Prepare your story
Think about daily challenges, current supports, and the goals you want the plan to help you reach.
This section now leads with one clear idea: preparation, planning, and review are connected stages, and clarity at the beginning makes every later step easier to manage.
Prepare
Gather examples, goals, and reports before the meeting.
Plan
Explain what daily life looks like and what support is still missing.
Review
Use progress and evidence to improve the next version of the plan.
Planning Summary
Good planning is usually less about saying more and more about saying the right things clearly.
Five Step Flow
Instead of equal cards across a row, this layout treats the process like a guided sequence so each step feels connected to the next.
Think about daily challenges, current supports, and the goals you want the plan to help you reach.
Describe what is difficult at home, in the community, at appointments, and in routines that matter to you.
Show how therapies, equipment, personal support, or skill-building will help you make practical progress.
Funding decisions are organised into categories, giving you a framework for choosing and managing support.
Plans should keep evolving when circumstances change, progress is made, or extra support is needed.
Meeting And Preparation
This version reduces the layering. The left side explains how to talk through needs during the meeting, and the right side keeps the preparation checklist direct and easier to scan.
During The Meeting
The goal is not to cover everything. It is to explain what daily life looks like now, what support already exists, what is still not working, and what outcomes the requested supports should improve.
Daily needs
Be concrete about personal care, mobility, communication, safety, transport, and community participation.
Existing support
Clarify what family, carers, mainstream services, and providers already do, and where the gaps still are.
Evidence
Assessments, reports, and therapy recommendations help explain function, support needs, and likely outcomes.
What To Prepare
Include independence, routine stability, participation, skill development, therapy outcomes, or safer daily living.
Map what is already helping and what is still preventing you from doing the things that matter most.
Use short examples from real life so the planner can see the gap between needs, risks, and the support required.
After The Plan
Once funding is approved, the next job is to translate the plan into services, routines, and outcomes that actually support the person's goals and everyday life.
Use the plan with providers who understand the goals behind the funding, not just the budget lines.
Keep simple notes on progress, challenges, and unmet needs so future reviews are based on evidence, not memory.
When goals change or supports are not enough, the plan should be revisited with clearer information and stronger detail.
Need help with planning?
Call 0435 330 666 or contact us online if you want help understanding the process before the next step.