Title: TAM Guide Webinar 2: Guide Overview and Getting Started
1TAM Guide Webinar 2
Guide Overview and Getting Started
- FHWA and AASHTO Sponsored Webinar Series on the
AASHTO Transportation Asset Management Guide A
Focus on Implementation
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2Webinar Instructors
- Matt Hardy, AASHTO (sponsor)
- Kirk Steudle, Michigan DOT
- Nastaran Saadatmand, FHWA (sponsor)
- Hyun-A Park, Spy Pond Partners, LLC (lead
facilitator) - Mark Gordon, AECOM
- Paul Thompson, Consultant
- Laura Wipper, Oregon DOT
- Cory Pope, Utah DOT
- Becky Burk, Maryland SHA
- Martin Kidner, Wyoming DOT
- Scott Richrath, Colorado DOT
3AASHTO Transportation Asset Management (TAM) Guide
- Provides a strategic framework for asset
management - Address strategic questions as transportation
agencies manage their surface transportation
system - Establishes a common language for TAM practice
and includes commonly used definitions - Realize the most from financial resources now and
in the future to address - Preserving highway assets
- Providing the service expected by customers
- Focuses on approaches that an agency can take and
use - Lessons that come from practical experience of
agencies that are implementing asset management
today
4TAM Guide Webinar Series
- Webinar 1 Applying the Guide
- Overview of how the TAM Guide can help
transportation agencies improve efficiency and
effectiveness - Scenarios such as Making the Case for Funding,
Extending Asset Useful Life, and Improving
Safety Performance - Webinar 2 Guide Overview and Getting Started
- General overview of the entire Guide, covering
underlying framework and each section of the
Guide - Strategies for using the guide including
instructions on how an agency can get started on
using the Guide to begin improving and/or
implementing asset management - Webinar 3 The Transportation Asset Management
Plan (TAMP) - Importance of getting an organization aligned to
embark on an asset management improvements
process using the TAM Guide - Key focus on the development and use of the TAMP
- Webinar 4 Tools Techniques for Implementing
the TAMP - Discussion of the various management systems and
tools and techniques described in the Guide and
illustrations of their effective use - Specific cases of how agencies have used
management systems and tools and techniques
described in the Guide
5Webinar 2 Objectives
- Providing you with an orientation on the TAM
Guide organization - Using the TAM Guide to help you assess where you
are on TAM maturity - Helping you figure out what the gaps are between
where you are today and where you want to be in
the future - Developing a strategy scope for TAM
implementation - Setting the stage for organizational change
needed to support asset management - Getting an introduction to levels of service
6Webinar 2 Agenda
- TAM Guide Overview
- Chapter Contents
- TAM Assessment Tools
- Gap Analysis Tool
- Self Assessment Tool
- Defining the Scope of TAM
- Organizational Alignment
- Change and Leadership in Asset Management
- Organizational Change Frameworks Baldrige,
Balanced Scorecard - Performance Management Standards
- Brief Introduction to Levels of Service
- Q A and Wrap Up
7AASHTO TAM Guide Volumes 1 and 2 are Interlinked
8TAM Guide Road Map 14 Steps to Implementation
Part Two
Part One
9TAM Guide Chapter by Chapter OverviewMark
Gordon
- AECOM
- Principal Investigator, NCHRP 8-69
10Chapter by Chapter Road Map to Implementation
- Definition of TAM
- Transportation asset management is a set of
concepts, principles, and techniques leading to a
strategic approach to managing transportation
infrastructure. Transportation asset management
enables more effective resource allocation and
utilization, based upon quality information and
analyses, to address facility preservation,
operation, and improvement. This concept covers a
broad array of DOT functions, activities, and
decisions e.g., transportation investment
policies and priorities relationships and
partnerships between DOTs and other public and
private groups long-range, multimodal
transportation planning program development for
capital projects and for maintenance and
operations delivery of agency programs and
services and real-time and periodic system
monitoring and data processing. All of these
actions are accomplished within the limits of
available funding.
