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Report to Congressional Requesters:

December 2003:

HUMAN CAPITAL:

Key Principles for Effective Strategic Workforce Planning:

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-39] GAO-04-39:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-39, a report to congressional requesters 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The federal government is in a period of profound transition and faces 
an array of challenges and opportunities to enhance performance, 
ensure accountability, and position the nation for the future. 
Effective results-oriented management of the government’s most valued 
resource—its people—is at the heart of this transition.

This report is part of a large body of GAO work examining issues in 
strategic human capital management. Based on GAO’s reports and 
testimonies, review of studies by leading workforce planning 
organizations, and interviews with officials from the Office of 
Personnel Management and other federal agencies, this report describes 
the key principles of strategic workforce planning and provides 
illustrative examples of these principles drawn from selected 
agencies’ strategic workforce planning experiences.

What GAO Found:

Strategic workforce planning addresses two critical needs: (1) 
aligning an organization’s human capital program with its current and 
emerging mission and programmatic goals and (2) developing long-term 
strategies for acquiring, developing, and retaining staff to achieve 
programmatic goals. While agencies' approaches to workforce planning 
will vary, GAO identified five key principles that strategic workforce 
planning should address irrespective of the context in which the 
planning is done:

* Involve top management, employees, and other stakeholders in 
developing, communicating, and implementing the strategic workforce 
plan.
* Determine the critical skills and competencies that will be needed 
to achieve current and future programmatic results.
* Develop strategies that are tailored to address gaps in number, 
deployment, and alignment of human capital approaches for enabling and 
sustaining the contributions of all critical skills and competencies.
* Build the capability needed to address administrative, educational, 
and other requirements important to support workforce planning 
strategies.
Monitor and evaluate the agency's progress toward its human capital 
goals and the contribution that human capital results have made toward 
achieving programmatic results. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-039.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact J. Christopher Mihm 
at (202) 512-6806 or mihmj@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents:

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Principle 1: Involve Top Management, Employees, and Other Stakeholders 
in Developing, Communicating, and Implementing the Strategic Workforce 
Plan: 

Principle 2: Determine the Critical Skills and Competencies That Will 
Be Needed to Achieve the Future Programmatic Results: 

Principle 3: Develop Strategies Tailored to Address Gaps and Human 
Capital Conditions in Critical Skills and Competencies That Need 
Attention: 

Principle 4: Build the Capability Needed to Address Administrative, 
Educational, and Other Requirements Important to Supporting Workforce 
Strategies: 

Principle 5: Monitor and Evaluate the Agency's Progress toward Its 
Human Capital Goals and the Contribution That Human Capital Results 
Have Made toward Achieving Programmatic Goals: 

Concluding Observations: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Related GAO Products:

Figures:

Figure 1: Strategic Workforce Planning Process: 

Figure 2: Illustration of Principles for Involving Top Management and 
Others: PBGC's Workforce Planning Efforts: 

Figure 3: Illustration of Principles for Determining Critical Skills and 
Competencies: NHGRI's Workforce Planning: 

Figure 4: Illustration of Principles for Selecting Targeted Human 
Capital Strategies: DOL's Development of an MBA Fellows Program: 

Figure 5: Illustration of Principles for Building the Capacity to 
Support Workforce Strategies: GSA's Use of Human Capital Flexibilities: 

Figure 6: Illustration of Principles for Evaluating Contribution to 
Strategic Results: SSA's Evaluation of Retirement-Related Strategies: 

Letter December 11, 2003:

Congressional Requesters:

The Homeland Security Act of 2002,[Footnote 1] recent congressional 
hearings on proposals to reform the Department of Defense's civilian 
personnel reforms, and reports by the Commercial Activities Panel 
chaired by the Comptroller General and the National Commission on the 
Public Service[Footnote 2] recognize the important contribution that a 
properly designed and implemented human capital program can make toward 
achieving an agency's mission and strategic goals. Strategic workforce 
planning, also called human capital planning, focuses on developing 
long-term strategies for acquiring, developing, and retaining an 
organization's total workforce (including full-and part-time federal 
staff and contractors) to meet the needs of the future. It is an 
essential element of the institutional infrastructure that each agency 
needs to ensure that its human capital program capitalizes on its 
workforce's strengths and addresses related challenges in a manner that 
is clearly linked to achieving the agency's mission and goals.

This report is part of a large body of work examining issues in 
strategic human capital management. It was initially requested by 
Senators Lieberman and Thompson in their capacities as Chairman and 
Ranking Minority Member, respectively, of the Senate Committee on 
Governmental Affairs, and by the chairmen and ranking minority members 
of the committee's two cognizant subcommittees. This report, as agreed 
with your offices, describes principles of human capital planning and 
provides illustrative agency examples that will contribute to effective 
agency strategic workforce plans. GAO, like other agencies across 
government, is in the midst of transforming how it does business. 
Accordingly, our internal strategic human capital planning efforts are 
consistent with the principles described in this report.

To develop this information, we reviewed documents from (1) 
organizations with governmentwide responsibilities for or expertise in 
workforce planning models and tools, such as the Office of Personnel 
Management (OPM) and the National Academy of Public Administration 
(NAPA), and (2) federal agencies recommended by several sources as 
having promising workforce planning programs. We also reviewed our own 
reports and testimonies on human capital issues. In addition, we met 
with officials from these organizations concerning existing workforce 
planning models and lessons learned from their workforce planning 
experiences. We did not evaluate the effectiveness of specific 
workforce planning processes being used by the agencies we contacted. 
Appendix I provides additional information on our scope and 
methodology. A list of recent GAO products related to federal agencies' 
management of human capital is included at the end of this report.

