Download - Recognising Community Engagement in London

Transcript
Page 1: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Recognising Community Engagement in London

Application Workshop

Page 2: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Workshop overview

• Hopes and expectations of the morning• About the Dragon Awards

− The Award categories− What qualifies for an Award− What makes it worth applying for an Award

• Making the most of the application• The judging process and judges• What happens next• Final thoughts and questions• Optional session

Page 3: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Putting the Awards in context

The Dragon Awards

Page 4: Recognising Community Engagement in London

The Award categories

• Education • Enterprise and Employment • Strengthening the Third Sector • Community Partners• Heart of the City Award for Best

New Community Programme• Lord Mayor’s Award for

Longstanding Achievement

Page 5: Recognising Community Engagement in London

What qualifies for an award?

• Work that demonstrates good practice and innovation in working with businesses and facilitating their involvement in the community

• Work that demonstrates building / maintaining effective partnerships• Partnership working that has a clear community benefit

NB: Social Enterprises can apply in the Community Partners category if they act as a community partner or in one of the business categories if the programme is above and beyond their core activities

Page 6: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Notes on the awards

• Social Enterprises can apply in the Community Partners category if they act as a community partner or in one of the business categories if the programme is above and beyond their core activities

• The project / partnership may involve more than one partner – but it is better to focus on one to “tell the story”

Page 7: Recognising Community Engagement in London

What makes it worth applying• External recognition

- Profile with clients/customers and the wider community - Media coverage for the winner (in the past 3 years Dragon Awards publicity

has been estimated to be worth over £760,000) - Profile within CCI and CSR networks- Profile with corporates and community partners- Profile with funders

• Recognition of corporate partners- Helps them to engage senior management - Recognition of staff and volunteers involved in the programme

Page 8: Recognising Community Engagement in London

…some more reasons to apply • Internal recognition within the organisation

- Recognition of staff and volunteers working in the community partner to “make it happen”

• Other reasons- Invitation to the dinner – a networking opportunity!- The statuette- It’s free

Page 9: Recognising Community Engagement in London

• Recognising the contribution of community partners and how they:- Engage and manage corporate interest and enable the corporate to

be involved in the community- Build and maintain relationships- Engage, manage and support employee volunteers- Evaluate the value of the partnership and ways in which

it can be strengthened- Look to the future

Community Partners Award

Page 10: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Pilotlight• A charity that brings together business leaders with small charities • Working with RBS, graduates were offered the challenge of creating practical

solutions to real issues faced by a number of small charities. Their tasks included:− Developing a new numeracy app for children struggling with maths− Marketing support for a campaign to attract funders− Scoping out the creation of a social enterprise

• Pilotlight supported the relationship between RBS, their graduate volunteers and the different charities

• The benefits to community, community organisation and the business were considerable!

An example from 2013

Page 11: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Guy Fox History Project- An educational charity that delivers arts and heritage projects which empower and

inspire children to learn about the world around them. - Guy Fox is a cartoon fox who believes you can learn anything you want to!- Guy Fox and UBS have been working together to create educational activities for

children. - UBS has supported Guy Fox with funding, volunteering and business support to

deliver a wealth of educational workshops in which children create illustrate books for other children.

- In return Guy Fox provides creative input into UBS’s Community Affairs strategy, recruitment and learning programmes, creating unique, skills enhancing activities.

An example from 2012

Page 12: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Give a clear description …..

Judges can only base their decisions on the information that is on the application form, so…• Describe the community organisation, what it does and its objectives• Give a clear description of the partnership and how it works• Focus on what makes it work and how• Highlight how the business is involved as well as who is involved • Talk about the challenges you faced and how were these overcome• Be positive and talk about the future potential for the programme

Page 13: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Talk about input, output and impact

Input• What?

• Why?

• How?

• Who?

• Where?

Output• Community

• What• Who?• How many?

• Business • What?• Who?• Value to the

business• Leverage

Impact• Community

• Beneficiaries• Organisation• The wider

community • Business

• Changes within the business

Page 14: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Focusing on impact

• Be explicit about what the business does for the community organisation and what the community organisation does for the business

• Explain the impact the partnership has had on both partners and on the community− Give case studies

• Give examples of how the partnership has benefitted the business • Highlight things that are innovative or different

Page 15: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Telling the story

• Include as much of the suggested information as possible

• Use statistics

• Include feedback from staff and volunteers

• Include case studies

• Talk about the things other say about the work; include external

recognition

Page 16: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Tell us why you should win

• Showcase the best of your partnership• Talk about why it is special or possibly even unique• Talk about what makes it a success and the challenges you have

overcome

Page 17: Recognising Community Engagement in London

What the judges say

It is a great community programme but it was hard to

see how the partnership worked

What impact did it have on the local community?

This was a great application. It was very clear how it worked and what each partner gained from the

partnership. It showed an equal relationship!

It assumed I knew all about the project. It really would have

benefited from a short explanation!

Page 18: Recognising Community Engagement in London

• The finalists are selected by the Preliminary Judging Panel• The winners are selected by the Final Judging Panel - chaired by the Lord

Mayor• Judges work in pairs and focus on specific categories – assigned a

primary and secondary category to judge• Conflicts of interest are declared at the start• A mix of experience and expertise

Judging the Awards

Page 19: Recognising Community Engagement in London

• Heather Barker – CSR Consultant• Linda Barnard – Community Affairs

Manager, Bank of England• Michelle Dawson – Director,

Community Operations ELBA • Jenny Field – Deputy Chief Grants

Officer, City Bridge Trust• Patsy Francis – Director of

Community Affairs, UBS• Bob Fry – Managing Director, Aukett

Swanke

The preliminary judging panel

• Carolyn Housman – Director, Heart of the City

• Sophie Hulm – CR Manager, City of London

• Jon Lloyd – Director, Corporate Citizenship

• Poorvi Patel – London Operations Director, Business in the Community

• Helen Sanson – Director, Tower Hamlets Education Business Partnership

• Vicky Clark – Employment and Skills Consultant, LB Haringey

Page 20: Recognising Community Engagement in London

• Alderman Fiona Woolf CBE – The Lord Mayor of the City of London

• Matthew Bowcock – Chair, Community Network Foundation

• Lady Diana Brittan DBE – Chair, The Connection at St Martin’s in the Fields

• Martyn Lewis CBE – Chair, Youthnet• Harvey McGrath – Co-Chair, London

Enterprise Panel

The final judging panel

• Amanda Jordan – Co-Chair, Corporate Citizenship

• Ken Olisa – Chair, Restoration Partners• Richard Sumray MBE – Chair, London

2012 Forum• Cyrus Todiwala MBE – Proprietor &

Executive Chef, Café Spice Namaste Group

• Catherine Usher – Regional Managing Partner - London, DLA Piper

• Ruwan Weerasekera - Managing Director, UBS

Page 21: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Application Deadline – 23 May

Preliminary Judging – 23 June

Finalists announced

Final Judging – 14 July

Annual Dinner – 1 October

What happens next

Page 22: Recognising Community Engagement in London

The annual dinner

• 1 October• Hosted by the Lord Mayor at

Mansion House• Black tie• All Community Partner

applicants receive two complimentary invitations, one for staff plus one for a beneficiary

• Finalists receive a third invitation

Page 23: Recognising Community Engagement in London

Telephone:020 7332 3608

Email:[email protected]

Contact Details