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An Introduction to Results Management
Table of Contents
An Introduction to Results Management
Chapter 1: Results Management Context and Evolution
Chapter 2: What Results Management Is and Why It's Important
Chapter 3: Putting Results Management into Practice
Chapter 4: Implementing Results Management: Challenges and Opportunities
Materials and Resources on International Experience with Results Management
Appendix 1: Results Management at the Country Level
Appendix 2: Results Management at the Project Level
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Chapter 2: What Results Management Is and Why It's Important

Results management, properly implemented, improves efficiency and effectiveness. Results management goes beyond focusing solely on formal systems and measurement to emphasize shared values and leadership as key success factors. This implies a multifaceted approach to deal effectively with complexity and an ability to adapt to change while maintaining core values and public confidence. Results management should have embedded within it a commitment to organizational learning and improvement in support of results-based decision making related to achieving the organization's strategic goals.

For most organizations, results management represents a new and different way of doing business. In order to more clearly understand what this implies, it may first be useful to also clarify what results management is not.

What Results Management is Not

Results management is not the same as MBO. MBO, originally described by Peter Drucker over half a century ago, is based on aligning goals and subordinate objectives throughout an organization. In theory, the organization-wide alignment of goals and objectives maximizes effectiveness and leads to achieving objectives. Indeed, there are many positive lessons to be learned from MBO, including the need for a systematic, strategic planning process and a managerial focus on objectives rather than on activities. However, MBO works only if objectives are clearly understood, few in number, and specific. It works best with centralized organizations and assumes full organizational control over outcomes and fixed relationships between inputs and outputs. In contrast, results management works best in decentralized organizations operating in fluid and changing environments.

Results management is not the same as program evaluation. Traditional evaluations are generally completed only after a project or program is completed. In most evaluations, findings are not fed back into the organization as part of an iterative, responsive, decision-making process. Project managers seldom receive real-time feedback; instead, feedback comes only with the findings of the formal evaluation by which time it is no longer possible to make corrections. Real-time (or nearly real-time) feedback loops are integral to results management and play a key role in supporting results-oriented decision making. The two approaches complement each other and are important components of a comprehensive results management approach.

Results management is not just a design tool. The logframe was originally developed for use by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in the early 1970s. Since then, the logframe has become a key planning and management tool for many development agencies—Britain’s DFID, Canada’s CIDA, Australia’s AusAID, and Germany’s GTZ to name just a few.

Typical uses of the logframe have been to support participatory project planning, to serve as an analytic tool to document project results, and to provide a sound monitoring and evaluation framework. The logframe has clearly proven its value as a management and planning tool and is now firmly established as an essential tool in development work. Indeed, the logframe is the primary tool through which development agencies conceptualize project objectives and determine appropriate strategies and tactics to attain those objectives. However, as originally formulated, the logframe’s primary application has been as an analytical tool for project design.

In the context of results management, modifications to the original logframe are required, particularly as stakeholder understanding of the causal relationships between expected results and underlying assumptions and risks are elaborated. This dynamic element is generally absent in the traditional logframe approach.

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What Results Management Is

Results management is simultaneously (i) a management approach and (ii) a set of tools for strategic planning, monitoring and evaluating performance, reporting, and organizational improvement and learning. Results management improves organizational performance by applying traditional tools such as strategic planning, results frameworks, monitoring, and program evaluation in the modern context of decentralization, networking, flexibility, participatory processes, and accountability.

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A Logical Approach to Cause and Effect

At the core of “results thinking” is the concept of the results chain, a schematic illustration of the intended causal relationships among various elements over time (see Box 1). The results chain clearly shows the plausible, causal relationships among its elements, while also clarifying the various cyclical processes and feedback loops planners need to be aware of. The basic rationale is to plan from right to left by initially focusing on impacts and intended outcomes and then identifying the outputs, activities, and inputs required to achieve them. Tracking performance then goes from left to right, feeding information back to inputs and activities to make necessary adjustments and improvements thus leading to better results.

See also Glossary of Key Terms in Evaluation and Results Based Management* published by OECD-DAC.

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Focus on Outcomes

The core of results management is its focus on desired outcomes. Outcomes are the intended, intermediate effects of an intervention’s outputs. At the sectoral or country level, they are shaped by many factors, with any particular project or program making only a marginal contribution.

While it is important to have a vision of desired impact, actually managing for impact is unrealistic and in fact impossible. Realistically, managers of specific projects or programs aim to manage progress towards outcomes. Given that achieving outcomes depends in part on factors beyond the direct control of a project or program, a different approach to attribution than that traditionally used for inputs or outputs is needed. Such an outcome orientation represents a fundamentally different way of thinking about stakeholder and client relationships that requires managing for results across all layers of the organization, with a consistent focus on partnership and collaboration.

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Leadership

The role of leadership is essential not only to set the direction for and constantly contribute to clarifying the core functions and objectives of the organization but also to model the behavior and attitude to support the results orientation.

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Participation

Buy-in and support can only be achieved by actively involving staff and stakeholders. People are inclined to resist any approach that is perceived as being imposed from above. However, when staff are actively involved in developing and implementing a results approach, they become owners of the process. Thus, participation plays a key role in ensuring relevance and responsiveness; defining realistic expected results; accurately assessing risks and assumptions; monitoring progress towards expected results; reporting on performance; and assessing lessons learned and providing input into management decisions.

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Learning and Improvement

Unless results management is perceived as useful and applicable, it is likely to be viewed negatively as involving additional requirements and placing extra burdens on staff. Successful implementation requires creating and nurturing an organizational culture in which outcomes are valued because they are understood by all stakeholders to be important. This implies a shift from traditional, procedure-oriented bureaucratic thinking to flexible, results-focused thinking that is responsive to client demands. This requires that managers and staff see the value of adopting an outcome orientation and using performance information to achieve relevant outcomes.

Improved knowledge is a prerequisite for making better decisions. Systematic feedback loops help to identify those factors that predict good performance (i.e., achieving results). Improving the flow of information about results supports making more appropriate and timely strategic decisions about implementation and quality improvements.

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Integrating Stakeholder and Client Concerns

All public sector and development organizations have stakeholders that are “partners” and “clients.” The nature of partners and clients differs from organization to organization. In a government agency, clients might be the recipients of services; in a development agency, clients might be governments of developing countries. Similarly, the term “partner” in government might refer to other public sector agencies, while in a development agency it might refer to other donors or international organizations.

Organizations are accountable to their stakeholders, and stakeholders should be involved in making the transition to results management. Thus, in both public and private sector organizations, successful results management requires building and sustaining transparent and accountable strategic partnerships.

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Chapter 3: Putting Results Management into Practice