Developing and using a Performance Measures Dashboard



Similar documents
Picturing Performance: IBM Cognos dashboards and scorecards for retail

Patterns of Technology and Technique Use in an Active Learning Classroom

Roadmap for Teacher Access to Student-Level Longitudinal Data

Successfully Implementing Paperless Accounts Payable

Date Submitted: October 1, Unit: The Office of Institutional Research, Planning, and Effectiveness I. MISSION STATEMENT

IMPLEMENTING HEALTHCARE DASHBOARDS FOR OPERATIONAL SUCCESS

ON Semiconductor identified the following critical needs for its solution:

Jabil builds momentum for business analytics

Northern Michigan University Masters of Public Administration Program Tapping into Student Power for Civic Projects

Alliance Scorecarding and Performance Management at TechCo. A Vantage Partners Case Study

NYU and UC Berkeley: Looking Outside to Improve Inside. David Greenbaum, UCB Lynn Rohrs, NYU Jenn Stringer, UCB

PROVIDING INSIGHT FOR OPERATIONAL SUCCESS

Renewable Solid Fuel Boiler Project

White Paper March Seven S&OP Reports Every Manufacturing Executive Needs Sales & operations planning excellence with IBM Cognos software

Led by the Office of Institutional Research, business intelligence at Western Michigan University will:

Expense Planning and Control Performance Blueprint Powered by TM1

Data management for improved customer experience and higher returns

PRONTO-Xi Business Intelligence

Wyeth Pharma: Sales success with an IBM Cognos solution

Measuring What Matters: A Dashboard for Success. Craig Schoenecker System Director for Research. And

White Paper September Picturing Performance: IBM Cognos dashboards and scorecards for healthcare

BIRT Performance Analytics Summary of Features. Product Brochure

Metrics by design A practical approach to measuring internal audit performance

Building an Executive Dashboard On Top Of Excel. Building an Executive Dashboard On Top Of Excel

STRATEGIC WEBSITE INTEGRATION FACELIFT TEAM

The University of Texas at San Antonio. Business Affairs 2016 STRATEGIC PLAN December 2007

Business Intelligence and Dashboards - The New Generation

ITPMG. February IT Performance Management: The Framework Initiating an IT Performance Management Program

How To Understand The Financial Crisis

Analytics for Healthcare

P OINT OF SAIL. Mission: Healthy U.P. Vets Work Incentives and Assistance Program 25th Anniversary of the ADA

The metrics that matter

Information Management & Data Governance

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY What is it? Why build it? What s in it?

IntelliNet Delivers APM Service with CA Nimsoft Monitor

Eastern Illinois University information technology services. strategic plan. January,

Healthcare Performance Management Strategies for Highly Efficient Practices

idashboards FOR SOLUTION PROVIDERS

MANUSCRIPT THE DETROIT WATER AND SEWERAGE DEPARTMENT S PERFORMANCE AND DASHBOARD SYSTEM (PADS): STRATEGIES, ACTIONS, AND MEASURES FOR OPTIMAL RESULTS

DEAN, COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES

Creating An Excel-Based Balanced Scorecard To Measure the Performance of Colleges of Agriculture

How To Build A New System For A College

How to extend SAP PPM to enable Dashboard Analytics for optimal decision support

Best Practices for Planning and Budgeting. A white paper prepared by PROPHIX Software October 2006

Summary of Critical Success Factors, Action Items and Performance Measures

Best Practice: Online Access to Agency Performance Review

College of Charleston Assessment Template. Please copy completed form into Compliance Assist. Thank You.