Results in Brief:

Strategic workforce planning addresses two critical needs: (1) aligning 
an organization's human capital program with its current and emerging 
mission and programmatic goals and (2) developing long-term strategies 
for acquiring, developing, and retaining staff to achieve programmatic 
goals. Agency approaches to such planning can vary with each agency's 
particular needs and mission. The success of the workforce planning 
process that an agency uses can be judged by its results--how well it 
helps the agency attain its mission and strategic goals--not by the 
type of process used. Nevertheless, existing strategic workforce 
planning tools and models and our own work suggest that there are 
certain principles that such a process should address irrespective of 
the context in which planning is done. (See fig. 1.) These are as 
follows:

* involve top management, employees, and other stakeholders in 
developing, communicating, and implementing the strategic workforce 
plan;

* determine the critical skills and competencies that will be needed to 
achieve current and future programmatic results;

* develop strategies that are tailored to address gaps in number, 
deployment, and alignment of human capital approaches for enabling and 
sustaining the contributions of all critical skills and competencies;

* build the capability needed to address administrative, educational, 
and other requirements important to support workforce strategies; and:

* monitor and evaluate the agency's progress toward its human capital 
goals and the contribution that human capital results have made toward 
achieving programmatic goals.

Figure 1: Strategic Workforce Planning Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

The following provides additional information on each of these 
principles. First, federal agencies are increasingly realizing that 
they must transform themselves to meet long-term fiscal, other 
domestic, and global challenges of the 21st century. Workforce planning 
that is linked to an agency's strategic goals is one of the tools 
agencies can use to systematically identify the workforce needed for 
the future and develop strategies for shaping this workforce. We have 
found that efforts that address key organizational issues, like 
strategic workforce planning, are most likely to succeed if, at their 
outset, agencies' top program and human capital leaders set the overall 
direction, pace, tone, and goals of the effort, and involve employees 
and other stakeholders in establishing a communication strategy that 
creates shared expectations for the outcome of the process. For 
example, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) officials used a 
team of managers working under the guidance of senior directors from 
PBGC's budget, human resources, and other offices to involve 
executives, supervisors, and staff before developing a strategic 
workforce plan.

Second, an agency needs to define the critical skills and competencies 
that it will require in the future to meet its strategic program goals. 
Fiscal, demographic, technological, and other forces are challenging 
government agencies to change the activities that they perform and the 
goals that they must achieve, how they do their business, and even who 
does the government's business. To effectively meet these challenges, 
an agency needs to (1) consult with key congressional and other 
stakeholders on its strategic goals and (2) identify the workforce 
skills and competencies that are critical to achieving these strategic 
goals and how the agency will obtain these requirements, including 
those that the agency will need to acquire, develop, and retain to meet 
its goals. For example, every 5 years, the National Human Genome 
Research Institute (NHGRI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) 
develops new strategic goals for the project and identifies the 
scientific and research capability needed to achieve these goals. 
National and international human genome experts discuss such topics as 
how skills critical to achieving previous goals may change during the 
coming years; how NHGRI should acquire, develop, and shape these skills 
within universities and NHGRI research programs; and whether NHGRI will 
need additional managers with similar scientific and medical skills to 
oversee research activities. NHGRI's April 2003 strategic plan calls 
for the research institute to increase the number of scientists and 
managers with computational and clinical medical skills during the next 
5 years.

Third, once an agency identifies the critical skills and competencies 
that its future workforce must posses, it can develop strategies 
tailored to address gaps in the number, skills and competencies, and 
deployment of the workforce and the alignment of human capital 
approaches that enable and sustain the contributions of all critical 
skills and competencies needed for the future. Strategies include the 
programs, policies, and practices that will enable an agency to 
recruit, develop, and retain the critical staff needed to achieve 
program goals. In short, developing such strategies creates a road map 
for an agency to use to move from the current to the future workforce 
needed to achieve program goals. When considering strategies, it is 
important for agencies to consider the full range of flexibilities 
available under current authorities, as well as flexibilities that 
might need additional legislation before they can be adopted. In 
addition, agencies need to understand the strengths and weaknesses of 
their current human capital program and how the program can 
successfully use such flexibilities. For example, during its fiscal 
year 2001 preparation of fiscal year 2003 budget proposals, the 
Department of Labor (DOL) developed strategies for increasing the 
number of Master of Business Administration (MBA) graduates at the 
department. Its strategy, which was successfully included in its fiscal 
year 2003 budget, called for using recruitment bonuses and student loan 
repayments to recruit individuals with business degrees and a training 
program to acquaint those hired with the department. DOL has recently 
started training a second class of 17 MBA Fellows, in addition to the 
13 enrolled in February 2003.

Fourth, as agencies develop tailored workforce plans and address 
administrative, educational, and other requirements that are important 
to support them, it is especially important to recognize practices that 
are key to the effective use of human capital authorities. These 
practices include educating managers and employees on the availability 
and use of flexibilities so that they are implemented openly, fairly, 
and effectively. For example, the General Services Administration (GSA) 
Region 3 built transparency and accountability into a newly designed 
award process by making lists of award amounts and frequencies (without 
personal identifiers) available to supervisors within the region so 
that they know how their use of such flexibilities compares with that 
of other regional supervisors.

