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Repairs and
Maintenance - Case Studies and Downloads
Doubling turnover to take the lead in the facilities management market
Morrison
Facilities Services Ltd is one of the UK’s largest providers of Social Housing
repair and maintenance services. From its Birmingham Headquarters, Qusharat
Hussain, Commercial Director, oversees I.T for two company divisions, Midlands
and South, across multiple sites, with contracts worth over £100million p.a. The
main contract is with Birmingham City Council (£60 million p.a.), which has some
56,000 properties in Birmingham.
Quantifiable Benefits
Many company directors these days say: “IT is critical to our business”. In
Morrison’s case, it is not only critical in a practical sense of enabling the
business to function effectively 365/24/7, it is also, according to Qusharat:
“the single most important aspect of our business that has attracted new clients
and enabled us to target double digit growth”.
Tenant satisfaction levels are now generally recorded as ‘high’ in surveys – and
Birmingham CC has just extended its existing contract with Morrisons for
additional two years on the basis of this performance.
Qusharat Hussain is in no doubt that the benefits of the system put together by
Morrisons and British Computer Services company, ROCC Computers, has enabled
Morrisons to take a lead in the facilities management market: “Time costs money
and every aspect of our business has seen a reduction in the time involved.
Administration (front and back office), paperwork and transaction costs have
been reduced by this level of automation. Staff are able to carry out more
creative business and methods development work because they have more time to do
so. Birmingham City Council can demonstrate savings and improved levels of
service and is meeting its targets for Best Value.”
“ROCC’s role was pivotal to the success of our system”, says Qusharat. “ROCC
staff integrated the products we had selected to use as ‘best of breed’ with
their call centre and scanning solutions on a modern platform which is more
efficient and faster than the previous platform. We have a solution that is
flexible, versatile, has room for further development and growth and is easy to
use for the ordinary call centre person – they do not need to have advance IT
skills. They can become conversant with and use the system very quickly, with
minimal training. That’s good for us and important for our customers and
tenants”.
IT – the Competitive Advantage
Qusharat continues: “It is significant that ROCC’s personnel are seen as an
extension of our own teams. Their knowledge and support have helped us to secure
other contracts. Our joint effort has undoubtedly enabled Morrisons to attract
new business: a number of other local authorities are interested, including
Derby Council and British Gas/Transco.
“ROCC has enabled us to achieve a standard of quality that will make us the
market leader in outsourced facilities management. The investment made has
already been covered by our increase in income; it’s all about economies of
scale and we have the capacity to add considerably to our business within the
existing IT framework. Our system enables us to catch the right information and
get the job done right first time.”
How does it Work?
It all started in 2003, when Morrisons employed ROCC to implement a system to
make further improvements to its already advanced IT systems. The companies had
already worked together for several years via Serviceteam, a facilities
management business purchased by Morrisons. The system allows multiple contracts
to be run and the profitability of each individual contract to be analysed and
monitored. These contracts include councils such as Birmingham & Tamworth.
For Birmingham City Council, Morrisons undertake the repair and maintenance work
for 56,000 residential properties, including running the call centre used by
tenants to report their requirements. Its IT systems utilising around 200
workstations, now manage every aspect of the call centre, from the logging and
coding of the phone call, to the work request, organising inspections, job
completion reporting, scanning work tickets, invoicing and customer satisfaction
surveys.
When a tenant ‘phones in (any time or day of the year), the system validates the
tenant, goes through the diagnosis of the job required, identifies what
tradesmen may be needed or if an inspector needs to call to check. Appointments
are made by the Opti-time software, allowing for AM/PM bookings, with times
where possible. Urgent repairs are often made the same day, with non urgent
within 20 days – these achievements alone far exceed the performance of many
other facilities management providers. The aim is to get the job done right
first time, avoiding wasted resources, personnel time and job follow up work and
therefore minimising costs, as well as ensuring high levels of customer
satisfaction.
Repair jobs are issued to operatives via a work ticket. The operative carries
out the task, marks the start and finish time, materials used, further work
suggested etc. They bring the work ticket back to HQ where it is electronically
input into the ROCC system, validated and captured on the database. Manual
intervention is only required when the system flags up an anomaly (perhaps 5% of
entries). It is so efficient that just four to six people process some 4,000
tickets per week – a work rate that many other organisations might require
double the staff to process manually.
Some 1800 calls a day are taken by the Birmingham call centre, of which around
1000 are new repair requests. “What is most noticeable is the speed of our
response time”, says Qusharat. “The automated system enables us to get to the
details of a job quickly, accurately and comprehensively, so we can provide the
right skills and materials to ensure a fix first time in the majority of cases.”
The data is archived so that the Council can audit when needed. Simply typing in
the job number will bring up the full history of the job and its costs. “Being
electronically archived has meant that the ‘back office’ element of our workload
and the accessibility of data for the client, has been dramatically improved. In
practical terms, we store far less paper and we can find information quite
literally at the touch of a button. It’s safe, reliable, fast and efficient for
our Clients – and even more rewarding in some ways, it means that their tenants
receive a much better service. If they have queries on past jobs or want to
check on existing ones, the answers are readily available. All this is reflected
in the Council’s Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) which measure our performance
and reflect continual improvement since the introduction of the system”, says
Qusharat.
Once the data about each job is captured into the system, the costs are
automatically attributed using a comprehensive coding method and subsequently an
invoice is raised. These are batched into groups for forwarding to the client at
regular intervals – again interfaced via a fully automated link.
Commitment to the Future
According to Qusharat: “The initial task of bringing in three new integrated
systems within a very demanding timescale of 12 weeks, was carried out calmly
and efficiently, without causing any major upsets so that our old system could
keep going until change-over. This took place ‘over-night’ and with no ‘hiccups’
– remarkable. ROCC staff understand our business and our priorities. They know
their products well – we have worked together to maximise the integration of our
chosen software and their ongoing support service is excellent.”
Qusharat concludes: “We are committed to introducing ROCC’s intranet based
product, Uniclass Enterprise – back office, following the success of the move to
the Front Office product. ROCC will continue to work with us to look to new
technologies such as remote working via hand held units and alternative scanning
technologies to minimise user input. We have confidence that the combination of
quality of service and product range provided by ROCC will continue to enable us
to meet the needs of our business and those of our customers and to meet our
future growth targets.”
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