11Implementation Steps 1 to 3 Set Direction
- Purpose of TAM
- To meet a required level of service, in the most
cost effective manner, through the management of
assets for present and future customers. - (International Infrastructure Management Manual,
NAMS, 2006)
12Implementation steps 4 to 8 Create Alignment
Management, leadership and culture
13Implementation Step 9 Develop a TAM Plan
14Implementation Step 10 Strengthen Service
Planning
Levels of Service Framework
15Implementation Step 11 Strengthen Lifecycle
Management
Example Decay Curve
16Implementation Step 12 Strengthen TAM Integration
Consolidated Performance Framework
17Implementation Steps 13-14 Strengthen Systems
and Data
TAMIS Integration Framework
18Oregon DOTs Getting Started ExperienceLaura
Wipper
- Oregon Department of Transportation
- Manager, ODOT Asset Management Integration
19Search for Best Practices
Oregon DOT Experience
- What we did
- Looking to Others - Research
- Trying it Ourselves - 2006 Asset Management Pilot
Project - Half-Life of Data - Performance Measure to State
Legislature - FACS-STIP Tool - Data Sharing
- 1R Paving Program - Using the Data
- What we learned
- Experiences of Others - Asset
Strategic Plan - Experiences of Ourselves -
- Less is More, Basic Inventory
- Collect Once, Use Many Times
- Value of Documentation Manuals
- Data Maintenance Critical
- Need to Make the Data Available
- Data Used for Program Decisions
20Proposed Data Collection Plan
Oregon DOT Experience
- Sustain the green
- Bridges
- Pavements
- ITS Sites
- Basic Inventory July 2008
- Bike/Ped Facilities
- Basic Inventory Oct. 2008
- Retaining Walls
- Culverts
- Traffic Barriers
- Wetland Mitigation Sites
- Traffic Structures
- Signs
- Approaches
- Lifeline Routes by Oct. 2008
- Slopes Rock Fall
21Updated Asset Management Strategic Plan
Oregon DOT Experience
- Integrated Plan
- Strategic
- Implementation
- Communication, and
- Technology Strategy
- Asset List
- Foundation to build on
22TAM Improvement Path
23TAM Gap Analysis Tool and Self
Assessment ToolPaul D. Thompson
- Paul D. Thompson
- Contributor, NCHRP 8-69
24TAM Practices Gap Analysis
- The process of continuous improvement is a
feature of TAM at all levels of maturity - The TAM improvement process is about closing the
gaps, between - What needs to be done, the desired TAM
objectives and - Current levels of achievement
- The gap analysis tool is tactical
- Greater level of detail than the self assessment
- Results aggregate up to 6 key areas, expanding on
Volume 1 - More focus on TAM processes and lifecycle
management - Uses the maturity scale at a greater level of
detail
25TAM Maturity Scale
- A broad characterization of agency evolution
- A way of grouping advancements that typically
occur together - A screening tool to identify likely next steps
- A short-hand way of classifying the audience
26TAM Maturity Scale
1. No effective support from strategy, processes,
or tools. Lack of motivation to improve.
27TAM Maturity Scale
2. Recognition of a need, and basic data
collection. Reliance on heroic effort of
individuals.
28TAM Maturity Scale
3. Shared understanding, motivation, and
coordination. Development of processes and tools.
29TAM Maturity Scale
4. Expectations and accountability drawn from
asset management strategy, processes, and tools.
30TAM Maturity Scale
5. Asset management strategies, processes, and
tools are routinely evaluated and improved.
31TAM Gap Analysis Tool
32TAM Gap Analysis Example
33Strategic Self Assessment (from Volume 1)
- Policy Goals and Objectives
- How does policy guidance benefit from improved
asset management? - Planning and Programming
- Do resource allocation decisions
reflect good practice in
asset
management? - Program Delivery
- Are appropriate options
and management
methods used to deliver the program? - Information and Analysis
- Do information resources
effectively support asset
management policy and
decisions?
