In September 2020, Essex County Council decided to apply a new, Social Value-focused methodology for all procurements over £100,000 - the majority of their £1.2bn gross commissioned budget.
In less than 18 months, this new Social Value programme achieved a remarkable impact and the council's suppliers have made huge Social Value commitments.
Essex County Council was always compliant with Social Value legislation, but saw an opportunity to deliver greater benefit to communities by leveraging its £1.2 billion spend with suppliers.
To this end, the council adopted the Social Value TOM System™, and the Social Value Portal team created a set of Measures tailored to the Essex economy.
The council even put together a dedicated Social Value team, which had four key priorities:
To ensure that all staff understood Social Value procedures, the team also produced webinars, presentations and updated guidance.
The council's focus on Social Value extended across the procurement cycle, with a dedicated Social Value lead supporting priority contracts both pre-tender and in contract management meetings, thus providing a forum for supplier and staff feedback.
Research showed that a lack of understanding is inhibiting progress on Social Value.
Essex County Council combatted this by creating a ‘too big to miss’ festival of learning, aiming to:
The festival was a great success, facilitating engagement with key internal and external anchor institutions, and helping the team form stronger relationships and a deeper understanding of the benefits of Social Value.
The council was aware that outcomes and impact is a major Social Value success factor.
To enable effective tracking, the council used Power BI to develop a dynamic Social Value reporting tool. This informs targeting-setting, and has enabled them to score bids relative to their Social Value target of 50p to every £1 spent.
All staff and management now have on demand access to Social Value reports - which feature all supplier offers available to the community, including schools, colleges, charities and community group.
The council is keen maintain momentum and keep building for the future, holding monthly meetings with its Sustainable Growth Directors to maintain alignment and support shared objectives.
But what has the Council's Social Value strategy achieved to date?
As of April 2022, 98 suppliers across 17 contracts, with a combined value of £447 million, have committed to £42 million of Social Value in their winning bids.
In real terms, this equates to 981 jobs, including career opportunities for care leavers, the long term unemployed, those not in education, employment or training, young offenders undergoing rehabilitation, and people with disabilities.
The Social Value commitments of the council's suppliers also feature training opportunities, apprenticeships, expenditure with local SMEs, and savings in CO2 emissions.