The document discusses the Handyperson Benefits Realisation Toolkit (HPBRT), which was developed in 2011 to help handyperson services prove their value to commissioners. It outlines the methodology used to develop the toolkit, which aggregates retrospective data on issues like falls and fires to estimate costed benefits of preventing incidents. While the benefits are not strictly financial savings, the toolkit provides a way to model the size of services needed to achieve targeted benefits. The document explains how the toolkit can still be used today with basic service data on expenditures, visits, jobs and job types to estimate benefits.