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Mastering Stakeholder Relations In Difficult Times. …so superintendents and other district administrators can focus on issues that impact student achievement …instead of constantly wrestling with the issues defined by a vocal minority found in every district. CAVE People
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Mastering Stakeholder Relations In Difficult Times
…so superintendents and other district administrators can focus on issues that impact student achievement …instead of constantly wrestling with the issues defined by a vocal minority found in every district.
CAVE People • (an initialism for Citizens Against Virtually Everything) • WIKIPEDIA
“What I love about the Internet is that no one knows I’m really a dog.”
Administrators Need Clarity 2-3 yrs down ---- This year ---- Today ----
The Challenge: If you only play defense, you lose. STATUS QUO Reactionary stakeholder initiatives Random initiatives Ad hoc initiatives Too many initiatives Too few initiatives
The Strategy Stakeholders The Silent Majority The Vocal Minority
District Administrator’s World Silent Majority Vocal Minority
A systemicand systematicapproach to measuring and managing stakeholder perception. • Move away from reactionary, random and ad hoc surveys • Metrics aligned with strategic plan and best practices
Systemic and systematic stakeholder perception fuels CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT. • Define and track what is important • Empower central office staff and site administrators • Empower teachers in classrooms to listen to students
Consultative, Collaborative Culture of trust (“You don’t have to shout to be heard.”)
Accomplishments beyond test scores • Community Participation Level • Teacher Engagement • Student Engagement • …etc.
The resulting communication helps define the conversations in the community… in the absence of which “alternative” sources can dominate.
Stakeholder Perception • Communication and Engagement • Continuous Improvement
(Random, reactive, and ad hoc surveying, which creates more data silos, and often the norm in school districts, does not lend itself to this kind of value.)
3-yr Strategy Pre-Deployment Communication Questionnaire Data Collection Reporting & Analysis Post-Deployment Communication Perception Culture
Too much data Not enough information Hardly any insight
What is Important… • Today? • Down the road? • …what does the strategic plan call for? • …what do best practices require?
Communication Audit Survey of Surveyors (SOS) to measure “baseline survey activity” (too few=data gaps, too many = survey fatigue) Build and publish Survey Calendar
Consistency in methodology and process across all departmentsand school sites Longitudinal discipline Alignment with Best Practices
From: The Superintendent • To: All Stakeholders • Sub: Surveys in 2009-2010 • How many and when • Why we’re surveying • What you can expect in return • Thank you!
Start transforming how the district’s leadership team is perceived Collect better QUALITY feedback Drive response rates up
What questions should you ask? • How will you ensure that your survey: • Will meet compliance requirements? • Will answer the critical questions? • Is bias-free (age/grade/education-level)-appropriate? • Will not offend anyone? • Will not become a PR fiasco for my District? • Deploy Surveys that are Reliable, Tested and Validated.
Strategic Communication Expertise • K-12 Survey methodologist • K-12 Psychometrician
Myth Survey = Data Collection Web Form
Digital Divide? Paper, phone, online, backpack? Quality controls on data collectede.g. Only one response per respondent? Boost response ratesBest day/time to launch survey, anonymity
Visualize data in a way that facilitates decision-making Data Dashboard to facilitate dialog and collaboration between stakeholders
Closing of the loop is the most powerful incentive for participation in surveys Critical to sustain respondent stamina and interest Credit survey results for changes and new direction Critical trust-building step
If possible, give direct accessto survey results. (a survey reporting dashboard)
75% 75% Depends on where you were last year!
Trend analysis requires advanced planning and a systematic approach.
Systemic and systematic surveying builds and advances a culture of listening and a culture of trust between the various constituencies and the district leadership team. The resulting support can be critical in the success of district leaders. It provides district leaders with clarity on key issues so that the stream of anecdotal data from various sources does not distract them. Surveying is a powerful communication tool – people absorb and retain more facts when they are presented as questions to them. This helps district leaders communicate their message and ensure input in what people hear. A single repository of survey data ensures critical institutional knowledge and district history are not tied to any one individual or department and can be accessed when needed.