Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The Management Accountability Framework (MAF)



The Management Accountability Framework (MAF) is a framework used by the Treasury board Portfolio to assess the quality of management in departments. It is structured around 10 elements: Public Service Values, Governance and Strategic Directions, Policy and Programs, Results and Performance, Learning, Innovation and Change Management, Risk Management, People, Stewardship, Citizen-focused Service, and Accountability. Indicators are defined for each element and are used to measure performance in each area.

More information on the MAF is available on the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat's website: http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/maf-crg/index-eng.asp

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Dimensions of an Outcome

Outcomes are normally part of a performance measurement framework of one type or another. Most often, they will be used in the public sector or the non-profit sector to explain how their activities’ contribution to society. The might also be used at a lower level to measure the implementation of a strategy in the private sector. In that particular case an organization would be measuring the outcome of a strategy, although in the terminology generally used in public sector performance measurement; this would be closer to an expected result.

Regardless, the purpose of this post is to clarify a perceived ambiguity surrounding outcome levels. In performance measurement literature, different levels of outcomes are often mentioned, such as immediate, intermediate, long-term and final outcomes. The descriptions given usually revolve around time and impact on society.

However, to clearly define outcomes, they need to be perceived through at least 3 dimensions:

  1. reach or societal impact,
  2. time (frame, lag, or delay) and
  3. attributability or responsibility

The reach or societal impact can be generally conceived of as the “societal importance or value” of the outcome. For example, “reducing the number of sick Canadians” may be an outcome, but “healthy Canadians” is a broader, and further reaching one.

The time dimension is a little more complex, because more things can be measured here. For example, an outcome could be defined as a desired end-state. In that context the time dimension would refer to the time required to bridge the gap between the current state and the desired end-state. The time dimension can also be important in a context where an organization’s action will only have an impact on the outcome after a period of time.

The attributability of an outcome for the organization or the responsibility or the organization for the outcome are also to be considered. Attributability can be defined as the amount of “credit” an organization can take for the change in the outcome. Most often, not all change in an outcome can be attributed to the actions of an organization. The concept of attributability is closely linked to the concept of causality. A change in the outcome is attributable to the organization if the organization’s actions are the cause of the change. Responsibility, however, is a different concept. Where attribution is when an organization appropriates changes in an outcome, responsibility is when an organization is made responsible for an outcome, or if you prefer, is mandated to have an impact on the outcome. However, attributability of the change in the outcome still remains to be proven of organizations with clear responsibilities. For example, the Bank of Canada has an agreement with the Government of Canada regarding target inflation rates. To a certain extent, it is responsible for the rate of inflation. The question in that case is, what level of change (or lack of) in the inflation rate can the Bank take credit for?

Although it has not been included with the 3 other dimensions, the measurability of an outcome should always be considered. It is hard to measure the performance of a set of actions if the change in the outcome itself is not measurable. An unmeasurable outcome will also lead to questions and debates about methods and approaches, and may lead to questioning of the value the organization brings to society.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Cognos Help Resources

For those of you interested in Business Intelligence (BI) software, here are a few links relevant for IBM Cognos 8 BI:


Cognos

Most of the support or help information on the Cognos site requires a login and password.

Supportlink is published frequently and includes some interesting tips and techniques
http://support.cognos.com/supportlink/

The main Cognos support site, the Knowledge Base is a useful tool
http://support.cognos.com/en/support/index.html

Customer Resource Center - Report Author Section contains more detailed documents on different subjects and techniques
http://support.cognos.com/en/resources/roles/gcs_3.html


COGNOISe

Cognos Centered community, here's the link to the forums:

http://www.cognoise.com/community/


ITtoolbox

Some Cognos related forums, take a look at the forum list for other products

http://businessintelligence.ittoolbox.com/groups/technical-functional/cognos8-l
http://businessintelligence.ittoolbox.com/groups/technical-functional/cognos-l


Tek-Tips

Another Cognos related forum

http://www.tek-tips.com/threadminder.cfm?pid=401

Monday, August 18, 2008

DPR Requirements Relating to Government of Canada Outcome Areas

When writing the Departmental Performance Report, a link between the department’s strategic outcomes and the Whole-of-Government Framework must be established. An explanation of how the department’s strategic outcomes are aligned with Government of Canada outcome areas. This should be done in Section 1: Overview under the Summary Information heading.

