Practicing good governance in all public and third sector organisations which receive public money is essential. It demonstrates transparency, accountability, inclusion and responsiveness to service user needs. However, poor governance has the opposite, destructive, effect. Even bodies delivering value for money and good service delivery can see those achievements devalued by poor governance. How should organisations promote, practice and protect the good governance which helps prevent institution and career ending episodes?
These are tough times for all organisations delivering services using the public pound, in both the public and third sectors. Scotland's new First Minister, Humza Yousaf MSP, stated in his first policy speech to parliament that "And we are also – and this is worth stressing – facing the most difficult public spending environment that this devolved parliament has clearly ever seen." He went on to indicate that "As a result, we are having to make tough decisions about our priorities." Statement to the Scottish Parliament, 18 April 2023.
It is clear that funding rounds are expected to be tough. Meanwhile service users still expect good services, delivered where and when they need them. Good governance is the gearing which, when done well, gives every organisation its best chance of continuing to attract the funding needed while satisfying user demand.
Those governing our public bodies today face a daunting task. Stretching limited budgets and resources to meet rising demand for services. Bending the spend but maintaining and improving service quality. Helping their organisations become more efficient and innovative in the way they design and deliver services. All of this while operating within policy frameworks and guidelines set out by government and sector regulators. In times like these, delivering good governance is critical to being able to achieve the balance between financial challenge and service demand. This conference examines what good governance is, what it looks like and how it can be achieved.
This conference looks at core challenges in delivering good governance. It considers the key factors to be addressed across all bodies. It reflects on the challenge of maintaining high standards in governance and focussing on excellence at a time when more is having to be done with much less.
The conference examines these challenges in three sessions:
Topics to be discussed
Head of Strategy & Performance
Scottish Police Authority
Principal
Edinburgh College
Founder and Director
Crimson Bridge Communications
Associate Professor of Public Leadership and Management in the Department of Leadership and HRM
Northumbria University
Partner and Co-head of Government and Business Team
Brodies LLP
Occupational Psychologist and Client Director
KultraLab
Independent Consultant and Deputy Chair of the Board of the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR)
JV Consulting and OSCR
09:15 Chair's opening remarks
Jill Vickerman, Independent Consultant and Deputy Chair of the Board of the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR)
ScotCharityReg
Session 1: Good governance – the strategic context in 2023
09:20 Governance and collaboration – what should good governance look like in 2023?
Dr Ian C Elliott, Associate Professor of Public Leadership and Management in the Department of Leadership and HRM, Northumbria University
NorthumbriaUni
ian_c_elliott
09:35 The role of boards, executive and non-executive directors
Audrey Cumberford MBE, Principal, Edinburgh College
edinburghcoll
09:50 Question and answer session
10:05 Comfort break
Session 2: Core themes in good governance
10:20 Delivering effective inclusion and diversity initiatives
Ryan Tahmassebi, Occupational Psychologist and Client Director, KultraLab
KultraLab
10:35 Good and bad governance – learning from both
Jackie McGuire, Partner and Co-head of Government and Business Team, Brodies LLP
BrodiesLLP
10:50 Question and answer session
11:05 Comfort break
Session 3: Managing risk, meeting challenges and delivering change
11:20 Reputation and message – when it's all going wrong
Graeme Downie, Founder and Director, Crimson Bridge Communications
11:35 What do good service user relations look like during challenging times?
Amanda Coulthard, Head of Strategy & Performance, Scottish Police Authority
ScotPolAuth
11:50 Question and answer session
12:05 Chair's closing remarks
Jill Vickerman, Independent Consultant and Deputy Chair of the Board of the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR)
ScotCharityReg
Amanda Coulthard
Head of Strategy & Performance
Scottish Police Authority
Amanda leads on Strategy and Performance for the Scottish Police Authority, having joined in February 2021 from a role in West Dunbartonshire Council as the performance advisor the Chief Executive and Elected Members, leading a team responsible for: Strategic Planning & Performance; Data Analysis; Policy; Consultation & Engagement; Equalities; Community Planning; Partnerships and Local Scrutiny.
As the Head of Strategy & Performance for the SPA Amanda leads the Authority’s approach to developing and reviewing the national policing strategy, maintaining a system of performance assurance and reporting to support best value, and maintaining public confidence in policing. Amanda’s career has been spent in the public sector, working across Local Government, NHS, and Non-Departmental Public Bodies. In addition, Amanda has held a number of non-executive public and voluntary appointments including Non-Executive Director of NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde.
Audrey Cumberford MBE
Principal
Edinburgh College
Audrey is a graduate of a number of world leading UK Universities, including Oxford University’s Said Business School. Having graduated in Edinburgh, Audrey moved to Bristol University to undertake research within the field of sports psychology. Following this, she left the University sector and moved into private industry before returning to the education sector where she has held senior roles for the past 24 years.
Prior to her current role Audrey led and delivered a large scale, £70m merger resulting in the formation of West College Scotland. Audrey’s reputation as a visionary innovator has resulted in her holding a number of high profile national positions such as Board member of the Scottish Funding Council (responsible for £1.8billion funding for colleges and universities) and the Scottish Government’s Enterprise & Skills Strategic Board – responsible for improving the overall performance of the economy by ensuring that the whole Enterprise and Skills System, with a combined budget of over £2billion, delivers Scotland's Economic Strategy. In May 2022, Audrey was appointed by the Scottish Government to the National Strategy for Economic Transformation Delivery Board.
