Title: Evans School of Public Affairs Public Management
1Evans School of Public Affairs Public Management
BudgetingPbAf 511-522-512Course Sequence
Overview
2Overview Outline
- Why study public management and budgeting?
- How did we learn?
- What did we learn?
3Why Study Public Management and Budgeting?
- Management and budgeting are intertwined with
policies and politics. - Management and budgeting skills are key to
developing/implementing policies or programs. - Management and budgeting skills are essential to
improving performance and avoiding potholes.
4Assumptions
- Public service (government or nonprofit) is
complex - Missions are often ambiguous.
- We compete with and rely on others for many of
our resources and much of our authority. - Good policies and programs cant happen without
good leadership and management - Leadership is key to define missions mobilize
resources. - Management is key to implement missions
programs. - Distributed leadership
- With vision and skills, everyone in an agency can
lead and manage.
5Keys to Good Management
- Understand the different roles leaders and
managers can play, and adopt them strategically. - Scan and assess your external environment and
your internal capacity. - Develop skills, tools, and frameworks to analyze
manage diverse, ambiguous situations. - Apply skills, tools, and frameworks flexibly
- Learn from experience
- Adapt lessons to new situations.
- Develop the capacity for wise judgement.
6How did we learn?
- Learning methods
- Case Studies
- Integrated readings
- Participatory Discussion
- Exercises
- Memos
- All Education is Self-Education
7What did we learn?
- Strategic Frameworks
- Different frameworks can be effective.
- A good framework is
- Comprehensive
- Analytic
- Integrated and iterative
8The Context
Leadership and Management Strategy
Zone of Influence
/\ lt gt \/
Zone of Control
9The Strategic Triangle
Mark Moore
PUBLIC VALUE
OPERATIONAL CAPACITY
AUTHORIZING ENVIRONMENT
10What did we learn?
Responsibilities of Leadership
Budgeting (Winter) How do I tell the financial
story of an organization from the financial
statements? What does it cost and why do I want
to know? How do I plan my programs with scarce
resources?
Pub Mgt II (Spring) Evaluation and
Accountability Managing People Labor
Relations Providing Effective Service Integrated
Strategic Leadership
Pub Mgt I (Fall) Assembling Influence Developing
and Enacting Policies Building Relationships,
Power, Performance Developing Organizational
Strategy
11The American Management Associations
definition of leadershipGetting things
donethrough people.
12Responsibilities of Leadership
- Purpose
- Set a direction (mission).
- Align people and tasks.
- MotivateInspireEmpower.
- Principles
- Everyone can lead.
- Different challenges require different leadership
styles. - Understand the field of action.
- Action requires working with and through others
- Build relationships power
- ListenUnderstand... Communicate.
13Building Relationships,Power, and Performance
- Purpose
- Clarify organizational mission, goals, values.
- Map official unofficial power structures.
- Improve understanding communication among
diverse stake holders. - Design manage change to achieve key goals.
- Principles
- Missions and goals must add public value.
- Communication power are both formal informal.
- Organizations and their environments consist of
people and interests with agendas and feelings. - Effective change requires involving and rewarding
affected interests.
14Assembling Influence
- Purpose
- Map understandthe environment.
- Assess the forces power centers.
- Clarify objectives.
- Develop options criteria Elements of a stable
solution. - Design processes to achieve the objectives.
- Principles
- All issues affect a variety of stake holders.
- Interests have negative positive powers.
- No outcome is neutral, but good, inclusive
processes can achieve legitimate outcomes. - Diverse stake holders must be involved in the
process, for - legitimacy
- better information ideas.
15Advancing a Policy Agenda
- Purpose
- Create broad interest in new solutions.
- Design and debate alternatives.
- Identify and promote sustainable outcomes.
- Choose processes venues strategically (for
power legitimacy).
- Principles
- Analysis is important.
- Including a diverse range of stake holders is
critical for effective deliberation. - Legitimacy and sustainability are essential.
- Different institutional venues favor different
interests and outcomes.