34Utah DOTs Self Assessment ExperienceCory Pope
- Utah Department of Transportation
- Systems Planning and Programming Director
35Use of a Self Assessment to Get StartedUtah DOT
- Utah DOT began its asset management efforts with
the Self Assessment exercise in the AASHTO Asset
Management Guide Volume I - 48 employees reviewed a series of statements
representing best practice and rated - The degree to which they were consistent with
current DOT practices - The degree to which improvement in that area was
desired - After a detailed analysis of the results, the DOT
developed a comprehensive asset management
implementation plan
36Use of a Self Assessment to Get StartedUtah DOT
Responses to Question A6 Policy guidance on
resource allocation allows Utah DOT sufficient
flexibility to pursue a performance-base approach.
37AM Scoping, Leadership, and ChangeKirk Steudle
- Michigan Department of Transportation
- Director
- Current AASHTO President
38Defining the Scope of TAM in Your Agency
- TAM Scope
- Which assets?
- Which actions or decision?
- Which business processes, including methods and
forms of delivery? - What asset management capabilities?
- What data?
- TAM Project Management
- Carefully delineate the scope of the effort
- Define and periodically update cost and resource
estimates for effort - Define and periodically update the project
schedule - Actively identify risk factors and have a plan
for addressing risks - Ensure that all participants and stakeholders
have real-time access to all of the above
39Approaches to Implement Asset Management
- Many different reasons exist for why TAM
implementation is needed in an agency - Focusing on the one that is right for your agency
at this time is critical for TAM success in
delivering improved results - The focus area that is chosen will drive the
planning activities that will lead to a good
Transportation Asset Management Plan (TAMP)
40Organizational Alignment Change and Leadership
in Asset Management
41Change is a Part of the AM Business Model
- Change Leadership
- Convince people of the need for and benefit of
change - Create a change leadership coalition
- Develop a vision of changes and strategy
- Communicate that vision regularly
- Make actions consistent with the vision
- Make sure people are involved and empowered to
make changes consistent with the vision - Reinforce the change effort with short-term
successes - Keep the focus on the change effort
- Anchor new approaches into the culture
- Plan for Change
- Assess the agency's readiness for change.
- Define a leadership structure.
- Build opportunities for collaborative review and
revision into the timeline, keeping in mind that
successful change is incremental. - Permit employees to fail, learn, and move
forward. - Develop a communication plan, potentially using
multiple media such as speaking, writing, video,
training, focus groups, and electronic
communications. - Assess both positive and negative impact to the
agency's processes, systems, customers, and
staff. Develop mitigation plans for each risk. - Develop and communicate performance measures and
expectations. - Find ways to let employees know how the changes
will affect them individually.
42Building the Team Step by Step
43Organizational Change Frameworks
- Organizational change is a fundamental part of
TAM - Understanding and planning for the change needed
in your organization will ensure successful TAM
implementation - Multiple methods and tools exist for managing
organizational change
Six Sigma Framework
Baldrige Framework
Balanced Scorecard Framework
44Application of the Baldrige Framework at Maryland
SHABecky Burk
- Maryland State Highway Administration
- Performance Excellence Manager
45Baldrige Framework
- The Baldrige framework is based on a set of
criteria for performance excellence, used by the
U.S. Department of Commerce to select recipients
of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.
It is based on a set of core values and concepts
which include
- Visionary leadership
- Customer-driven
- Organizational and personal learning
- Valuing employees and partners
- Agility
- Focus on the future
- Managing for innovation
- Management by fact
- Public responsibility and citizenship
- Focus on results and creating value
- Systems perspective
46Maryland SHA Baldrige Performance Management
Combined 7 Baldrige criteria into 5 Vision Areas
- Quality
- Efficiency
- Outputs
Processes
47Application of the Balanced Scorecard at Wyoming
DOTMartin Kidner
- Wyoming Department of Transportation
- State Planning Engineer
48Balanced Scorecard Framework
- The Balanced Scorecard framework focuses on the
alignment of specific business activities with an
organization's enterprise strategy. - Focus is on a balanced set of performance
areasfinancials, customers, learning, internal
processes. - The Balanced Scorecard is a framework used to
balance competing needs.
