Personal Service Society
Supporting innovative charity work with cutting-edge
communications
Although the care solutions provided
by the Personal Service Society (PSS) are
forward-looking, its staff were
hampered by an out-of-date communications
infrastructure. To work more
cohesively and efficiently as an organisation, the charity wanted
to establish a communications network that would enable staff to
share information quickly and securely across multiple sites.
A high-capacity data network and a
managed telephony solution from ntl:Telewest Business provided the
answer – delivering seamless, high-speed communications while
keeping costs down.
Seamless connections across the
organisation
Established in 1919, PSS is a pioneer
in the provision of services that tackle social problems in the UK.
It has laid the foundations for many community-based social and
healthcare organisations – including the Citizens Advice Bureau,
Age Concern and Relate. Headquartered in the centre of Liverpool,
the charity has satellite offices in the north of England, Wales
and Scotland. Our communications
infrastructure is helping PSS work
more effectively so it can provide improved services to the people
who need its help.
Speeding up the flow of
information
Outdated systems were limiting the
flow of information across PSS offices, and to other social service
groups and fieldworkers. A slow dial-up connection meant that using
email and the Internet was time-consuming – and if they
needed to distribute large documents,
staff sometimes had to resort to saving files to CD and delivering
them by courier. To address this, we proposed a network that would
link the charity’s offices, providing high-speed Internet access
and allowing them to transfer large files quickly. Barry Keal, IT
Manager at PSS, was impressed by our products – and our costs.
“When it came to the crunch, the package that ntl:Telewest Business
put on the table simply couldn’t be matched by the other
providers,” he confirms.
Smooth and efficient call
handling
Although the initial focus was to
improve data communications, PSS’s voice systems were also in need
of a refresh. We installed a fully-managed Centrex telephony
solution across all of the charity’s offices. “In the past, we were
unable to transfer calls between different sites and if people
contacted the wrong department, we had to give them another number
to call,” explains Barry. “Now we can forward the call directly –
helping us to provide a calm,
smooth service.”
The ntl:Telewest Business solution is
also cost-effective – with better tariffs, reduced rental charges,
and free internal calls. “Our telephone bill has been reduced by a
third,” says Barry Keal. “It means we can invest more money into
further improvements to our telecommunications structure.”
PSS also took advantage of our
Telebusiness Numbers service to provide a charge-free 0800 number
for its groundbreaking ‘Young Carers’ campaign. By calling this
free number, school-age carers can access advice, counselling,
advocacy and respite care – and PSS
can manage the routing of incoming calls using a web-based
interface.
Meeting a critical deadline
Speed is key to any project and for
PSS and ntl:Telewest Business, time really was of the essence.
Regeneration of Liverpool’s city centre meant that roads and
pavements would be resurfaced directly outside PSS headquarters. We
had to work fast to lay 1,000 metres of fibre before the
regeneration work began. Miss the deadline and it would be another
two years before cable could be laid.
“Our head office is obviously the central hub of the
organisation – so if they didn’t get the fibre down in time there
would have been little point to the project,” says Barry Keal. “But
ntl:Telewest Business did it... with three weeks to spare!”
What it has made possible
In Barry’s opinion, the ability to
control the charity’s IT infrastructure remotely across the
network is a key benefit – saving time and money. “I can now
provide and apply IT expertise instantaneously, wherever it is
needed,” he comments.
Barry is also excited about future
opportunities made possible by the network. He concludes: “In the
future we’ll be looking at videoconferencing and adding data links
to other satellite offices”.