10th June 2020
By Auz Chitewe, Associate Director.
In this article, we share one way that a group of people, all connecting virtually from different locations, went about creating a Driver Diagram.
A Driver Diagram is a core improvement tool that is useful for visually showing the theory of change for an improvement effort. It helps teams articulate a shared understanding of the things they think they need to do to achieve an aim, their theory, and communicate that to other people. It is essentially a visual representation of their strategy on one page.
The typical approach to creating a Driver Diagram is to do it in person with people who are closest to the system you are trying to change. This starts with agreeing an aim to describe in a timebound way what outcome you want to see, where and by when. This is followed by constructing a list of the main factors/themes that will impact on achieving the aim – primary drivers. Next you would identify sub-themes or components to the primary drivers which will make up the secondary drivers. Finally, you would link change ideas to the secondary drivers.
As part of the Trust’s response to COVID-19 it developed a recovery workstream designed to think about things the Trust would need to do to help people who use, deliver and interact with ELFT services learn from the changes that had taken place due to the pandemic, that could influence the future direction. Due to the restrictions in place as a result of COVID-19, they had to connect using video conferencing which presented the challenge of how to develop a driver diagram virtually
Co-production: Having diverse views related to the work collectively design the theory of change.
Divergent Thinking: Using techniques that allow for many ideas to be generated and different perspectives to be heard.
Affinity Diagram: Grouping the many ideas into a few key themes.
Equalizing Power: Using methods that allow the broad range of stakeholders to have equal power and influence at every stage of the process.
Convergent Thinking: Purposefully applying criteria to screen, select, evaluate, and refine the options to ones that have a high probability of helping achieve the aim.
During the meeting, the Microsoft Excel document that had been autopopulated from the initial survey was being amended in realtime in full view of all involved at each step of the process. This produced an aim, some primary drivers and secondary drivers. After the meeting, all this was quickly transferred into the driver diagram below.
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