1 / 18

Benchmarking : What is it?

Benchmarking : What is it?. Dr. Clive Grace Presentation to the Local Government and Regeneration Committee in relation to Strand 2 of its Inquiry into Public Services Reform Scottish Parliament 10 th September 2012. What it is & why it matters Varieties & Scope Purposes Issues

bevis
Download Presentation

Benchmarking : What is it?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Benchmarking : What is it? Dr. Clive Grace Presentation to the Local Government and Regeneration Committee in relation to Strand 2 of its Inquiry into Public Services Reform Scottish Parliament 10th September 2012

  2. What it is & why it matters • Varieties & Scope • Purposes • Issues • Theories of Change and Improvement • Politics, Politicians, and Benchmarking • An arrow not a silver bullet • Be systematic but not one ‘system’ Benchmarking

  3. Comparison of services against an external standard • Matters because: • Cost and scale of services • Vertical fiscal imbalance • Public aversion to ‘postcode lottery’ • Local representation and service delivery without (much) local taxation What it is and why local performance matters

  4. What is benchmarked? • Services • Corporate capacity • Inputs, outputs, or outcomes • How are the benchmarks set? • Financial benchmarks for economy • Productivity benchmarks for efficiency • Innovation benchmarks for excellence • Who does it? • Self regulation • Sector led regulation • External agency Taxonomy of Benchmarking

  5. Benchmarking is ubiquitous • Service cost and technical comparison (APSE, CIPFA, WAO Benchmarking Clubs) • Statutory performance indicators • Whole authority & Whole area assessments • Excellence schemes • Peer review and challenge • ‘Communities of practice’ • Improvement Plans? Outcome Agreements? BVA1 and 2? Variety and Scope

  6. Economy Efficiency Effectiveness Excellence.... ....Evasion? ....Austerity? Purposes

  7. Definitions and units for comparison • (Very little comparison of public services between England, Scotland and Wales) • Data validity and consistency • Time series • Authoritative interpretation • Action in response • Context of Public Service Reform approach and operating ‘Theory of Improvement’ Issues

  8. Example: Aim Drive from ‘Awful to Adequate’ Funding Large real terms increases Focus Corporate capacity and national standards Method Balanced scorecard Motivation External stimulus, naming and shaming, terror and targets Alternatives: self actuated improvement; consumer/user pressure; political accountability; etc Theories of change and improvement

  9. Example: PSR Approach and Theory of Improvement

  10. 200+ indicators for all frontline and corporate services • 287 pages of guidance • Set centrally after consultation • Operated by the Audit Commission • Superseded in 2006 by a more outcome focussed national indicator set Best Value PIs

  11. CPA – single and upper tier

  12. Joint inspectorate assessment for each area • Individual ‘use of resources’ judgements for councils, police, health, fire and rescue authorities • Local performance against the national indicator set • Risk assessment linked to local area agreements Comprehensive Area Assessment

  13. Aim Improvement from within Funding Getting tighter (£20,000 per review) Focus EFQM model with 12 criteria (incl. corporate effectiveness) Method Mixed review teams Motivation Support and ownership Peer review

  14. Risk regulatory regimes

  15. A marriage made in both heaven and hell? • Critical political accountability.... • ...problematic political time horizons and public opinion drivers • Great benchmarking requires tremendous political self-discipline Politics, Politicians, and Benchmarking

  16. Benchmarking is one arrow in the quiver, and not THE answer.... • ...it is best applied from the ‘improvement end of the telescope’... • ....in the context of a thought through policy of Public Service Reform and Improvement... • ...and (ideally) a fair degree of political consensus... • ...and the support of key stakeholders An arrow not a silver bullet

  17. Working out and carefully designing the benchmarking approach does not guarantee success... • ...but not doing so guarantees failure • Not ‘one benchmarking system fits all’.... • ....different services in different situations call for different benchmarking solutions Be systematic but do not impose one ‘system’

  18. clivegrace@hotmail.com 10th September 2012

More Related