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Once you have identified the needs and you have made sure that your project will help meeting them, the following question arises: is the cooperative model relevant? What kind of organisation are you aiming to create?
There is no one-size-fits-all cooperative model, even in the elderly care sector. The relevant cooperative model depends on the local context, the services provided, available initial resources and final aim of the project. This flexibility is one major asset: cooperatives are open to innovation!
The type of cooperative relevant for a specific project will depend on the national rules and local contexts. Your national support contact will be able to provide you with extensive and customised guidance. Yet, the typology below can offer some first insights of the possibilities you may consider.
The primary goal of a cooperative is to meet the needs of its members: whose needs are you willing to target? At least three models may be relevant in the elderly care sector:
The economic sector(s) covered by your organisation should also be one of your main concerns at this stage: it will be the basis of your short-term and long-term business plan. Some examples are presented below.
Although one model is not better than another, this toolkit focuses especially on elderly care multistakeholder cooperatives. Involving elderly care providers (whether formal or informal) and receivers in one same economic structure – possibly together with partner stakeholders (public bodies, businesses, non-profit organisations) – may potentially lead to the creation of innovative ways to address elderly care issues in terms of active assisted living and solidarity between generations. Most of the tools and steps presented here are however common to the creation of any elderly care cooperative, and should be easily transposable to other cooperative models.
iCareCoops provides a sustainable, ICT-driven solution to our ageing society's increasing need for care. The project aims to develop a new way of promoting and supporting elderly care cooperatives as a model to organise elderly care in an efficient way.
AALEL (AAL Experience Language)
What does your social environment need?
Cooperatives are embedded in their social and economic environment: their creation often stems out from a need or an opportunity. The first step is to determine if the service that will be provided by your cooperative will meet people’s needs and if they will use it. Before starting a business and whatever size or type of cooperative you are planning, doing some sort of research is highly recommended. Several approaches and tools exist to carry out a needs assessment research: some may be comprehensive but also time-consuming, e.g. conducting a large-scale survey of potential users; others may allow to quickly gather information – e.g. interviewing a few partners, conducting secondary research – but without guaranteeing a perfect relevance or reliability. A careful balance between your aims, available funding and resources, may help you choosing the most relevant method. The “Territorial needs assessment guideline” offers some recommendations to help you in this process.
Keep in mind that many elderly care services are most likely already provided by the community: they can be formally or informally organised, supported by public services or self-organised, undertaken by health professional or volunteer care providers, etc. Mapping elderly care services requires you to undertake a review of the stakeholders who are already operating on the territory: meeting them and presenting your idea will allow you to test the relevance of your project, benefit from external knowledge and experience, and will give you the possibility to adapt your idea accordingly. This step is also an opportunity to identify potential future partners of your cooperative.
Key things to think about
"Before carrying out a needs assessment you must consider various questions.- What do you want to find out?
- Who is the information for? Just for your own planning, or will it also be used for a funding application? If so, then will the needs assessment answer the types of questions your funder might ask?
- How can you express your questions in plain language that people will understand and respond to?
- What specific questions will you ask, and will the answers really tell you what you want to know?
- How will you gather the information?
- Who is going to do the research?
- How much can you do yourselves and with which parts do you need help?
- Where are you going to do the survey, or find information?
- How much is it all going to cost? Draw up a budget.
- How much time have you got and when does it need to done by? Draw up a timetable."
-- Author (Sustain, 2015)