From the Template Instructions for Departmental Performance Reports (http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/rma/dpr3/06-07/instructions/instructions_e.asp):

“a summary status on the department’s performance in achieving their strategic outcome(s) and program activity expected results. The Summary Information table is mandatory and must be followed by a narrative section. The narrative section is to provide an overall description of the department’s performance for 2007–08. All key elements provided in the summary table must be explained. This section should provide the department’s overall performance in relation to the previously set priorities; indicate the progress made towards departmental strategic outcomes and how it is supported by the program activities; and outline how the departmental strategic outcomes contribute to broader government-wide objectives.”


“the description of the departmental context must also include a discussion of how departmental strategic outcomes are aligned with Government of Canada outcome areas. For more information on current outcome areas or Canada’s Performance and the RPP Overview for Parliamentarians website, departments can consult the “Whole of Government Framework” instructions online at http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/pubs_pol/dcgpubs/mrrsp-psgrr/siglist_e.asp (see the contact list at the end of the Guide to the Preparation of Part III of the 2007–08 Estimates).”


Here is a link to the Template Instructions for Departmental Performance Reports (PDF and RTF version available by clicking on the links at the bottom of the menu on the left side): http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/dpr-rmr/2007-2008/instructions/instructions00-eng.asp

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Whole-of-Government Framework

The Whole-of-Government Framework can be found here:

http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/ppg-cpr/framework-cadre-eng.aspx?Rt=1037

It looks something like this:




I'm no expert, but it doesn't look like it's accessible for the visually impaired.

The following page explains in more detail how it works/how it is used:

http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/reports-rapports/cp-rc/2006-2007/cp-rc02-eng.asp#Introduction

The Government’s Priorities

The Government’s 5 priorities are:

A Proud and Sovereign Canada

There is nothing more fundamental than the protection of our nation’s sovereignty and security. The Government will rigorously defend Canada’s place in the world including through the realization of our strong Arctic vision and a responsible, effective path forward in Afghanistan.

A Strong Federation

Canada is more united today than it has been in 40 years. The Government will continue to strengthen the federation – and modernize its democratic institutions – through measures including formal limits on federal spending power and long-overdue reform of the Senate.

A Prosperous Future

Canada cannot be complacent about the continued growth of its economy. The Government will provide effective economic leadership and a prosperous future by aggressively moving forward with broad tax relief that includes a further promised reduction in the GST.

A Safe and Secure Canada

Canadians want their safe streets and communities back. The Government will continue to tackle crime and strengthen the security of Canadians by reintroducing important crime legislation with the new a Tackling Violent Crime Bill, and by putting a strong focus on safe communities and youth and property crime.

A Healthy Environment for Canadians

Canada’s environmental and health standards are already among the highest on Earth. The Government will continue to improve the environment and health of Canadians by delivering realistic and achievable results in areas such as environmental enforcement and product and food safety.

Source: http://www.pm.gc.ca/eng/feature.asp?featureId=5

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Instructions (Guide) for Developing a Management, Resources, and Result Structure

This document is a set of instructions, although I see it more as a guide, to develop (or if you prefer, implement) Program Activity Architectures (PAA), Performance Measurement Frameworks (PMF) and Management, Resources, and Results Structure (MRRS).

I found it useful. Constructive criticism: the pages showing the PMF tables didn't print out well on letter size paper in portrait layout. If I remember correctly, those pages are towards the end and print out well on landscape legal. I wish they would have made a pdf file, probably would have avoided this type of problem, and it would have made the document more portable and sharable.

Link: http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/pubs_pol/dcgpubs/mrrsp-psgrr/id-cm/id-cm_e.asp