Performance Improvement Framework Self Review Training 24 June 2010 Central Agencies l DPMC l SSC l Treasury Mythological Ministry of Magic Mission: Making Money Materialise 50% Staff Growth (FTE) Personnel Expense per Employee (FTE) Change in Real Price or Staff 40% Personnel Expenses (ex. ACC) Total Operating Expenses 30% 20% 10% 0% 99/00 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08 HYEFU 08/09 -10% Financial Year PIF challenge: Showing value to a sceptical public (or reviewer) 2 Central Agencies l DPMC l SSC l Treasury #3. Cost Effectiveness VALUE FOR MONEY (Best Result for NZers) #1. Technical Efficiency #2. Allocative Efficiency Value for Money is hard to assess directly … but poor results at ANY corner of the ‘triangle’ shows under-performance Central Agencies l DPMC l SSC l Treasury #1. PRICE, QUANTITY & STANDARDS (TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY) ‘Did new spending actually increase or improve output ?’ Effect of Flying Hours on Maritime Patrol Prices 80% Gulf of Oman (Output D16 - 659 extra hours) Total flying hours Real change in price or output 70% Real cost per flying hour 60% Real cost (Personnel) 50% Real cost (Total Expenses) 1. 40% 2. 30% 20% 10% 0% FY 98/99 FY 99/00 FY 00/01 FY 01/02 FY 02/03 FY 03/04 -10% -20% Financial Year FY 04/05 FY 05/06 FY 06/07 3. 4. 5. How did prices of big outputs change? Did output volume or quality change proportionately? Did quality change? Did o’heads grow? Can we show citizens actually benefit from this? Central Agencies l DPMC l SSC l Treasury #2. DID OUTPUT GET TO THE PROBLEM AREA, & EFFECT CHANGE Allocative Efficiency ‘Can we get better results Extra Prisoners ('03 vs '07) Large Proportion of New Prison Space Used for Less Serious or Less Risky Offenders Can we link extra $$$ & output to priority groups, areas, needs & opportunities? 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Seriousness Score -50 -150 "0" "1" "2" "3" "4" "5" Seriousness Score 198 251 218 137 63 -1 -157 155 127 85 99 81 Reoffending Risk "6" 129 Who has / is the problem? Who got interventions or $$$? Who missed out? How well do allocative rules really work? Reoffending Risk -100 -200 without spending more ?’ "7" "8" 15 104 164 118 " 9 " " 10 " 17 247 Can we deliver more in areas that will benefit more, & limit waste? Central Agencies l DPMC l SSC l Treasury #3. INCREASED PRICE (OR OUTPUT) IMPROVES CORE OUTCOMES Look for diminishing returns. Scale & timing ($ vs. outcome)? 20% 10% /0 7 06 6 /0 05 5 /0 04 4 /0 03 3 /0 -10% 02 2 0% /0 Did end outcomes improve much? Did gains mirror / equal spending? Did gains precede or lag changes? Intermediate outcomes improved? 30% 01 1. 2. 3. 4. Investing to reduce crime … Change Relative to FY 01/02 ‘Are results good, bad or simply indifferent ?’ -20% Real Funding Violence Drugs & AntiSocial Dishonesty ERO Approach - Context ERO evaluates the performance of schools and early childhood services ERO’s self-review was undertaken as a pilot review for the PIF (July 2009) The context for ERO’s self-review was “the alignment of services and supporting infrastructure to better support Government priorities for education” This organisation-wide context meant that ERO tested all aspects of the framework Brent McPherson- June 2010 ERO Approach - Team Level Position (tier 2) National Manager Corporate Services (tier 2) National Manager Review Services (Central) (tier 3) Strategy & Performance Manager (tier 3) Manager Information Services (tier 3) (tier 3) The team: was appointed by the Chief Executive had knowledge about the business and governance had access to information had evaluation skills Chief Finance Officer Manager Standards & Contracts Brent McPherson- June 2010 ERO Approach - Method Critical areas identified in the framework were allocated between review members - in pairs (allocated areas were independent to current portfolios) Each pair recorded their assessment, action points & evidence in a template (to justify their judgement) The team synthesised results & discussed judgements (moderation) The report (and recommendations) was discussed with the Senior Management team Brent McPherson- June 2010 Benefits to ERO The self-review: reinforced a commitment to all staff to promote a culture of continuous improvement reinforced ERO’s own credibility (ERO promotes evaluation capacity externally) identified a set of recommendations for action (the recommendations have been accepted by SMT and integrated into the work programme) encouraged the Chief Executive to think about ERO’s future approach to internal evaluation Brent McPherson- June 2010 Why Do A Self-Review? respond to Govt priorities (ie how to “maximise the value received from its education services”) promote continuous improvement through a formal and structured approach promote accountability – and a balance of internal and external review (ERO ‘s approach to schools) prepare for a formal review review the organisation (do it in chunks?) basis for engaging with the Minister (PIAs, SOI) Brent McPherson- June 2010 Issues and Challenges To improve the value of the self-review, next time ERO would….. plan ahead schedule at a time appropriate to ERO (and set time aside to conduct the self-review) engage managers and staff in the planning (and engage the senior management team throughout) identify priorities – to reduce time spent on areas where there are high levels of comfort incorporate a greater field component - to test the cascade of initiatives to the field (ERO is a field agency) develop an associated communications plan Brent McPherson- June 2010 Issues and Challenges ERO removed bias by: ensuring that review team members did not review their own portfolio using a moderation process to synthesise the results ensuring that the views expressed were backed up by supporting evidence Brent McPherson- June 2010 Issues and Challenges Other recommendations/challenges: treat it as a formal review (ready the documents) ensure the team has access to evaluation skills plan for conflicting opinion what is the current culture of the agency? Brent McPherson- June 2010