Fifth, evaluating the contribution that the workforce plan makes to 
strategic results measures the effectiveness of the workforce plan and 
helps ensure that the strategies work as intended. This involves two 
activities: determining (1) how well the agency implemented its 
workforce plan and (2) the contribution that the implementation made 
toward achieving programmatic goals. These activities can also improve 
the effectiveness of workforce planning strategies and the overall 
workforce planning process by identifying shortfalls in performance and 
other improvement opportunities that can be incorporated into the next 
planning cycle. For example, the Social Security Administration (SSA) 
evaluated the results of its early retirement efforts to design future 
retirement programs that would shape the staffing levels available to 
attain the agency's goals.

Each of the five organizations profiled in this report provided 
comments on a draft. All agreed with the information presented. GSA and 
other agencies also provided technical comments that we have 
incorporated as appropriate. In addition to its technical comments, GSA 
noted that our discussion of its workforce planning activities focuses 
on only the efforts of one GSA region. We have clarified this point in 
the report.

Background:

Strategic human capital management is a pervasive challenge facing the 
federal government. In January 2001, and again in January 2003, we 
identified strategic human capital management as a governmentwide high-
risk area after finding that the lack of attention to strategic human 
capital planning had created a risk to the federal government's ability 
to serve the American people effectively.[Footnote 3] As our previous 
reports have made clear, the widespread lack of attention to strategic 
human capital management in the past has created a fundamental weakness 
in the federal government's ability to perform its missions 
economically, efficiently, and effectively.[Footnote 4] In the wake of 
extensive downsizing during the early 1990s, done largely without 
sufficient consideration of the strategic consequences, agencies are 
experiencing significant challenges to deploying the right skills, in 
the right places, at the right time. Agencies are also facing a growing 
number of employees who are eligible for retirement and are finding it 
difficult to fill certain mission-critical jobs, a situation that could 
significantly drain agencies' institutional knowledge. Other factors 
such as emerging security threats, rapidly evolving technology, and 
dramatic shifts in the age and composition of the overall population 
exacerbate the problem. Such factors increase the need for agencies to 
engage in strategic workforce planning to transform their workforces so 
that they will be effective in the 21stcentury.

There are a variety of models of how federal agencies can conduct 
workforce planning. For example, in 1999 OPM published a five-step 
model that suggests agencies define their strategic direction, assess 
their current and future workforces, and develop and implement action 
plans for closing identified gaps in future workforce needs.[Footnote 
5] Since then, NAPA and the International Personnel Management 
Association (IPMA) have reported on workforce models used by federal, 
state, and local governments and industry, and developed their own 
generic models.[Footnote 6]

Comparing these models, NAPA and IPMA found that the following four 
steps are generally common to strategic workforce planning efforts:

* examining future organizational, environmental, and other issues that 
may affect the agency's ability to attain its strategic goals;

* determining skills and competencies needed in the future workforce to 
meet the organization's goals and identifying gaps in skills and 
competencies that an organization needs to address;

* selecting and implementing human capital strategies that are targeted 
toward addressing these gaps and issues; and:

* evaluating the success of the human capital strategies.

However, they also reported that federal agencies often implement these 
steps differently and focus on a variety of issues based on their 
particular circumstances when preparing their strategic workforce 
plans. For example, faced with a long lead time to train employees 
hired to replace those retiring and an increasing workload, SSA focuses 
a large part of its workforce planning effort on estimating and 
managing retirements. Unlike SSA, PBGC officials faced a future 
workload that could rise or fall sharply. Consequently, PBGC focused 
its November 2002 workforce plan on identifying skills to manage the 
combined efforts of federal staff and contractors to address a volatile 
workload.

Principle 1: Involve Top Management, Employees, and Other Stakeholders 
in Developing, Communicating, and Implementing the Strategic Workforce 
Plan:

Planning, developing, and implementing workforce planning strategies, 
such as those that involve reshaping the current workforce through 
early separations, managed attrition, or increased hiring, can cause 
significant changes in how an agency implements its policies and 
programs. Our work on the human capital experiences of leading 
organizations as well as organizations that are undergoing major 
mergers and transformations has identified numerous lessons that can 
help federal agencies successfully implement strategic workforce 
planning strategies.[Footnote 7]

These lessons include the following:

* Ensuring that top management sets the overall direction and goals of 
workforce planning. Top leadership that is clearly and personally 
involved in strategic workforce planning provides the organizational 
vision that is important in times of change; can help provide stability 
as the workforce plan is being developed and implemented; and provides 
a cadre of champions within the agency, including both political and 
career executives, to ensure that planning strategies are thoroughly 
implemented and sustained over time. It can also help integrate 
workforce planning efforts with other key management planning efforts, 
such as succession planning and information technology or financial 
management reforms, to ensure that such initiatives work together to 
achieve the agency's goals. For example, we have reported that to be 
effective, succession planning needs the support and commitment of an 
organization's top leadership.[Footnote 8] In other countries, 
government agencies' top leadership (1) actively participates in the 
succession planning and management programs; (2) regularly uses these 
programs to develop, place, and promote individuals; and (3) ensures 
that these programs receive sufficient financial and staff resources 
and are maintained over time.

* Involve employees and other stakeholders in developing and 
implementing future workforce strategies. Agency managers, 
supervisors, employees, and employee unions need to work together to 
ensure that the entire agency understands the need for and benefits of 
changes described in the strategic workforce plan so that the agency 
can develop clear and transparent policies and procedures to implement 
the plan's human capital strategies. Involving employees and other 
stakeholders on strategic workforce planning teams can develop new 
synergies that identify ways to streamline processes and improve human 
capital strategies and help the agency recognize and deal with the 
potential impact that the organization's culture--the underlying 
assumptions, beliefs, values, attitudes, and expectations generally 
shared by an organization's members--can have on the implementation of 
such improvements. Changes that recognize how they may challenge the 
existing culture, and include appropriate steps to deal with potential 
problems, are more likely to succeed than strategies that do not.