Request For Proposal Redesign, Development, and Ongoing Hosting of the Monterey Peninsula College website (

Using a Dashboard to Improve Classroom Utilization. Academic Support Resources

Anatomy of a Decision

CASE STUDY

TROY UNIVERSITY Sorrell College of Business Response to ACBSP Evaluation Feedback Report November 11, 2008

Logistics Made Easy. Go-To Transport s Green Bay Office Uses McLeod Software and TransCore DAT to Support Rapid Growth

Identify your future leaders with Kallidus Talent

D R I V I N G O P E R A T I O N A L I M P R O V E M E N T

Beyond listening Driving better decisions with business intelligence from social sources

Five Secrets to Contact Center E-learning and Coaching Success

Collaboration. Michael McCabe Information Architect black and white solutions for a grey world

Robert R Gamache, Associate Vice President Academic Affairs, Student Affairs, and International Relations

DATA VALIDATION AND CLEANSING

University of Maine at Presque Isle 2020 Strategic Plan

Session Objectives: National Consortium for Continuous Improvement in Higher Education

4 Keys to Driving Results from Project Governance

CRM: Empowering the Sales Force

IBM Social Media Analytics

_WF_reporting_bro_UK.

DENVER PUBLIC SCHOOLS. EduStat Case Study. Denver Public Schools: Making Meaning of Data to Enable School Leaders to Make Human Capital Decisions

Advanced Diploma of Management Sutherland College - Gymea Campus BSBMGT617A: Develop and Implement a Business Plan Assessment and Marking Guide

Triple Point s Management Dashboard

Transcription:

Developing and using a Performance Measures Dashboard Gavin Leach, Vice President, Finance and Administration Northern Michigan University 1401 Presque Isle Avenue Marquette, MI 49855 (906) 227-2200 gleach@nmu.edu Felecia Flack, Assistant Vice President, Information Services Northern Michigan University 1401 Presque Isle Avenue Marquette, MI 49855 (906) 227-1272 stowers@nmu.edu Sherri Towers, Assistant Vice President, Finance and Planning Northern Michigan University 1401 Presque Isle Avenue Marquette, MI 49855 (906) 227-1070 stowers@nmu.edu

Executive Summary Northern Michigan University has developed a comprehensive performance measures dashboard that provides actionable data to decision makers on a timely basis in a userfriendly format. At NMU, the need for useable, actionable data was apparent. Competition from other universities, performance measure requirements from state government, the necessity to analyze finances, staffing and operations all of these require data. Although the university had vast amounts of data, prior to dashboard implementation, access to data was cumbersome and inconsistent. Standard key performance indicators didn t exist. The performance dashboard provides an easy-to-understand, succinct way of presenting data. It offers a quick at a glance overview of how the university is doing in four areas: program sustainability and vitality student success and outcomes financial effectiveness state and university priorities Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) in each area show how the university is meeting its goals by means of red, yellow and green indicators. Right away, a determination can be made as to whether or not further investigation is necessary. The project began with the creation of a cross-departmental team who knew and understood the need for data and how it was going to be used, as well as the IT folks who were going to build the dashboard. A series of meetings were held to identify the KPIs and targets and layout the dashboard framework. The team identified the target audience, and decided how often the data was going to be updated and what level of detail the dashboard was going to present. Information Technology staff then identified, evaluated and selected software and created a dashboard prototype and populated it with data. Once staff from Institutional Research vetted and validated the dashboard data, the dashboard was shown to the provost, vice presidents and deans for review. Final tweaks were made and the dashboard was presented to the Board of Trustees in May, 2013. Today the dashboard serves as a consistent measurement system that allows the university s executive management team to measure, monitor and manage university business activity and to evaluate how the university is meeting its goals and objectives.

Introduction of the Organization Northern Michigan University, located on the shores of Lake Superior in Michigan s Upper Peninsula, is a dynamic four-year, public university with a reputation for awardwinning leadership programs, cutting-edge technology initiatives and nationally recognized academic programs. NMU is one of three Michigan public universities to also serve a community college role for its region, offering programs that range from one-year diplomas through doctoral degrees. NMU serves about 8,500 students with more than 180 degree programs, including 18 that are at the graduate level and one at the doctoral level. NMU is one of only two Michigan universities to have an entrepreneurship major and has one of the few programs in the country for both ski management and wildland firefighting. Northern s 360 acre campus is located in Marquette, a city of 21,000 residents. Designated one of America s Top Mountain Bike Towns by USA Today (Oct. 2013) and One of the Ten Best Small Cities to Raise a Family, Forbes (Oct. 2010) Marquette provides excellent quality of life. And, Michigan s Upper Peninsula is known for its safe, friendly and natural environment. The Marquette community and Northern Michigan University are intricately intertwined, which adds to the vitality of the area and to the opportunities available to NMU students. The diversity of the Upper Peninsula s geographical terrain serves the NMU community as an extensive outdoor classroom.

