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Advice on Data Used to Measure Outcomes. Friday 20 th March 2009. Today’s Workshop. Introduce myself & background 2008/09 SOA – SBC experience 2009/10 SOA – Context How we developed the 2009/10 SOA Consultation Linking activities to SOA – the 4 areas PED leads How to measure success
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Advice on Data Used to Measure Outcomes Friday 20th March 2009
Today’s Workshop • Introduce myself & background • 2008/09 SOA – SBC experience • 2009/10 SOA – Context • How we developed the 2009/10 SOA • Consultation • Linking activities to SOA – the 4 areas PED leads • How to measure success • The outcome • What SBC needs to measure – a worked example • Issues in what to measure • Primary • Some conclusions • Discussion
Introduction • Planning & Economic Development • Business Information Unit has led development of Outcome Agreements • Own experience of developing evaluation frameworks contributing to PSA in England Local Authorities • Process of Logical Frameworks, Logic Chains etc
Area of activity • Regeneration – town centre, retail, events & tourism expertise • Property – economic development, infrastructure and property management expertise • Economic Development – tourism, inward investment, business support expertise • Rural Development – economic development, key sectors, funding, regeneration expertise • Business Gateway – key sectors, business support expertise
Our Experience • Scottish Government’s National Outcomes • Development for 2008/09 • Scottish Borders Council - Observations • New way of working • Community Planning Partnership = 20 partners • c 48 Outcomes • c 15+ under ‘economic’ • Mix of outcome, indicators, output, activity • Difficulties in performance management • Different times
2009/10 SOA – Context • NO - We realise our full economic potential with more and better employment opportunities for our people • NO - We are better educated, more skilled and more successful, renowned for our research and innovation • NO - Our young people are successful learners, confident individuals, effective contributors and responsible citizens • NO - We live in well-designed, sustainable places where we are able to access the amenities and services we need
2.1 – supporting & growing business activity in key sectors 2.2 – promoting self-employment & creating sustainable businesses 2.3 – maximising employment opportunities 10.3 – improving the socio-economic performance of our town centres & growing stronger communities 3.1 – maximising participation in education, training & employment amongst economically inactive 3.2 – existing workforce is highly skilled and responsive to the needs of employers 3.3 – the Scottish Borders Campus is a World Class Centre of Learning 4.2 – all young people will be in education, training or employment 4.3 – young people demonstrate achievement & attainment 9 Outcomes that relate to the ‘economy’
How did we decide? • Examined where SBC PED is responsible & accountable? • Probably 4 key areas • Looked at the nature of our contribution • Where SBC contributes with other Stakeholders? • Through Competitive Borders • Where SBC’s other departments are responsible & accountable • Skills, education, learning
Consultation • Internal consultation – SBC • Logic Chain Approach • External consultation • Partners eg SEn, VisitScotland, SDS, Sectoral Groups • Education sector • Business Planning
Objective of exercise • To understand the activities, projects we do • How these link to strategy, policy, objectives • And how these need to link to Single and National Outcomes • What is needed to deliver activities => And this is what we have come up with
But how do we measure success? • Outcome = result from outputs – why we should be spending ££ (cumulative = impact) • Output = The services delivered as a result of activities – measurable • Activities = The way(s) in which we deliver/ implement • Inputs = The resources used to deliver or produce activities (& outputs) eg human and financial resources
And what is SBC measuring? • Outcome? Outputs? • Effectiveness in meeting Objectives? • Inputs - Project Managers must consider the causal link between activities & ultimate performance • So we use ‘if/ then’ methodology - at each level we can develop targets and indicators => For example, the data we need to collect
Regardless of ‘who measures’, there may be issues • What to monitor – hard & soft outcomes? • Baseline • Tracking - a data capture strategy; • Primary – Business or Beneficiary – survey? • Secondary – spatial availability? Sampling issues? Delay • Frequency – over what time period • Longitudinal • Attribution • Reference Case? Control Groups • Collection & Ownership • Who and at what cost? • Single point of capture? Shared assessment? Benefits?
Advice on data used will depend on • Why it needs to be collected; at which level of the ‘Logic Tree’; and by who • The audience – is it • Internal (eg Economic Development, budget holders, project managers) • External (eg partners, funders, public, policy makers) • Their different levels of interest • Achievements against objectives • Monitoring • Outcomes & Impacts • Value & Lessons • Strategic Added Value
Close Richard Sweetnam 01835 825 069 richard.sweetnam@scotborders.gov.uk