* Establish a communication strategy to create shared expectations, 
promote transparency, and report progress. A communication strategy is 
especially crucial in the public sector where a full range of 
stakeholders and interested parties are concerned not only with what 
human capital and programmatic results will be achieved by a plan, but 
also with the processes that are to be used to achieve those results. 
For example, if a workforce plan calls for employing strategies that 
have not been extensively used before, such as recruitment bonuses, 
employees may be concerned about whether the processes will be followed 
consistently and fairly. In general, communication about the goals, 
approach, and results of strategic workforce planning is most effective 
when done early, clearly, and often and is downward, upward, and 
lateral.

Figure 2 describes how PBGC adopted several of these lessons during its 
recent workforce planning efforts.

Figure 2: Illustration of Principles for Involving Top Management and 
Others: PBGC's Workforce Planning Efforts:

PBGC adopted an innovative approach for involving top management that 
addressed its needs for both strategic workforce planning and enhanced 
professional development of potential executives. In 2000, we reviewed 
PBGC's organizational structure and reliance on contractor employees, 
and recommended that the corporation conduct a comprehensive review of 
its future human capital needs that addressed the size of its 
workforce; its deployment; and the knowledge, skills, and abilities 
needed to meet its future mission needs.[NOTE A] PBGC officials agreed 
that it needed a strategic workforce planning study. They also 
believed that the corporation needed to strengthen its succession 
management program to prepare future managers. PBGC officials 
responded by creating a multifaceted program, which it calls the 
Leaders Growing Leaders Program, and made the program's participants 
responsible for developing and evaluating workforce planning 
information. In essence, potential future corporate leaders in the 
program became PBGC's strategic workforce planning team. PBGC 
officials believed that having its future leaders analyze planning 
issues and formulate corresponding strategies to address these issues 
provided an added incentive for the team to develop strategic 
workforce planning recommendations that its members, as future 
leaders, can successfully implement. 

The planning team has completed several workforce-planning analyses to 
respond to our recommendations. Under the guidance of an executive 
steering committee, which consists of senior directors of PBGC's 
largest departments and its planning, budget, and human resources 
offices, the team has (1) studied other agencies' approaches to 
workforce planning; (2) examined current trends in PBGC's workload, 
employment, use of contractors, technology, and other factors; (3) 
developed for itself and the steering committee broad assumptions of 
how PBGC should address these issues in the future; and (4) 
interviewed over 100 executives, supervisors, and staff members to 
identify current and future skills needed in critical job occupations. 
PBGC officials identified these critical job occupations by analyzing 
the type of work conducted by PBGC and how technology and other 
factors were changing critical skills. 

During November 2002, the PBGC planning team completed a strategic 
workforce plan that (1) analyzed the differences between the current 
and future critical competencies identified in these interviews and 
(2) discussed with the steering committee possible recruitment, 
training, and retention strategies to address needs and opportunities. 
For example, the team identified six groups of critical competencies, 
such as competencies in project and contract management and 
information technology, that the corporation was in the greatest 
danger of not having within 5 years. To address these potential gaps, 
the team recommended that the corporation explore such strategies as 
partnering with colleges and universities; using rotational 
assignments, mentoring, and establishing one-on-one instructional 
programs to expand training; and aligning performance plans and awards 
to its corporate goals. According to PBGC officials, by the end of 
2003 the corporation will have implemented strategies to address these 
potential gaps and used the workforce plan to update its strategic 
goals for 2004 through 2008. 

[A] U.S. General Accounting Office, Pension Benefit Guaranty 
Corporation: Contracting Management Needs Improvement, [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/HEHS-00-130] GAO/HEHS-00-130 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 18, 2000).

[END OF FIGURE]

Principle 2: Determine the Critical Skills and Competencies That Will 
Be Needed to Achieve the Future Programmatic Results:

It is essential that agencies determine the skills and competencies 
that are critical to successfully achieving their missions and goals. 
This is especially important as changes in national security, 
technology, budget constraints, and other factors change the 
environment within which federal agencies operate. For example, as 
discussed in our July 2003 report on the Department of Homeland 
Security's (DHS) international cargo container programs, DHS Customs 
officials have developed two new programs for increasing the security 
of such cargo that require recruiting and training about 270 staff to 
work with their foreign counterparts at more than 40:

international ports and international shipping companies.[Footnote 9] 
To fully implement the new security programs, DHS expects to recruit 
and train candidates with diplomatic, language, and risk assessment 
(targeting) skills for 2-to 3-year permanent assignments at foreign 
ports. We reported that because some of these ports are in countries 
that our government considers hardship assignments, DHS faces a 
daunting challenge in attracting U.S. personnel with the necessary 
skills for these assignments. We recommended, among other improvements, 
that DHS develop human capital plans that clearly describe how the 
cargo security programs will meet the programs' long-term demands for 
skilled staff. DHS officials agreed to develop human capital plans to 
better ensure the programs' long-term success.