In addition, Audrey represented Scotland on the UK’s first Independent Commission on the ‘College of the Future’, Chaired by Sir Ian Diamond. In 2020, Audrey, along with Paul Little published the ‘Cumberford-Little Report’, commissioned by Scottish Government Ministers to consider the economic impact of colleges.
Audrey’s career has spanned both the private and education sector and underpins Audrey’s passion and drive to ensure tertiary education in Scotland plays a fundamental role in supporting businesses across the country - embedding a symbiotic relationship between the business community and Scotland’s colleges as providers of vocational and technical education, business support and skills training.
Graeme Downie
Founder and Director
Crimson Bridge Communications
Graeme Downie is Founder and Director of Crimson Bridge Communications, a public affairs and strategic communications company based in Fife. He has worked in communications for over twenty years, building strategic campaigns for organisations to educate, influence and help deliver their agenda.
He was previously a Director at Orbit Communications and Head of Communications in Scotland & Northern Ireland for innovation charity, Nesta and has worked in consultancy in London and Brussels.
Graeme has worked across a broad range of sectors including charities, food & drink, transport, construction, housing, health and energy.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/graemedownie/
Ian C Elliott (Dr)
Associate Professor of Public Leadership and Management in the Department of Leadership and HRM
Northumbria University
Associate Professor of Public Leadership and Management in the Department of Leadership and HRM at Northumbria University. He is also current Chair of the Joint University Council, the UK learned society for public administration, public policy and social work. His research includes work on public leadership, organisational change in the public sector and community empowerment.
Jackie McGuire
Partner and Co-head of Government and Business Team
Brodies LLP
Jackie is Co-head of the Brodies Government and Business Team. She is a public law specialist with particular experience and expertise in the local government sector where she worked in-house for a substantial period of time. She regularly advises on the full breadth of local authority activity including social care, education, housing and roads as well as in relation to conduct and good governance. She also advises clients in relation to major infrastructure process working closely with colleagues in Real Estate and Planning in relation to compulsory purchase and statutory consents. Jackie’s client base includes a number of Scottish local authorities.
Jackie also acts on behalf of a number of registered social landlords as well as the Scottish Housing Regulator. Her regulatory practice also extends to advising and supporting care providers in connection with investigations and regulatory interventions in addition to advising clients in the independent schools sector in relation to regulation, standards and good governance.
Ryan Tahmassebi
Occupational Psychologist and Client Director
KultraLab
Ryan is an Occupational psychologist with over 10 years’ experience specialising in employee engagement, wellbeing, and organisational culture. He has led global employee research programmes for organisations including Tesco, Nestle, HSBC and the NHS and delivered keynotes on employee experience at the global Amazon EX summit in Seattle. Ryan is the Client Director at KultraLab, a digital coaching platform fusing behavioural science and technology. He is driven by one simple belief that everyone deserves to have good days at work.
Jill Vickerman
Independent Consultant and Deputy Chair of the Board of the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR)
JV Consulting and OSCR
Jill Vickerman is an independent consultant specialising in providing advice and delivering solutions within the public and third sector. She is also the Deputy Chair of the Board of the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR).
Between 2013 and 2023, Jill was the National Director of the British Medical Association (BMA) in Scotland. During this time she led the work of the BMA in Scotland, influencing national health policy, and working on behalf of doctors and training doctors in Scotland. Prior to 2013, Jill spent 26 working for the Scottish Government in a range of different roles and departments, initially as an analyst where she led the analytical services for the health and social care department, and latterly as head of policy for health quality in Scotland. In this latter role, Jill worked with the NHS and with the third sector to develop the Quality Strategy and the 2020 Vision for health and social care in Scotland.
Over the period 2013-2017 Jill was a trustee for Erskine Hospital, the veteran’s charity, where she was a board member, and sat on the care governance committee and the audit and risk committee.
Sponsor: KultraLab
KultraLab is a behavioural science and technology organisation.
We are on a mission to unlock everyone’s potential through the power of coaching.
We believe that we are past the point of no return – we need to think differently about the world of work. Fusing together coaching, behavioural science and technology we can create exceptional organisations by enabling all employees to connect deeply with a business, learn new skills at scale and speed and improve their performance beyond recognition.
That’s why we created our CoachTech Platform, Kultra®, to provide organisations with a highly scalable and cost-effective solution to give everyone access to their own coach. The benefit? Your people feel more empowered, more engaged and more connected to the business, accelerating positive change and business growth.
Our partners
At KultraLab, we believe the future of business is through collaboration. We intentionally partner with organisations that can add value to our mission of helping our clients build the consumer workforces of tomorrow:
KultraLab Partner: Kelvin Capital
The Kelvin Capital team has a combined 30 years experience of working with new businesses and understands both the challenges and opportunities, which will be encountered during the high growth phase. The team has built up extensive networks, which will be made available to assist and support the portfolio businesses.
Kelvin Capital will actively promote the portfolio businesses through its website and social media activities raising their awareness and profile.
The entire Kelvin Capital team is focused on the success of our portfolio of businesses.
This conference will take place online.
How to book
You can book to attend, or order the video only, in 3 ways:
Conference fees
Group discount – organisations booking 3 or more delegates will receive every third delegate place free of charge (please complete further forms if necessary)
Payment
We do not currently accept payments online and will send you an invoice.
You have the option of paying by BACS or card.
BACS details will be included on the invoice.
If you wish to pay by card, please tick the appropriate box on the booking form and a member of our staff will contact you by telephone to take the payment. Alternatively you may call 0131 556 1500.
Terms and conditions
By placing this booking, you agree to the full terms and conditions found via the link at the foot of our website.
Book delegate places or purchase video recording.