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Improve Your Steering with Dashboard Reports

Improve Your Steering with Dashboard Reports. Tiffin Shewmake PRIZIM, Inc. 2006 National Environmental Partnership Summit Breakout Session: Creating Positive Change: Tools and Techniques for Driving Environmental Stewardship Tuesday, May 9, 2006 10:30 AM to 12:00 PM . NO GAS GAUGE. . .

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Improve Your Steering with Dashboard Reports

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  1. Improve Your Steering with Dashboard Reports Tiffin Shewmake PRIZIM, Inc. 2006 National Environmental Partnership Summit Breakout Session: Creating Positive Change: Tools and Techniques for Driving Environmental Stewardship Tuesday, May 9, 2006 10:30 AM to 12:00 PM

  2. NO GAS GAUGE. . .

  3. DON’T DRIVE LIKE MY MOTHER

  4. DON’T FLY (OR MANAGE) Without the right information

  5. DASHBOARD REPORT • Short report, typically one or two pages • Designed for management • Uses graphics and color to present key indicators • Produced on a frequent or regular basis

  6. BUSINESS DASHBOARD 1978 article in the Harvard Business Review “Graphic Shorthand as an Aid to Managers."

  7. DASHBOARDS CAN BE: Interface for a computer system Paper reports For public communication

  8. WHAT! ANOTHER REPORT? • Most reports are not designed for managers • Too long • Essential information buried in background data • Format makes it hard to see trends and spot problems • Too infrequent • Dashboard Reports are • Designed specifically for managers • Short, easy to understand quickly • Format helps highlight trends and potential problems • Frequent enough to support decision making

  9. USING DASHBOARD REPORTS • Evaluate progress towards goals • See if the trends are positive or negative • Stay informed about the status of priority areas • Identify potential problems • Raise questions that need further analysis or information • Track efficiency and resources • Shift resources to achieve the best results Most valuable when actively used to evaluate and manage programs

  10. USING DASHBOARD REPORTS • Compstat Approach • Pioneered by the NYC Police Department • Data-centric, meetings revolve around the data to identify, track and solve problems • Adopted by many other agencies • Washington State, including the Department of Ecology, uses a variation--Government Management Accountability and Performance or GMAP

  11. DASHBOARD ELEMENTS • A dashboard report has three main elements • Indicators • Capture progress towards the program’s goals • Characterize the program’s operations • Usually a mix of outcomes (what was achieved) and outputs (what was done) • Context • Information to help you understand the meaning of the indicators • Goals, health standards, staffing or budget data, size of the regulatory universe • Format • How the data is displayed

  12. DASHBOARD ELEMENTS

  13. INDICATORS Indicators should reflect the program’s mission, goals, and priorities • You tend to get what you measure • If you reward police for writing speeding tickets what do you get more tickets or reduced speeding? • Important to include outcomes • Include environmental measures • Also need to track of activities

  14. INDICATORS Direct environmental indicators are important because they help keep your focus on your ultimate mission—protecting the environment • Ambient measures—air and water quality • Impact on Habitat – impervious surface, protected areas • Wildlife • Invasive species

  15. Net and troll catch of Chinook Salmon INDICATORS

  16. INDICATORS Direct environmental indicators don’t provide all of the information you need • Not provide feedback quickly enough • Cause and effect hard to track • Monitoring may not be extensive or timely enough • Agency or program does not control all the variables • One solution is to use indirect environmental indicators such as emissions and waste volumes. Understanding environmental problems, especially if combined with measures of programmatic goals, can help show where new solutions are needed or highlight the need for more resources.

  17. INDICATORS • Activity or Outputs • Need to measure program activities and results • Should reflect priorities (example permit backlogs) • Understand where program resources are allocated • Used in addition to environmental measures

  18. Restoration Goal 185,000 acres by 2010 CONTEXT Context is information that helps make sense of the indicators • Goals show what you are trying to achieve • Trends show if you are getting to your goal • Dimension or relative size of program

  19. CONTEXT Adding context to environmental and programmatic measures should tell the story of the program Graphics from the 2003 Annual Ocean andBay Water Quality Report County of Orange, Health Care Agency, Environmental Health’s Ocean Water Protection Program

  20. INFORMATION TO HELP FIND THE PROBLEM Graphics from the 2003 Annual Ocean andBay Water Quality Report County of Orange, Health Care Agency, Environmental Health’s Ocean Water Protection Program

  21. PRESENTATION • Design graphs based on • The purpose • The target audience • The graph needs to fit the data • Be careful of using gauges • Too many data elements makes it hard to understand • Scale can obscure the meaning of the data • Use color to add meaning • Use text to add meaning

  22. PRESENTATION Select the right time span and make sure that the scale works for the data

  23. CHARTJUNK

  24. Time span?

  25. Good dashboard indicator?

  26. INDICATORS Minnesota Pollution Control Agency -- Environmental Information Report

  27. Trend? Context?

  28. Environmental Measures

  29. Time Span Raises Questions

  30. Remember– don’t drive like my mother. Use information to help steer your program, achieve your goals and protect the environment.

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