We have reported on similar human capital challenges at other agencies. 
For example, in June 2003, we testified that the Securities and 
Exchange Commission (SEC) had failed to fill most of the new staff 
positions it needed to examine recent high-profile corporate failures 
and accounting scandals.[Footnote 10] In our June 2002 report on the 
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC),[Footnote 11] we stated 
that the increasing competitive nature of the natural gas and 
electricity markets made it critical that FERC have more staff members 
knowledgeable about how the energy markets work and how to regulate 
these markets effectively. However, FERC did not have a strategic human 
capital management plan to guide its efforts to transform its workforce 
and had not taken full advantage of the personnel flexibilities and 
tools available to federal agencies in addressing its human capital 
challenges. In April 2002, we found that the individual federal trade 
agencies responsible for negotiating, monitoring, and enforcing U.S. 
trade agreements lacked sufficient staff members with the expertise to 
perform the necessary economic, technical, and legal analyses for the 
new agreements.[Footnote 12] The agencies collectively did not have 
sufficient expertise to adequately complete these analyses and faced 
problems with recruitment and high turnover rates.

The scope of agencies' efforts to identify the skills and competencies 
needed for their future workforces varies considerably, depending on 
the needs and interests of a particular agency. Whereas some agencies 
may decide to define all the skills and competencies needed to achieve 
their strategic goals, others may elect to focus their analysis on only 
those most critical to achieving their goals. The most important 
consideration is that the skills and competencies identified are 
clearly linked to the agency's mission and long-term goals developed 
jointly with key congressional and other stakeholders during the 
strategic planning process. If an agency identifies staff needs without 
linking the needs to strategic goals, or if the agency has not obtained 
agreement from key stakeholders on the goals, the needs assessment may 
be incomplete and premature.

Agencies can use various approaches for making a fact-based 
determination of the critical human capital skills and competencies 
needed for the future. For example, PBGC collected qualitative 
information from interviews with agency executives and managers on the 
factors influencing the agency's capability to acquire, develop, and 
retain critical skills and competencies. Another approach, used by the 
Department of the Army, is to collect extensive information from 
employee surveys on education, training, and other factors that may 
influence employees' skills.[Footnote 13] Information on attrition 
rates and projected retirement rates, fluctuations in workload, and 
geographic and demographic trends can also be useful. When estimating 
the number of employees needed with specific skills and competencies, 
it is also important to consider opportunities for reshaping the 
workforce by reengineering current work processes, sharing work among 
offices within the agency and with other agencies that have similar 
missions, and competitive sourcing. (See fig. 3 for information on 
NHGRI's approach for determining critical skills and competencies 
needed to achieve its strategic goals.):

Figure 3: Illustration of Principles for Determining Critical Skills 
and Competencies: NHGRI's Workforce Planning:

NHGRI has identified the organizational capabilities it needs to 
achieve its goals in the human genome project. About every 5 years 
since 1990, the agency has developed new strategic goals for the 
project and identified the general organizational capabilities needed 
to meet these goals. For example, based on the advice of federal and 
nonfederal managers, scientists, and other stakeholders, the agency 
has consistently determined it needs the capability to (1) develop and 
use state-of-the-art genetic analysis techniques, (2) create and 
manage very large databases of genetic information, and (3) explore 
the ethics of developing detailed genetic maps of people. However, as 
the science has matured, NHGRI has increasingly emphasized the 
capability to develop medical applications of genetic discoveries. As 
research priorities have changed, NHGRI has also identified and 
developed the inhouse capability to provide and manage financial 
grants to support pre- and postdoctoral researchers at universities 
and for its own in-house research program. 

Accomplishing all of its 
agreed-upon strategic objectives, NHGRI recently reexamined the 
program’s future research goals and associated organizational 
capabilities. From July 2001 through November 2002, NHGRI officials 
conducted a series of workshops and solicited advice from national and 
international experts to (1) review the U.S. program’s past scientific 
successes, (2) define new strategic research goals and areas of 
emphasis, and (3) identify the scientific and research capability 
needed to achieve these goals. Program officials and scientists 
participating in the planning workshops discussed such topics as how 
skills critical to achieving previous goals may change during the 
coming years; how NIH should acquire, develop, and shape these skills 
within universities and NIH research programs; and whether NHGRI will 
need additional managers with similar scientific and medical skills to 
oversee research activities. According to NHGRI officials, workshop 
participants called for an even greater reliance in the future on 
scientists with computational and clinical medical skills. The 
program’s April 2003 strategic plan includes ambitious goals for 
translating the wealth of existing genetic information and technology 
into medical applications that will significantly improve human health 
care and calls for an increased number of scientists with such skills. 

[End of figure]

Scenario planning is an approach that agencies have used to manage 
risks of planning for future human capital needs in a changing 
environment. As discussed in our April 2003 report on agencies' efforts 
to integrate human capital strategies with their mission-oriented 
efforts,[Footnote 14] scenarios can describe different future 
environments that agencies may face. For example, after the terrorist 
attacks of September 11, 2001, and during the creation and 
implementation of DHS, senior U.S. Coast Guard officials reexamined 
five long-term scenarios developed in 1999 to describe different 
environments that could exist in the year 2020. In 1999, these 
scenarios had been the basis for agency leaders and planners to create 
operational and human capital strategies that they thought would work 
well for the U.S. Coast Guard in each independent scenario. After 
September 11, 2001, agency officials reviewed the scenarios to 
determine whether additional scenarios were needed in light of the 
attacks and decided to (1) create new long-term scenarios to guide 
planning beyond 2005 and (2) generate two scenarios with an 18-month 
horizon to guide short-term operational and human capital planning. 
Similarly, to prepare its 2002 strategic workforce plan, PBGC used 
scenario analysis to determine how the scope and volume of its 
activities might change in the next 5 years. The strategic workforce 
plans these organizations developed identify gaps in workforce skills 
or competencies that they need to fill to meet the likely scenarios 
rather than planning to meet the needs of a single view of the future. 
U.S. Coast Guard and PBGC managers believe that by using multiple 
scenarios they gain flexibility in determining future workforce 
requirements.

