Designing policy with and for the people it is meant to serve is a key ambition of the Dutch Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment (SZW). But how do you translate that ambition into everyday practice? How do you ensure that policies truly reflect the needs and lived realities of citizens? This was the challenge I worked on in 2025 as part of the Support Team Innovation. I developed the QuickScan: a monitoring tool that not only provides insight into how SZW approaches participatory policymaking. But more importantly: sets a learning movement in motion.
The first step towards a learning culture
One of the Ministry’s strategic goals is to develop policies that better align with what is happening in society. To contribute meaningfully to that goal, we first needed a clear picture of the current situation: a shared understanding of how the various directorates within the Ministry involve citizens and people with lived experience in policymaking.
The QuickScan proved to be an effective solution. It is important to stress, however, that this tool is much more than a measurement instrument. It serves as a starting point for collective learning and reflection, and for taking concrete steps towards better policy. In that sense, it represents an important first step in fostering a learning culture around participatory policymaking.

