Using the In Home Care Sustainability Support Grant to Build Stronger Services
The announcement of the In Home Care Sustainability Support Grant is welcome news for many providers across Australia.
For a sector that delivers essential services to families with complex needs, those living in remote areas and those requiring non-standard hours of care, sustainability has been an ongoing challenge for many years.
The reality is that In Home Care operates within what is often described as a thin market.
Many providers face increasing costs associated with workforce, compliance, administration, travel and service delivery. At the same time, opportunities to increase revenue are often constrained by government funding settings and the affordability of fees for families.
Unlike some other sectors, sustainability challenges cannot simply be solved by increasing prices or significantly expanding utilisation. For many providers, maintaining service viability requires a careful balancing act between supporting families, supporting educators and managing organisational sustainability.
Looking Beyond Immediate Pressures
When grant funding becomes available, the natural instinct is often to focus on immediate operational needs. There is nothing wrong with this.
Many services are dealing with genuine pressures and funding can provide important relief.
However, there is another question worth considering:
How can this funding create benefits that continue long after the grant funding has been spent?
This question shifts the conversation from short-term expenditure to long-term organisational capability.
Instead of asking:
"What can we spend this funding on?"
Perhaps a better question is:
"What can we invest in that will strengthen our service into the future?"
The Challenge of Working In the Business
One of the most common observations I have made throughout my career working with Family Day Care and In Home Care services is that leadership teams spend most of their time working in the business.
They are:
- Supporting families
- Recruiting and retaining educators
- Managing compliance obligations
- Responding to operational issues
- Navigating workforce shortages
- Maintaining service continuity
These activities are essential.
The challenge is that they often leave little time to work on the business.
Questions such as these can remain unanswered:
- What are the biggest risks to our long-term sustainability?
- What opportunities are we missing?
- Are our systems and processes supporting efficiency?
- Are we investing resources in the right areas?
- How effective are our governance arrangements?
- What would strengthen workforce retention?
- Where should we focus our improvement efforts?
Without dedicated time and objective analysis, these questions often remain buried beneath day-to-day operational demands.
Why Independent Assessment Matters
Every organisation develops blind spots. This is not because leaders lack capability or commitment. It is simply a consequence of being deeply immersed in the day-to-day realities of service delivery.
An independent assessment can provide:
- A fresh perspective
- Objective analysis
- Evidence-based recommendations
- Validation of existing approaches
- Identification of unseen risks and opportunities
Most importantly, it can help organisations distinguish between challenges that are structural and outside their control and those that can be influenced through better systems, processes, governance and decision-making. An independent assessment will not solve every challenge facing the sector.
However, it can help services better understand what is driving their performance and where targeted improvements may deliver meaningful benefits.
From Insight to Action
One of the weaknesses of many reviews and assessments is that they end with a report. Recommendations are documented. Priorities are identified. Then daily operational demands take over and implementation becomes difficult.
Real improvement occurs when insights are translated into action.
This is why any sustainability assessment should be accompanied by a practical implementation approach. The objective should not simply be to identify opportunities.The objective should be to strengthen the organisation.
This may include:
- Governance improvements
- Workforce sustainability initiatives
- Operational efficiencies
- Compliance system enhancements
- Strategic planning
- Organisational capability development
- Service delivery improvements
These are all investments that can continue to deliver value long after grant funding has been exhausted.
A Different Way to Think About the Grant
The In Home Care Sustainability Support Grant provides a rare opportunity to invest not only in operational sustainability but also in organisational capability.
For some services, this may mean allocating a portion of funding towards:
Phase 1: Sustainability Diagnostic Assessment
A whole-of-service assessment examining:
- Financial sustainability
- Governance
- Workforce capability
- Compliance
- Operations
- Service delivery
- Strategic opportunities
Phase 2: Sustainability Improvement Program
Implementation of priority initiatives designed to strengthen:
- Organisational capability
- Workforce sustainability
- Governance effectiveness
- Operational performance
- Long-term viability
The goal is not simply to produce another report.
The goal is to build a stronger, more resilient and more sustainable service.
Building Sustainability Beyond the Grant
The challenges facing the In Home Care sector are real. Many are systemic and beyond the direct control of individual providers. However, there remains significant value in understanding how your organisation is performing, identifying opportunities for improvement and making informed decisions about future investment.
The most successful organisations are rarely those that work the hardest. They are often the organisations that have the clearest understanding of their strengths, risks, opportunities and priorities.
As providers consider how to utilise the In Home Care Sustainability Support Grant, it may be worth asking:
What investment could strengthen our service not just for the next 12 months, but for the next five years?
That is where true sustainability begins.