Principle 3: Develop Strategies Tailored to Address Gaps and Human 
Capital Conditions in Critical Skills and Competencies That Need 
Attention:

Our March 2002 strategic human capital model stressed the importance of 
agencies developing human capital strategies--the programs, policies, 
and processes that agencies use to build and manage their workforces--
that are tailored to their unique needs. Applying this to strategic 
workforce planning means that agencies (1) develop hiring, training, 
staff development, succession planning, performance management, use of 
flexibilities, and other human capital strategies and tools that can be 
implemented with the resources that can be reasonably expected to be 
available and (2) consider how these strategies can be aligned to 
eliminate gaps and improve the contribution of critical skills and 
competencies that they have identified between the future and current 
skills and competencies needed for mission success. For example, we 
reported that to manage the succession of their executives and other 
key employees, agencies in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the 
United Kingdom are implementing succession planning and management 
practices that protect and enhance organizational capacity.[Footnote 
15] Specifically, their initiatives identify high-potential employees 
from multiple organizational levels early in their careers as well as 
identify and develop successors for employees with critical knowledge 
and skills. In addition, because they are facing challenges in the 
demographic makeup and diversity of their senior executives, agencies 
in other countries use succession planning and management to achieve a 
more diverse workforce, maintain their leadership capacity as their 
senior executives retire, and increase the retention of high-potential 
staff.

Also, in June 2003, we testified that although the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation (FBI) has taken some steps to address short-term human 
capital needs related to implementing its changed priorities, as well 
as completing a framework for a revised strategic plan, it has not 
completed a strategic human capital plan.[Footnote 16] We observed that 
the FBI should build a more long-term approach to human capital by 
completing a strategic human capital plan that outlines, among other 
things, the results of a data-driven assessment of its needs for 
critical skills and competencies. Such an analysis could become the 
basis for FBI officials deciding how to maximize the use of available 
human capital flexibilities as a strategy for recruiting and retaining 
agents with critical skills, intelligence analysts, and other 
critically needed staff.

Our 2002 strategic human capital model identifies aspects of human 
capital management that enable agencies to maximize their employees' 
contributions, such as (1) the continuing attention of senior leaders 
and managers to valuing and investing in their employees; (2) an 
investment in human capital approaches that acquires, develops, and 
retains the best employees; and (3) the use of performance management 
systems that elicit the best results-oriented performance from the 
staff, and indicators to measure the effectiveness of human capital 
approaches.[Footnote 17],[Footnote 18] Before beginning to develop 
specific workforce strategies, an agency can assess these aspects of 
its human capital approach, using OPM's Human Capital Assessment and 
Accountability Framework, which OPM developed in conjunction with the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and GAO; our model; and other 
tools. The results will help agencies develop a sense of the obstacles 
and opportunities that may occur in meeting their critical workforce 
needs For example, an agency that attempts to develop creative and 
innovative strategies will have a difficult time implementing the 
strategies if its assessment concludes that its overall human capital 
approach (1) does not effectively value people as assets whose value 
can be enhanced and (2) is not results oriented.

Much of the authority that agencies' leaders need to tailor human 
capital strategies to their unique needs is already available under 
current laws and regulations. Therefore, in setting goals for its human 
capital program and developing the tailored workforce planning 
strategies to achieve these goals, it is important for agencies to 
identify and make use of all the appropriate administrative authorities 
to build and maintain the workforce needed for the future. As our 
December 2002 report states, this will involve agencies reexamining the 
flexibilities provided to them under current authorities, and 
identifying existing flexibilities that they could use more 
extensively, to develop workforce planning strategies.[Footnote 19] 
These flexibilities may include providing early separation and early 
retirement incentives authorized by the Homeland Security Act of 2002, 
recruitment and retention bonuses and allowances, alternative work 
schedules, and special hiring authorities to recruit employees with 
critical skills.[Footnote 20] (See fig. 4 for information on DOL's use 
of flexibilities to recruit individuals with business skills.):

Figure 4: Illustration of Principles for Selecting Targeted Human 
Capital Strategies: DOL's Development of an MBA Fellows Program:

Like many agencies, DOL faces the challenge of acquiring needed skills 
and competencies to keep pace with changing conditions and to improve 
effectiveness of its programs. To address this challenge, it has 
formulated a strategy for using existing personnel flexibilities for 
recruiting individuals with advanced business administration skills, 
and presented a business case for this and other human capital 
initiatives in its fiscal year 2003 budget request approved by the 
Congress. 

Specifically, early in fiscal year 2002, the Secretary of Labor 
determined that, to transform itself into a more business-like 
organization, the department needed to (1) recruit individuals who 
possessed extensive business skills in order to develop such critical 
competencies as marketing, quantitative analysis, and strategic 
thinking and (2) train these individuals in the intricacies of 
operating the department’s many worker protection, compensation, and 
employment programs. After considering several human capital 
approaches for doing this, such as expanding recruiting efforts at 
universities to attract more business graduates and rotating 
individuals with business skills from other agencies to short 
assignments in the department, DOL officials decided to develop a 
program that combined aspects of both types of programs. 

