Reduce missed debt advice appointments using behavioural science
A guide to a new communication system
When a client doesn’t attend a debt advice appointment (‘no shows’), it means they are not receiving (or at least delaying receiving) debt advice which can dramatically improve their financial circumstances.
Advisers also have to prepare for each appointment, so every ‘no show’ not only wastes the time spent planning, but also the time reserved for the appointment itself.
The Money and Pensions Service (MaPS) supported eight participant organisations to implement the intervention which resulted in a significant reduction in the number of missed appointments (‘no-shows’) by almost one quarter (24%).
A new communication system
The Money and Pensions Service (MaPS) has developed a new communication system based on behavioural science, designed to reduce the number of clients missing appointments across the debt advice sector.
The NCS consisted of sending up to three communications in advance of a debt advice appointment, using the latest thinking in behavioural science to be concise but more frequent, elicit greater commitment, make the key message more salient and reduce the complexity of the tasks involved.
The impact
Eight participant organisations were involved in the intervention which lasted for approximately five months. The results of the intervention were clear – with the NCS in place there was a significant reduction in the number of missed appointments by almost a quarter (24%). At the same time, attendance overall increased, as did cancellations.
How the NCS works
The communication process below summarises how we propose debt advice providers implement the NCS. It is designed to provide flexibility to accommodate varying waiting times and current booking structure, developed from the learnings and the recommendations captured from the impact evaluation and interviews with front-line staff and clients.
Wider application
This same approach was also successful for other parts of the debt advice process. At one provider, similar techniques were used to increase the number of clients returning information required in order to progress their case to their adviser. By sending additional reminders in accordance with the NCS, the returns increased by 34% overall, while those being returned in the same week increased by around 80%.
We encourage debt advice providers to download the report and use the learnings to review their current communications with clients. It is our hope that our findings will influence change across the sector by reducing no-shows and helping more people in debt.
You can also download our toolkit which includes templates for email, post and SMS communication, alongside a guide to the new communication system.