On a recent Radio 4 Today programme a
Liberal Democrat spokesman was invited to criticise the
Government’s use of targets for managing the public sector At
last, I thought, someone is going to point out that targets
don’t get us what we want.
Alas, the spokesman could only suggest
that they should be used better. The fact is that targets
don’t help us get to where we want to be. Worse, they actually
obviate the possibility by making people focus on the wrong
things. In the police, schools, health service and local
authorities targets are hindering performance rather than
fostering improvement.
What I had hoped the spokesman would say
was that the whole idea of targets is flawed - that their use
in a hierarchical system engages peoples’ ingenuity in
managing the numbers instead of improving their methods.
Peoples’ attention turns to being seen to meet the targets –
fulfilling the bureaucratic requirements of reporting that
which they have become ‘accountable’ for - at the expense of
achieving the organisation’s purpose.
In simple terms, all this effort
constitutes and causes waste – inefficiency, poor service and,
worst of all, low morale.
The notion of a target is plausible. In
principle, there is nothing wrong with individuals having
targets that they may set themselves – lose weight, run
further, get another job, earn more money. But targets in a
hierarchical system is that it is imposed with authority, by
people who are generally detached from the work being carried
out. Targets are therefore arbitrary. They may suit a plan,
but they do not start from a knowledge of capability – what
the system predictably achieves and why.
What the spokesman should have said was
that instead of targets people need measures that lead to
questions of method - ‘How can we do this better?’
World class organisations have already
learned this lesson. They reject the traditional
‘cost-production’ model of management, under which managers
are separated from work and make decisions based entirely on
budgets.
To engage people in improvement
world-class organisations use measures that relate to purpose,
not budget, and which taken over time, since they know that
all performance exhibits variation. Because such measures draw
peoples’ attention to what is predictably being achieved and
why, the nature of their discussions turns to method. Better
measures are at the heart of a better way of managing. What
would Taiichi Ohno, the architect of the Toyota Production
System, the exemplar of world-class manufacturing, make of,
for example, the Government’s approach to improving the
performance of the NHS? Ministers say that capacity needs to
be increased and so are investing significant extra resources.
Ohno taught that Capacity equals work plus waste. By adding
more resources, the Government intends the system to ‘do more
work’, in Ohno’s formula. But he would insist that a better
way to remove waste -adding resources to a wasteful system
just compounds inefficiency.
Nor are ‘waste-busting’ initiatives much
help in a system that is managed and measured with targets.
The targets are a major cause of waste, consuming peoples’
time in artificial activity and, worse, deflecting their
attention from what they ought to be doing.
Ohno’s insight is that waste can only be
removed when manages learn to manage the overall flow of work
rather than functions within it. This comes as no surprise to
the people who do the work – some health authorities have
radically improved the way they respond to patients’
conditions by re-designing their processes to cut out multiple
visits and waiting. Simply, patients get what they need more
quickly.
To the surprise of traditionally-minded
‘production’ managers – who assume that putting expertise at
the point of transaction will increase costs - this results in
lower costs and improved service.
Unfortunately, these initiatives will
often not show up in the Government’s measures because they
are based on flow, not measures of individual functions like
numbers of operations or appointments - the things being
targeted. To concentrate on function always impedes flow, a
paradox that managers find difficult to come to terms
with.
Government promises it will pay
attention to ‘the customers’ experience’ of the health
service. Patients would prefer they paid attention to how well
the service treats and prevents disease. Patients and staff
need neither charters, visions, values and any of the rest of
the ‘modern’ management.
I had hoped that the spokesman
would point out that the people who work in our public
services want to focus on their purpose. Doctors and nurses
want to treat patients; police want to prevent and detect
crime. They need help with measures and means, not cajoling to
focus on arbitrary activities through hierarchical power. And
I hoped he would have strengthened his case by pointing out
that when their purpose has effectively become ‘serve the
hierarchy’ rather than ‘improve the work’ people get
disheartened and demoralised.
The extent of this phenomenon is
alarming. Talk to anyone about their experiences of public
services and there is a pattern; of people being prevented
from focusing on purpose by the requirement to concentrate on
what the hierarchy has decided is important. To put it
bluntly, people are dying while the health service is being
distorted by targets.
Targets are capricious. While they
are assumed to provide a spur to improvement, they actually
make performance worse. The next time we hear about the
Government’s use of targets is raised we should be asking why
they have not been abandoned.
Copyright John Seddon
Reproduced in The Observer 27 August
2000
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