Title: Dashboards: Measuring the organisations performance
1DashboardsMeasuring the organisations
performance
- Alan Hough
- Research Student
- Australian Centre of Philanthropy and Nonprofit
Studies, QUT - Building Better Boards 2008
2We will cover
- Why understanding your organisations performance
is important - Mechanisms for understanding
- The Nonprofit Dashboard
- How a Dashboard might be developed
- How a Dashboard might be used
- Why all performance measurement and management
systems have their limitations - Builds on my presentation to BBB 2006
3Why understanding your organisations performance
is important
4Conformance
- ASIC v Adler Ors
- Familiar with fundamentals
- Keep informed about activities
- Monitor orgs affairs and policies, by attending
meetings, and - Familiar with the orgs financial status
5Performance
- Good information can help the board to influence
the organisation in a positive way
6The importance of board routines
- We have routines for financial information
- But not for the explicit and systematic
assessment of non-financial performance
72. Mechanisms for understanding
8How do we find out whats going on inside our
organisations
- Organisational newsletters and documents
- Regulators
- Personal experience and informal conversations
- External networks
- Risk assessments
- Media
- Operational reports
- Financial reports
- Client/member experience
- Potential and former client/members experience
- Staff experience (paid or volunteer)
- Funders
- Accreditation/standards
9Good information systems are
- Concise
- Clear
- Timely
- Relevant to organisational strategy and the
boards work - The best available
- Based on past performance, but forward-looking
- Contextualized, with interpretation and analysis
- Comparative
- Integrate internal and external reporting
- Graphically depicted
10We will never know everything because
- The sheer quantity of potential information
- The cost of potential information
113. The Nonprofit Dashboard
12Butlers The Nonprofit Dashboard
- 47, with CD of Excel tools and Word surveys
- Just one of many alternatives e.g. for larger
organisations, Pentaho freeware
13Why a Dashboard
- A useful summary and addition to your Governance
Information System - Focused on key issues
- Routine format
- Omissions more likely to be noticed
- Can assist in
- Organisational learning
- Internal and external accountability
- Improving performance
14The Nonprofit Dashboard
- Visual display
- Can be linked to your mission /or plan
- Based on key measures of performance
- Can include lagging and leading indicators
154. How a Dashboard might be developed
16Two methods of development
- A quick and dirty process where the CEO puts
together a Dashboard for the board to play with - But the board still needs to learn about the
socialization strategies
- A considered process
- Examine info currently provided
- Interview key staff
- Ask board members what they need to know
- Review data systems and integrity (e.g.
definitions) - Review Scorecard formats and frequency
- Learn how to use the information
- Maintain the system GIGO
175. How a Dashboard might be used
18- Dean Spitzer, Transforming performance
measurement - One of the major reasons why performance
measurement is seldom able to deliver on its
positive potential is because it is almost never
properly socialized, that is, built in a
positive way into the social fabric of the
organisation.
19How we can use the Dashboard
- To create a routine for monitoring performance
- Rule of thumb Takes 6 occasions of use before
groups really understand how to use the
information - Think out loud about our orgs performance
- Ask What does this mean for my knowledge of the
organisation? - Ask What does this mean for stakeholders?
- Comparisons historical performance, planned
performance, standards, ratios, other
organisations
20What we know about the use of performance
information
- Information used punitively will result in
gaming - Financial rewards will result in a concentration
on the measures - Organisations often measure what is easy to
measure, not what is important - People often demand more information than they
use in practice - Watch for measurement churn
216. Why all performance measurement and management
systems are both a solution and a problems
22Universe of concerns
No measures available
Imperfect measures
Concerns sought to be measured
Good measures
Source Bevan and Hood (2006)
23Behavioural responses
- Saints Honest about any deficits
- Honest Triers Will not volunteer deficits, but
will acknowledge if asked - Reactive Gamers Will meet the monitored target,
even at the cost of dysfunctional consequences - Rational Maniacs Will knowingly conceal
performance - (Bevan and Hood 2006)
24For performance measurement to be productive
- 1. (a) Saints Honest Triers gt Reactive Gamers
Rational Maniacs, and - (b) Targets dont result in a shift from
former to latter, or - 2. Good measures are sufficient proportion to
ensure adequate information - (Bevan and Hood 2006)
25Limitations of data on nonprofit performance
- Technical issues of management can be challenging
- Availability v- cost
- Distinguishing contribution to outcomes
- Factors beyond the organisations control
- Data generalizability
- Absence data
- Difficult constructs
- Interpretability given absence of comparisons
- Paradoxical effects and unintended consequences
26In conclusion
- Dashboards are one means for improved monitoring
of performance - Successful implementation requires attention to
the technical and the human elements