Phil Bottle, Managing Director of NHS workforce planning specialists, SARD, discusses the unsung importance of operational management to the NHS, including how effective management can be the remedy for a system straining under the weight of misaligned capacity and demand.


Penny Dash’s recent comments cut straight to the heart of a critical issue within the NHS: the absence of robust operational management. Her observation that adding staff has not translated into the anticipated impact is a stark reminder that people alone, without the right systems and processes, cannot untangle inefficiencies or improve outcomes.

But what exactly is operational management in the NHS context? At its core, it’s about ensuring that the vast resources—people, time, and technology—are strategically aligned to deliver the best care for patients. It’s the art of transforming effort into efficiency, of turning plans into practical, measurable outcomes. It’s also about creating a culture of accountability, where teams understand their roles, adapt to challenges, and continuously seek improvement.

The cost of missing discipline

Operational management is not a glamorous term. It doesn’t grab headlines like breakthroughs in medical research or new funding announcements. Yet its absence is felt every day:

  • Empty outpatient clinics sitting next to overcrowded ones
  • Elective surgery lists under-utilised due to inflexible staffing
  • Temporary fixes taking precedence over sustainable solutions

These aren’t isolated problems; they’re symptoms of a system straining under the weight of misaligned capacity and demand. And they highlight the critical need for something often overlooked in healthcare: discipline.

“Dr Dash’s call for more ‘ops managers’ is a recognition that leadership matters.”

Operational discipline doesn’t mean rigid adherence to plans. It’s about creating the flexibility to respond dynamically to real-world challenges. It’s about having clear, standardised processes that still leave room for human ingenuity. It ensures the right people, in the right roles, supported by the right tools, are empowered to adapt and improve.

It is something clearly missing and sorely needed. Yet as unglamorous as this work may seem, these are the hard yards that need to be made for meaningful progress.

Unlocking potential through workforce potential

Workforce planning is one of the linchpins of effective operational management. Done well, it provides the foundation for aligning capacity with demand. It highlights inefficiencies and opportunities, offering clarity on how resources can best support service delivery.

However, traditional approaches to workforce planning often fall short. Data may be fragmented or inconsistent, job plans may fail to reflect actual service needs, and staff often feel excluded from decision-making. The result? A process that stalls and fails to deliver the needed impact.

What’s needed is a shift in focus:

  1. From fragmentation to integration: Workforce data should tell a cohesive story, not present conflicting narratives. This requires shared frameworks, clear language, and accessible tools that translate data into actionable insights.
  2. From top-down to collaborative: Operational management isn’t a one-person job. It’s a team effort that thrives on engagement at every level—from senior leaders to frontline staff. Collaboration fosters ownership, ensuring that changes are not only implemented but embraced.
  3. From short-term fixes to long-term sustainability: Quick fixes may alleviate immediate pressures, but sustainable operational management looks ahead, anticipating future challenges and building resilience into systems and processes.

Leadership and accountability

Dr Dash’s call for more ‘ops managers’ is a recognition that leadership matters. But perhaps even more critical is focusing on the processes those leaders oversee. Operational management isn’t just about systems; it’s about the people who run them. Effective leaders don’t simply keep the cogs turning—they identify inefficiencies, question the status quo, and work collaboratively to drive meaningful change.

This may mean rethinking whether current processes are fit for purpose or innovating entirely new ways of working. For example, underutilised elective services or ‘dark hours’ in clinical spaces could be addressed by flexing traditional staffing models or introducing creative solutions such as cross-team task-sharing.

Equally, accountability plays a pivotal role. As Paul Corrigan pointed out, the NHS must create environments where success and failure are acknowledged and acted upon. However, accountability should not equate to punitive measures like league tables. Instead, it should foster collaboration between trusts, encouraging the sharing of best practices and lessons learned. Data is crucial here—not as a blunt instrument, but as a tool to illuminate areas of strength and opportunities for growth.

A moment of opportunity

The challenges are clear, but so too are the opportunities. Meeting today’s demand is as critical as planning for the future. Predictive analytics can help model upcoming needs and support proactive decision-making, but current demand models are just as vital. These tools allow teams to allocate resources efficiently, manage capacity in real time, and ensure patients receive timely care. Balancing immediate pressures with future-proofing is the operational challenge of our time—and one that must be tackled head-on.

Operational management is more than a behind-the-scenes function. When strengthened, it unlocks efficiency, empowers teams, and transforms patient care. The time to focus on “ops, ops, ops” isn’t years away; it’s now.