Phase one: It might work
In phase one, teams work to better understand the problem, rapidly test potential solutions, and define how to measure success. At the end of phase one, teams present to health system leadership for the opportunity to receive additional investment to take their ideas to scale.
Duration: Six months (November to April)
- Training: Teams attend a series of workshops to learn high-impact methods for rapidly validating solutions
- Mentorship: An Innovation Advisor dedicates 40% of their time to the project
- Funding: Teams have access to up to $10,000 to test and develop their concepts
- Recognition and additional support: At the end of phase one, teams present their work to health system leadership for the opportunity to receive additional investment
- Define a meaningful problem space with baseline data.
- Develop an understanding of key problem drivers.
- Engage a working team to develop and test interventions.
- Set measurable targets for your work.
- Run a series of small experiments based on clear hypotheses
- Generate early evidence that you can move the needle.
- Identify and engage operational stakeholders who are willing to support your intervention once you have demonstrated impact.
Phase two: It does work.
In phase two, teams move from conducting small experiments to testing on a larger scale. Teams are challenged to demonstrate sustained impact and secure the resources and stakeholder support necessary to move their solution towards implementation.
Duration: One year (July to June)
- Training: Teams attend a series of workshops to learn approaches and skills for bringing innovations to scale.
- Mentorship: Innovation Advisors continue to dedicate time to the project. Allocation varies by project.
- Funding: Teams have access to up to $50,000 to move work forward.
- Test your intervention at a level of scale that provides the evidence needed for operational stakeholders to invest in further scaling and sustaining your solution.
- Define and articulate a business model to support your solution at scale. This includes demonstrating a clear return on investment for the health system, payers, and additional stakeholders with the resources to support your intervention.
Phase three: How we work.
Leveraging knowledge and momentum from previous phases, teams work with stakeholders to secure the permanent infrastructure necessary for their intervention. Teams “graduate” when they achieve sustainable implementation at scale for their solution.
Duration: Varies by project
- Gap resources as needed (funding, staff support, leadership advising).
- Develop and execute a strategy to operationalize your intervention at scale with resources independent of the Center.
- Identify clear metrics and infrastructure for accountability and continuous improvement.