI report within
    six months followed by stakeholder meetings

12
ROCI Accountability to whom must be answered?
  • Clients
  • Donors and funders
  • Client advocacy groups
  • Federal government
  • Local or state government
  • Local community
  • Board and staff members

13
Measuring Return on Investment (Value)
  • ROCI uses economic cost-benefit analysis to
    measure value
  • Community Value is measured for
  • Community or Aggregate Value
  • Broken out among Constituent and Partner Value
  • Prospective
  • To assess the potential return and risks of
    proposed investment strategies
  • Retrospective
  • To assess the effectiveness of previous
    investments

14
Communication of return on investment (value)
measures
  • Who do we need to communicate to and how?
  • Traditional Forms
  • Annual report
  • Meetings
  • Nontraditional Forms
  • Website
  • Town hall meetings
  • Budget documents

15
Return on Community Investment Measuring
Community Value
  • This section describes the issues and challenges
    of measuring value for Community enterprises

16
What is Return on Community Investment (ROCI)
  • A method to measure value for potential and
    existing constituents or stakeholder
  • Translates accountability theory and words into
    action
  • Uses a community accounting standard as opposed
    to a program accounting standard
  • ROCI is a structured conversation which will
    build the business case or strengthen
    partnerships within your collaborative or
    consortium

17
What is measured in Return on Community
Investment (ROCI)?
  • Community Value community benefits - community
    Costs
  • Community Benefits Program benefits from the
    standpoint of society not just the program or
    organization
  • Community Opportunity Costs Program costs from
    the standpoint of society not organization or
    program

18
Return on Community Investment in a table
19
Steps in Measuring Community or Social Returns
  • Defining Community
  • Creating or using an existing Logic model
  • With and Without Comparisons
  • Benefits and Costs
  • What is a Benefit
  • Private
  • Community
  • What is an Opportunity Cost
  • Private
  • Community
  • Key Community Opportunity Cost Adjustments
  • What is a Shadow Price
  • Cash Flow analysis
  • Inflation
  • Sensitivity Analysis

20
Defining Community
  • What geography
  • Nation
  • State
  • Region
  • City/County
  • Why Does it Matter
  • Helps define the relevant costs and benefits in
    the analysis

21
Link with Logic Model Framework
Resources
Activities
Outputs
Impact
Outcomes
22
Identifying Benefits and Costs
  • Benefits (monetary or physical health units)
  • Private
  • Shadow Price
  • External
  • Opportunity Costs
  • Private
  • Shadow Price
  • External

23
Program Benefits
  • Represent the direct, immediate or intended
    benefits of the program
  • For example, medications for uninsured, avoidance
    of ER, free or reduced cost medical care
  • Typically measured by program using some type of
    methodology
  • Monetary value
  • Non-monetary value/physical units

24
Community Benefits
  • Represent benefits of program to community or
    society, both intended and unintended
  • Measured as
  • community benefits () private benefits /-
    unintended benefits
  • community benefits (non ) number of health
    units or clients served
  • Examples of monetary unintended benefits
  • Economic impact of program expenditures on local
    businesses in community
  • Providing access to medical care improves local
    labor market

25
Two types of Benefits
  • Cost Savings
  • Revenue Enhancement

26
What is an Opportunity Cost?
  • Opportunity Cost is what you must forego to
    consume something of value
  • Expressed in monetary terms
  • Provide insurance access versus.other needs
  • Private opportunity cost what SKYCAP foregoes in
    making a resource allocation decision
  • community opportunity cost What society foregoes
    in when individuals/companies make decisions

27
Community Opportunity Cost
  • Measures foregone next best opportunity of
    resource use by community or society
  • Measured as
  • Community opportunity cost private opportunity
    cost /- Community adjustments
  • Community adjustments
  • Unemployed versus employed workers
  • Empty or vacant commercial building

28
ROCI Spreadsheet
29
Missing or Incomplete Data
  • Key data required is client intake and budget
    data
  • Program operation can be compared to other
    programs and research to assess
    cost-effectiveness
  • (i.e.) Other programs using Navigators have
    reduced health care costs by 10 with a similar
    patient population

30
Other Data Issues
  • Need an assessment of what data we have collected
    and how
  • Health status, charges/costs for patients,
    sociodemographics, insurance status, referral
    patterns, ER avoidance
  • Do we before and after data?
  • How do we manage data relationships and sharing
    with other partners?
  • What if we dont have the data we need?