Statement of the Problem/Initiative The university had a critical need for a process that would provide the means to monitor, analyze, and communicate university performance with respect to strategic, operational and resource management. Prior to 2013, university administrators, including the President and the Board of Trustees, the Provost, the Vice Presidents, and the Deans and Department Heads relied on paper reports supplied by central IT for data. Attempts had been made to provide online access to information but because it was not easily accessible and not user friendly, it was not readily embraced by university leaders. A standard and consistent set of key performance indicators did not exist. Where measures did exist, multiple definitions for the same measure could be found. Graduation and retention rates, for example, were sometimes reported in terms of the cohort group and sometimes in terms of the class level. The need for consistent, easily accessible, actionable data was recognized.

Design Although the university had been working with and using data since the mid-1990 s, the need for identifying a consistent set of key performance indicators and presenting them in an easy use format reached a critical point in 2012. University leadership issued the charge and the following steps were followed to implement a performance dashboard: A cross departmental knowledge management team was established Key performance categories were identified o Alignment with UP and Michigan priorities o Program sustainability and vitality o Student success and outcomes o Financial effectiveness Key performance indicators for each category were identified KPIs were aligned with the university strategic plan Target measures were established Decisions were made: o Audience (public or internal) o Timeframe o Update process o Look and feel refined Added the paw print, tested with various browsers o Level of drill-down (college, department, major) Software was evaluated but proved to be cost prohibitive Data sources were identified

Prototype dashboard created Academic data validated and vetted by Institutional Research Financial data validated and vetted by the Assistant V. P., Finance and Plannin Dashboard presented to Deans and Department Heads for feedback Presentation made to Board of Trustees Additional features and functionality were added o Trend data o Sort capability o Averages of past years data Dashboard moved under campus portal Success of the dashboard measured by: o Number of users with access to the dashboard o Ability to make decisions based on the data presented o Ability to analyze whether or not targets are being met o Relevance of key performance indicators

Implementation Once the knowledge management team identified the key performance indicators other questions were answered: who was the audience, where was the data going to come from, what timeframe should the dashboard cover and how often would it be refreshed and what level of detail should it provide. The decision initially was to make the dashboard public. Since the university had been using the IBM Cognos software for reporting since the mid 1990 s the logical choice was to use it for creating the dashboard. However, the cost of the public facing license proved to be cost prohibitive so other software was investigated. In the end, IT decided to use data generated by Cognos but to create the dashboard using PHP. The dashboard was presented to the Board of Trustees in May of 2013 and went live in October, 2013. It was removed from the university s public website and brought to an internal website in December. The following factors significantly contributed to the timeliness and success of this project: High degree of technical skills Familiarity with the university s reporting tool Knowledge of the university s data Establishing a cross-departmental knowledge management team Project endorsement from the highest level Board of Trustees request Availability and ease of use

Benefits The performance measures dashboard has greatly increased visibility into university operations and has empowered users make informed decisions about their areas. One of the most important benefits, because of its ease of use, is the access to data that it provides. Other benefits that have resulted from the performance dashboard are: Presents an at-a-glance view of university KPIs Identifies areas where further investigation is required Standardizes measures Facilitates discussion among university leaders Facilitates data driven decision making Displays trend, variance and target information Allows each college to focus on their data Gives university leaders sortable, varied views of data

Retrospect In retrospect, the Knowledge Management Team would have preferred to create a pilot dashboard and present it to university executives so that input could be gathered and project details could be flushed out. Determining that the dashboard was going to be internal and not public right at the beginning would have reduced the timeline and stress level of this project. Preference would have been to use the university s software reporting tool for creating the dashboard rather than using PHP.