- Vision is translated into measureable, annual
objectives and performance measures. - The workforce is engaged and helps develop
business-unit Scorecards. - Measurement is at the heart of the balanced
scorecard framework.
49Wyoming DOT Balanced Scorecard
50Performance Management Standards
- Performance-based decision making is one of the
core principles of TAM - An agency must be able to demonstrate that they
are making progress on established goals and
objectives - It must be able to
- Set goals and objectives tied to measurable
metrics - Make resource allocation decisions based on these
goals and objectives and the funding available
using the metrics to guide the decision making - Demonstrate to its customers the results of the
investments.
51Role of Performance Measurement in Government
- What gets measured gets done
- If you do not measure results, you cannot tell
success from failure - If you cannot see success, you cannot reward it
- If you cannot see success, you cannot learn from
it - If you cannot reward success, you are probably
rewarding failure - If you cannot recognize failure, you cannot
correct it and - If you can demonstrate results, you can win
public support.
from Reinventing Government, by David Osborne and
Ted Gaebler
52Performance-Based Management Iterative Process
53Developing Levels of Service
- Levels of service describe what the customers
perceive - Not set in isolation
- All agencies have some now, in some form (e.g.
GASB 34 Modified Approach) - Set at different levels strategic, customer and
technical - All must be SMART Specific, Measurable,
Achievable, Relevant, Timebound - Customer levels of service should be set with
customer input - Start by documenting what is delivered now (the
first-time up you can skip consultation /
customer research) - Pick from the full range of customer research
tools when gathering customer input - Customer levels of service amplify the agency
mission,
they must not contradict it
54Technical Levels of Service
- Take customer levels of service and convert them
into technical language - Technical levels of service should not stand
alone, but support a customer level of service or
a legislative requirement - Used by asset managers and engineers to ensure
that they are delivering the right things - Describe what the technical measures are required
to deliver the customer levels of service. E.g. - maximum and average roughness measured in IRI
- minimum and average skid resistance
- illumination levels from street lights
- The early stages of formal TAM may require
current technical levels of service to be
converted into customer speak and become
current customer levels of service
55Levels of Service Example for Sidewalks
56Maintenance Level of Servic (MLOS) at Colorado
DOTScott Richrath
- Colorado Department of Transportation
- Performance Policy Analysis Unit Manager
57Colorado DOTs Maintenance Levels of Service
(MLOS)
- CDOT uses an extensive Maintenance Levels of
Service (MLOS) budgeting system to allocate funds
and evaluate all maintenance activities performed
throughout the state for a given fiscal year. - The main objective of MLOS is to establish an
overall target level of service while staying
within allocated budget dollars. - Levels of service communicate targets for
accomplishment inside and outside the agency. - When planned levels of service are compared to
actual service levels accomplished, a basis of
accountability is established. - Relationships between levels of service and cost
enable CDOT to evaluate the impacts of different
funding levels, analyze tradeoffs in resource
allocation, and monitor planned versus actual
accomplishments against expenditures.
58CDOT Objective Meet or Exceed the Adopted
Annual Maintenance Level of Service Grade
59MLOS Guidance
60Questions and Answers
61Wrap Up
- Todays Webinar
- Orientation on the TAM Guide organization
- Know the tools available to assess where you are
with TAM and where you want to go - Understand the importance of leadership and
proactively manage change - Understand the purpose of levels of service and
how it is applied - Future Webinars
- Webinar 3 The Asset Management Plan (TAMP)
(Wednesday, November 30th, 2
4 PM EST) - Webinar 4 Tools and Techniques for Implementing
the TAMP (Wednesday, December 14th, 2-4 PM EST)