DOL’s 
resulting MBA Fellows Program, which began in February 2003, includes 
(1) goals for the year of recruiting 15 to 20 MBA graduates and other 
individuals with comparable business experience, (2) strategies to 
facilitate recruiting these individuals, and (3) a new 2-year program 
designed to provide these new hires with experiences in a broad 
variety of departmental programs. Strategies for hiring these 
individuals include establishing relationships with universities and 
professional organizations that have strong business programs to 
advertise DOL’s hiring program, and using existing flexibilities, such 
as recruitment bonuses and student loan repayments, to improve the 
competitiveness of the department’s employment offers. The new Fellows 
Program includes rotation assignments throughout DOL, development of 
individualized plans to enhance leadership and business experiences, 
and matching program participants with mentors. In July 2003, DOL 
hired a second class of 17 MBA Fellows to join the 13 hired in 
February. 

[End of figure]

Principle 4: Build the Capability Needed to Address Administrative, 
Educational, and Other Requirements Important to Supporting Workforce 
Strategies:

In a December 2002 report, we identified key practices that agencies 
need to employ to effectively take advantage of existing and new human 
capital authorities.[Footnote 21] Two of these practices--ensuring that 
the use of flexibilities is part of an overall human capital strategy 
and ensuring stakeholder input in developing flexibilities-related 
policies and procedures--are intrinsic to effective workforce planning 
and have already been discussed. However, as agencies plan how to 
implement specific workforce strategies that include flexibilities, it 
is important that they also consider other practices that are important 
to the effective use of flexibilities. These include the following:

* Educate managers and employees on the availability and use of 
flexibilities. Managers and supervisors can be more effective in using 
human capital strategies that involve new flexibilities, such as 
recruitment bonuses, if they are properly trained to identify when they 
can be used and how to use the agency's processes for ensuring 
consistency, equity, and transparency. To avoid confusion and 
misunderstandings, it is also important to educate employees about how 
the agency uses human capital flexibilities and employee rights under 
policies and procedures related to human capital.[Footnote 22]

* Streamline and improve administrative processes. It is important that 
agencies streamline administrative processes for using flexibilities 
and review self-imposed constraints that may be excessively process 
oriented. Although sufficient controls are important to ensure 
consistency and fairness, agency officials developing a workforce 
strategy that uses flexibilities should look for instances in which 
processes can be reengineered.

* Build transparency and accountability into the system. Clear and 
transparent guidelines for using specific flexibilities, and holding 
managers and supervisors accountable for their fair and effective use, 
are essential to successfully implementing workforce strategies. 
Guidelines can be used to (1) provide well-defined and documented 
decision-making criteria for using flexibilities and help ensure that 
they are consistently applied and (2) minimize managers' and 
supervisors' potential reluctance to use flexibilities by addressing 
their concerns that without guidelines, employees may see them as 
unfairly applying the flexibilities. An agency can also use a results-
oriented performance management system to reinforce managers' 
accountability for implementing human capital strategies. In October 
2000, OPM amended regulations to require agencies to, among other 
things, appraise executive performance by balancing organizational 
results with areas such as employee perspective. We reported on 
selected agencies' implementation of a set of balanced performance 
expectations for senior executives and identified examples of 
executives' expectations.[Footnote 23] Examples of these performance 
expectations were to "help attract and retain well-qualified employees" 
and "ensure workforce has skills aligned with the agency's objectives." 
(See fig. 5 for information on GSA Region 3's efforts to build the 
capacity to support its workforce strategies.)[Footnote 24]

Figure 5: Illustration of Principles for Building the Capacity to 
Support Workforce Strategies: GSA's Use of Human Capital 
Flexibilities:

GSA’s Philadelphia Regional Office (Region 3) has used a variety of 
means to educate stakeholders and managers about human capital 
flexibilities and to involve them in identifying ways to simplify 
their use. For example, it has done the following: 

* Established a Human Resources Council, which is composed of the 
human resources director and representatives of various GSA offices, 
to discuss human capital policies and practices in the region, such as 
alternative work arrangements and incentive awards. 

* Conducted Human Resources Solutions Series training to educate 
supervisors on the existence and use of human capital flexibilities. 
The training includes topics such as employee leave and work 
schedules, options for dealing with performance and conduct problems, 
and balancing managerial flexibility and accountability under merit
system principles. 

* Revised administrative approval processes for granting employees on-
the-spot cash awards ranging from $50 to $2,000. Previously, agency 
supervisors were required to complete lengthy justifications and send 
these forms to the personnel office for review. According to the human 
resources manager, the perceived burdens of the previous 
administrative process led to very few awards being granted. Now, 
according to GSA managers and supervisors, by accessing GSA’s intranet 
Web site, an agency supervisor can complete the award initiation 
process within minutes and on the next business day receive a 
certificate to present to the employee that shows what the award is 
for and when the employee can expect the money in his or her paycheck. 

* Built transparency and accountability into the revised award process 
by making lists of award amounts and frequencies (without personal 
identifiers) available to supervisors within the region so that they 
know how their use of such flexibilities compares with that of other 
regional supervisors. 

* Started using GSA’s intranet Web site and an employee newsletter to 
distribute information about employees’ rights and related personnel 
policies and procedures.  