31
Counterfactual thinking
  • Counterfactual What would have happened if we
    were not in existence
  • Patient health status and health costs before and
    after program
  • Try to measure other externalities
  • Educational achievement improvement
  • Housing improvement
  • Work productivity

32
Return on Community Investment Summary
  • ROCI Tells the community and funders if the
    program investment has paid off (accountability)
  • Documents the level and robustness of the
    payoff
  • Can be forward or backward looking
  • Several important principles must be followed in
    conducting the analysis

33
ROCI Measurement of Value Step by Step Guide and
Example
  • Presents a Step by Step guide using the Southeast
    KY Community access Program as an example

34
SKYCAP (Southeast Kentucky Community Access
Program)
  • Program designed to improve access to care for
    uninsured in Perry, Harlan, Letcher counties
  • Collaboration between
  • University of Kentucky Center for Rural Health
  • Harlan Countians for a Healthy Community, Inc.
  • Hazard Perry County Community Ministries
  • Data Futures, Inc. Harlan, KY

35
SKYCAP Stats
36
What Data is needed?
  • Hospitalization and emergency room cost savings
  • Other benefits (education, environment and
    housing, etc..)
  • SKYCAP budgets (grant and in-kind contributions)
  • Budget detail
  • Volume or number of cases

37
SKYCAP Private Community Benefits
  • Private benefits
  • Hospital and ER cost savings
  • Shadow Price
  • Non applicable
  • External Benefits
  • Economic impact of federal grant money
  • Total Community Benefits
  • Economic impact
  • Unadjusted Health care cost savings

38
SKYCAP Private Benefits
  • Cost savings estimated using previously
    described methodology
  • Compare patients before and during program
    participation
  • This gives us our with and without comparison and
    private benefit estimation

39
SKYCAP Cost Savings (Yr 1 Perry County)
40
SKYCAP Cost Savings (Yr 1 Harlan County)
41
SKYCAP Community Benefits
  • Direct Benefit
  • Reduction in Emergency room and In-Patient costs
    to local health care providers
  • In-Direct Benefit
  • SKYCAP spending on employees and supplies
    reverberates through local economies creating
    jobs

42
SKYCAP Private Community Costs
  • Private Opportunity Costs
  • Administration and Labor
  • Drugs and other supplies
  • Rent, utilities, etc.
  • Community Opportunity Costs
  • Labor
  • Unemployed workers who were hired have a
    Community cost less than their private
    opportunity cost
  • Federal grant Money
  • It is provided by money from outside the
    communities and has a zero Community opportunity
    cost to community

43
Economic Impact Analysis
  • Federal grant money (1st two years)
  • 1.34 million dollars
  • Economic Impact
  • Spillover effect to create new local jobs and
    income
  • Results
  • 1.3 million turns into 1.7 million dollars
  • 400,000 economic impact of SKYCAP

44
Backward Looking Rate of Return Value
  • ROR (Total benefits Total Costs) 100
  • Total Costs
  • SKYCAP ROR (1,381,690 - 1,297,305) 100 6.5
  • 1,297,305

45
SKYCAP ROCI Benefits Costs
46
Conclusion
  • SKYCAP has produced a healthy Return on
    Community Investment
  • Important assumption Federal Grant is zero
    Community value to community external money
  • Even w/ federal investment , SKYCAP appears to
    have produced a positive return on investment
  • ROCI can be produced for other programs, but data
    availability is a critical issue

47
Community and Constituent Presentation of ROCI
48
Preparing your idea for public presentation
  • Who are the key partners or stakeholders you are
    seeking to work with?
  • What is the enterprise that will produce these
    outcomes?
  • What will you offer?
  • What will you ask for?
  • What is the timeline of the request?
  • What information or data do you have to back up
    this deal?

49
What is your two minute elevator pitch?
  • Other advertising or public relation messages?
  • Radio
  • Television/Video
  • Internet
  • Newspaper
  • Public speeches
  • Who will be in charge of the message?

50
Is the community ready to hear the message?
  • Go back to identified constituencies
  • Major questions to ask?
  • How will we bring them together? (as a group,
    individually)
  • Where does each one stand on the program?
  • What are there concerns?
  • What is their personal or organizational
    self-interest?

51
Questions Comments
  • Contact information
  • Dr. Eric Scorsone
  • Dept. of Agricultural Economics
  • Michigan State University
  • scorsone_at_msu.edu
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