1 / 16

Challenges in Using Performance Information to Improve Management

Challenges in Using Performance Information to Improve Management. Drummond Kahn, Director of Audit Services, City of Portland (503) 823-3536 drummond@ci.portland.or.us http://www.portlandonline.com/auditor/auditservices. The City of Roses -- Portland. Challenges and Need to Use Information.

rosemaryf
Télécharger la présentation

Challenges in Using Performance Information to Improve Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Challenges in Using Performance Information to Improve Management Drummond Kahn, Director of Audit Services, City of Portland (503) 823-3536 drummond@ci.portland.or.us http://www.portlandonline.com/auditor/auditservices

  2. The City of Roses -- Portland

  3. Challenges and Need to Use Information • We’ll describe challenges to governments’ effective use of performance measurement information. • No matter how good measurement information is, it needs to be used!

  4. Performance Info Only Works When Used • Performance reports are like parachutes. • They function only when open! • Governments and the public appreciate performance reporting, and it’s key to governance, but has to be used.

  5. Our Overture • Conferences like this, and books, articles, and basic public opinion are getting the idea that performance measurement is critical. • BUT measurers are often the first cut in budget reduction (they are not “line” employees). • BUT government and decision-makers may not use or internalize the results.

  6. Today’s Sponsor • Performance Measurement, Performance Use, and four challenges • Today’s presentation is brought to you by the number 4 and the letter “P”

  7. Portland’s Audit Services Division • ALGA Member, follows Yellow Book • Audit Services is a Division in the Office of the City Auditor • 12.5 Full-time Equivalent employees • All audit staff hold graduate degrees, professional certification, or both • AGA/Sloan Foundation Awards for Excellence in SEA Reporting (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008) • Recent Knighton Gold and Silver Medals • www.portlandonline.com/auditor/auditservices

  8. Top Four Challenges • The biggest challenges to using performance measurement to improve management are: • Absence of an “executive champion” to support and encourage measurement in your organization (or, alternately, the departure of someone who had acted as a champion for measures). • Insistence of government to use traditional budget exercises (cuts and add-backs) rather than basing budget changes on performance information.

  9. Top Four Challenges (Continued) • Lack of integration between the budget and the performance information • (Potentially) Disconnect between the folks who prepare the measurement information and the folks who manage. • Remember – measurement information is for performance management holistically, not just for the budget process. • Viewing measurement as a once-a-year effort rather than an ongoing process.

  10. Top Four Challenges (Continued) To summarize, performance management will probably fail if: • It lacks an executive champion • It occurs in an environment that does not use or appreciate it (and persists in traditional budget exercises) or integrate measurement with management • It’s led by employees not connected with or responsible for overall management • It’s a once-a-year exercise.

  11. The “Executive Champion” • It takes leadership to “coach” successes in any organization. • Informed leaders use the tools at their disposal to study and make changes. • Remember the “Plan, Do, Review” effort? TQM? MFR? MBO?

  12. The “Two Percent Solution” • Some jurisdictions base next year’s plans and budgets on what happened last year (plus or minus two percent). • Enhanced management might consider other issues, like how much of that service is needed!

  13. Two Ships Passing in the Night • If upper management does not use and act on measurement information, it’s missing a chance at great success. • If measurers lose or temper their advocacy for governance based on measures, they miss a chance, too.

  14. All The Time, Not Once A Year • Brigadoon was the story about the Scottish village that appeared only once each century. • Measure regularly! • Make sure management uses the information regularly and not episodically.

  15. But It’s Not All “Doom and Gloom”! • Measurement by itself can provide a critical public accountability and lens into government operations. • Measurement helps transparency and accountability. • Management may act on information later.

  16. Thank You For Attending! Please call or e-mail if you have questions! Drummond Kahn Director of Audit Services, City of Portland (503) 823-3536 drummond@ci.portland.or.us

More Related