16Creating Public Value
- Purpose
- Understand the roles and purposes of
organizational strategy - - Add value - Fulfill mission
- - Inspire staff - Build support
- Assess bases for strategy
- - Mission - Opportunity
- - Authority - Capacity
- Map and mobilize the forces that affect strategy.
- Principles
- What must the organization achieve? What
strategy(s) will get the job done? - Strategies are affected by internal external
forces. - Strategies must
- - capitalize on opportunities
- - address constraints risks
- - be sustainable amidst complexity ambiguity
- - support learning adaptation.
17How do I tell the financial story of this
organization from reading the financial
statements?
- Purpose
- Interpret and use financial statements.
- Distinguish between accounting and financial
management issues. - Develop ability to serve in positions of
governance.
- Principles
- Financial statements are accrual based.
- Cash inflows and outflows are different from
revenues, expenditures and expenses. - Financial management issues are critical to
understanding the organization - Profitability
- Liquidity
- Asset Management
- Solvency
- Critical Success Factors
18What does it cost and why do I want to know?
- Purpose
- Recognize and distinguish among costs so they may
be used for decision making. - Distinguish between resource allocation and cost
allocation. - Make capital budgeting decision for the
organization.
- Principles
- Pricing decisions are based on full cost
information and market forces. - Revenue sources and resource allocation are
critical to enhanced performance. - Operations budgeting and capital budget are not
the same.
19How do I plan my programswith scarce resources?
- Purpose
- Resolve how programs compete with other programs
for resources. - Understand the set of management control
processes and their interrelationships. - Appreciate connections among the external
environment, the organization, and performance
results.
- Principles
- Programming budgeting, measurement and reporting
are iterative managerial cycles. - An organization is a set of interlocking systems.
- Performance management and measurement must be
understood and used in a context of demand for
accountability.
20Evaluation and Accountability
- Purpose
- Set performance targets Where does the
organization need to go? - Assess progress toward the targets.
- Identify reward strong performance.
- Identify areas for improvement, analysis, and
problem solving.
- Principles
- Targets assessments must be tied to mission
purpose. - You get what you measure.
- Evaluation is political There are winners and
losers. - Numbers are not value-free.
- Evaluate to learn, not to control.
- Celebrate success!
21Managing People Labor Relations
- Purpose
- Motivate and inspire staff and colleagues.
- Improve performance.
- Improve the work environment.
- Build short- and long-term capacity
- individual
- organizational.
- Principles
- Participation is motivating.
- Every manager staff member is a human being, w/
different abilities, interests, needs. - Peoples skills need to fit their positions.
- Most performance problems derive from
organizational issues, not individuals. - Changing systems requires working through others.
22Providing Effective Service
- Purpose
- Do more with less Improve customer service
performance by making work processes systems
more efficient. - Align organizational capacity with customer
demand. - Redesign products and services to achievethe
mission.
- Principles
- Comparative advantage flows from core
competencies. - Customers are citizens.
- Eliminate processes products that dont add
value streamline the rest. - Clarify make / buy criteria.
- Use technology to serve your mission, not to
drive it. - Contract for performance, not compliance.
23Integrated Strategic Leadership
- Purpose
- Develop organizations, programs, projects to
create public value. - Assemble influence to support them.
- Build capacity for performance
- people
- resources
- systems
- relationships
- Principles
- Public service requires strategic leaders who
- Integrate policy, budget, and management to
achieve their goals. - Understand and use personal power judiciously.
- Are flexible, creative,and wise.
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25How did we learn this material?
- The Work Our Learning Methods
- Attributes of an Effective Public Manager
26Attributes of an Effective Public Manager
- Analytical
- Visionary
- Inclusive
- Ethical
- Articulate
- Courageous
- Balanced
- Wise
27How our course sequence organizes and covers this
materialClock Diagram
28Building Partnerships Consensus
- Purpose
- Build relationships strategic alliances with
others who can help you create public value. - Expand organizational capacity and external
support. - Improve mutual understanding.
- Principles
- Partners lack formal authority.
- Respect diplomacy are critical communication
transparency are essential. - Cultures and styles of communication differ.
- Each partner adds value - comparative advantage.
- Collaboration is a means, not an end.