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The Why and What of Results Based Management. Susan Stout, Consultant, Monitoring and Evaluation Development Project: MEDP June 1, 2010. Overview of Presentation . Review context for MEDP and emerging focus on Monitoring and Evaluation in Turkey A macro view of Why Results Matter
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The Why and What of Results Based Management Susan Stout, Consultant, Monitoring and Evaluation Development Project: MEDP June 1, 2010
Overview of Presentation • Review context for MEDP and emerging focus on Monitoring and Evaluation in Turkey • A macro view of Why Results Matter • Basic Principles of Results Based Management
Context • Government of Turkey is committed to strengthen the relevance, efficiency and effectiveness (results) of policies and programs through better monitoring and evaluation and performance informed budgeting • Commitment articulated in Ninth National Development Plan, and in Public Law 5018
Context (2) • In 2007 SPO launched a Monitoring and Evaluation Development PlansandPrograms(MEDP) to begin the work of translating this commitment into action. • Formed Working Group of 3 line Ministries (Health, Environment and Forestry, Transport) to work with project team at PIAD/SPO to move forward • MEDP Team completed a Readiness Assessment and a review of Results Orientation of Core Planning Documents • Key next step is to build on these steps to articulate a develop understanding of Monitoring and Evaluation and a broad framework for system building
Why Focus on Results? • Goals motivate. • Being specific about what we mean by effectiveness helps motivate managers, staff and citizens • Performance measures are key signals • Since people want to do their best, even in the absence of a direct link to rewards, the simple act of generating feedback in the form performance measures can align resources and interventions
Managing for Results is key to good governance • Results and performance informed budgeting enhances transparency and accountability • Setting performance goals and monitoring progress will help GoT articulate and agree on strategic, and selective, priorities. • Specificity of performance goals and measures can help GoT leaders and enlist allies who share those goals. • Results management helps balance political pressures for spending with feedback on results • Changepublic mindset to focus on results and accountability • Can save moneyby identifying waste and inefficiency • Tracking effectiveness reveals what works and what doesn’t • Fuels replication and diffusion of sound policy and programs • Assures citizens that Government is working on their behalf • Measuring and managing for results can help build strong institutions at the country level • Encourages participation in the process of setting clear goals and reporting concrete progress, • Facilitates better informed deliberation among the public and its representatives.
Information on results links key drivers of public value… Authorizing Environment - Policy and Fiscal Priorities Public Value for Citizens The ‘art’ of Results Management is defining, and achieving, outcomes that are meaningful to BOTH provider and client/consumer, are measurable in a credible way and are used in decision making Operational Capacity of Government
The Power of Measuring Results • If you do not measure results, you can not tell success from failure • If you can not see success, you can not reward it • If you can not reward success, you are probably rewarding failure • If you can not see success, you can not learn from it • If you can not recognize failure, you can not correct it • If you can demonstrate results, you can win public support From Kuzek and Rist “Ten Steps” , 2008
at all levels Results should be Managed at all levels • Intergovernmental Transfers • Country fiscal/political institutions may/may not encourage to performance • Performance informed budgeting, and better M and E encourage better links between resources and results • Well structured M and E can create incentives for efficiency and feedback Citizens and Consumers ‘on the ground’ Local Administration Civil Society & Private Sector • Institution • Capacity to report and learn from Results • Focus on Results in key policy and project instruments (from NDP to detailed project feasibility studies) • Use of financial/knowledge instruments to collect and use information on results State/Provincial Government Line Agencies and Their Partners • Global • Better country system for monitoring and evaluation buildcredibility with outside resources • Better results management improves confidence in country capacity and is a key element of ‘good governance’ Central Ministries InternationalInstitutions
What is Results Based Management? • Focus is on Results/Performance • Feedback on whether goods and services are making a difference on the ground • Planning process emphasizes cause and effect, not just inputs and hopes! • Monitoring tracks progress toward results • Monitoring data informs project and program planning, management and reporting
Results: Key Questions What do we mean by results? • Sustained improvement impacts (goals), outcomes, outputs, and inputs How do we get better results? • By increasing attention to results in the strategy planning process and work planning processes • By measuring inputs, outputs and outcomes • By ensuring that data are used for management, learning and decision making – not just reporting and accountability.
The “Results Chain” Supply Demand
Impact (Goal) Outcome Outcome Output Output Output Activities Inputs Activities Inputs Activities Inputs Activities Inputs Causal logic – the results chain
Combined Programme Results lead to Strategic Results at the impact level Result Result Result Result Result Result Result Result Result Result
Results Chain Effectiveness Programme / Ministry level STRATEGY Efficiency Project / department level WORK PLAN 6months – 1 year After implementation immediate immediate 2 to 5 years 5 years or more Inputs Activities Outputs Outcomes Impact (Goal) National Level Indicators Project / Department Level Indicators
Aspects of results-based management Results-based Implementation Results-based Measurement Results-based Planning
A good results statement….. • States the most ambitious impact that an organization can effect • Expresses the highest level for which the project can reasonably be expected to be held accountable • May need to be qualified by using terms such as facilitated, improved, and supported to ensure that it is a realistic result of the project • Does not include the means of achieving them • Is as specific as possible • Describes changes in the conditions of people • Sets precise criteria for success • In its simplest form, a result is the objective restated as an accomplishment Source: Kusek and Rist, 2005
Some Broad Lessons on RBM • Building a results management system is primarily a leadership and managerial challenge • The technical aspects of improving monitoring and evaluation requires a supportive enabling environment • Clear signals from top leadership on commitment to results management • Incentives for use of information – link to resource planning and allocation • Coordination across multiple players
Lessons (2) • And technical issues matter as well: • A unifying framework on approach, common language and terminology which is used to facilitate coordination, monitoring of M and E itself • Mobilization of sectoral expertise – among planners, at line agency level and with statistical and academic resources • Clear and close relationship with core planning and budgeting processes and documents
Lessons (3) • Beyond leadership, commitment and appropriate technical work, key issues include: • PATIENCE • Introduction of results based management and M and E TAKES TIME, a realistic time table • ADAPTATION • While much to be learned from global and other country experience, system design must be adapted to national capacity and systems – one size does NOT fit all