[End of figure]

Principle 5: Monitor and Evaluate the Agency's Progress toward Its 
Human Capital Goals and the Contribution That Human Capital Results 
Have Made toward Achieving Programmatic Goals:

High-performing organizations recognize the fundamental importance of 
measuring both the outcomes of human capital strategies and how these 
outcomes have helped the organizations accomplish their missions and 
programmatic goals. Performance measures, appropriately designed, can 
be used to gauge two types of success: (1) progress toward reaching 
human capital goals and (2) the contribution of human capital 
activities toward achieving programmatic goals.[Footnote 25] 
Identifying both types of measures, and discussing how the agency will 
use these measures to evaluate the strategies before it starts to 
implement the strategies, helps agency officials think through the 
scope, timing, and possible barriers to evaluating the workforce 
plan.[Footnote 26] Periodic measurement of an agency's progress toward 
human capital goals and the extent that human capital activities 
contributed to achieving programmatic goals provides information for 
effective oversight by identifying performance shortfalls and 
appropriate corrective actions.

For example, a workforce plan can include measures that indicate 
whether the agency executed its hiring, training, or retention 
strategies as intended and achieved the goals for these strategies, and 
how these initiatives changed the workforce's skills and competencies. 
It can also include additional measures that address whether the agency 
achieved its program goals and the link between human capital and 
program results. An agency's evaluation of its progress implementing 
human capital strategies would use the first set of measures to 
determine if the agency met its human capital goals and identify the 
reasons for any shortfalls, such as whether the agency's implementation 
plan adequately considered possible barriers to achieving the goals, 
established effective checkpoints to allow necessary adjustments to the 
strategy, and assigned people with sufficient authority and resources. 
Further evaluation may determine that although the agency achieved its 
workforce goals, its human capital efforts neither significantly helped 
nor hindered the agency from reaching its programmatic goals. This 
could occur if an agency misjudged the relationship between human 
capital and programmatic goals when developing workforce plans and 
consequently has mistakenly estimated the magnitude of changes in human 
capital strategies that were needed to achieve program goals. These 
results could lead to the agency revising its human capital goals to 
better reflect their relationship to programmatic goals, redesigning 
programmatic strategies, and possibly shifting resources among human 
capital initiatives during the next planning cycle.

Developing meaningful outcome-oriented performance goals and 
collecting performance data to measure achievement of these goals is a 
major challenge for many federal agencies.[Footnote 27] Performance 
measurement tends to focus on regularly collected data available on 
direct products and services provided by a program, such as the number 
of staff trained to carry out an activity. In cases where outcomes are 
not quickly achieved or readily observed, such as assessing the impact 
a training program has on achieving an agency's goals, performance 
measurement is more complex.[Footnote 28]

Federal agencies in general have experienced difficulties in defining 
practical and meaningful measures that assess the impact human capital 
strategies have on programmatic results. For example, in its fiscal 
year 2003 performance plan, the Federal Emergency Management Agency 
identified goals of streamlining its organization and developing its 
workforce, but listed no measures to gauge progress for either 
goal.[Footnote 29] In contrast, the Environmental Protection Agency's 
(EPA) fiscal year 2003 performance plan includes measures of the 
agency's efforts to achieve activity-oriented human capital goals, such 
as implementing a workforce planning model at five offices by the end 
of the year and completing a comprehensive pay review. These 
performance measures provide a base upon which EPA can seek to gauge 
how well its human capital efforts help the agency to achieve its 
programmatic goals.

The challenge faced by EPA and other agencies in using such measures is 
that there is not always a clear link between specific human capital 
strategies and strategic programmatic outcomes. This is partly because 
there may be multiple causes of a specific outcome, only one of which 
is related to a targeted human capital strategy, and unforeseen 
circumstances that affect implementation of a strategy. Our recent 
testimony on human capital challenges at the SEC and key trade agencies 
illustrates the practical difficulties that agencies may 
encounter.[Footnote 30] We testified that during 2001, U.S. trade 
agencies increased staff levels to address insufficient monitoring and 
enforcement of trade agreements. However, we noted that measuring the 
effectiveness of this strategy might be difficult because the agencies' 
workloads in other areas continue to grow, which could cause them to 
shift resources intended for trade compliance to other program 
areas.[Footnote 31] If shifts in resources occur, the agencies may not 
be able to improve the effectiveness of trade compliance efforts, even 
though the human capital strategy initially succeeded in acquiring 
additional resources.

OPM's Human Capital Assessment and Accountability Framework, developed 
in conjunction with OMB and GAO, presents consolidated guidance on 
standards for success and performance indicators that agencies can 
refer to as they transform their strategic human capital management 
programs. For example, it includes such strategic workforce planning 
indicators as whether agencies use best practices to determine 
workloads and resource needs and have documented strategies for 
workforce planning that define roles, responsibilities, and other 
requirements of the strategies.[Footnote 32] As we stated in January 
2003, the framework represents a promising step that can improve 
agencies' human capital systems.[Footnote 33] Agencies can use its 
indicators as a basis for developing, implementing, and evaluating 
their workforce planning processes. Generally, agencies will need more 
specific indicators to measure the success of their workforce plans. 
(See fig. 6 for information on SSA's evaluation of retirement-related 
workforce strategies.):

Figure 6: Illustration of Principles for Evaluating Contribution to 
Strategic Results: SSA's Evaluation of Retirement-Related Strategies:

SSA is using the results of several studies of retirement trends in 
the agency to focus its voluntary retirement program. As we discussed 
in our February 2000 testimony, SSA conducted a study that predicted 
staff retirements and attrition by year from 1999 through 2020, as 
well as by major job position and agency component.[A] Its study 
showed that two factors would converge by the end of the decade: an 
expected increase in demand for services as baby boomers reach 
retirement age and the imminent retirement of a large part of the 
agency’s workforce. For example, the study projected that nearly 70 
percent of managers would be eligible to retire by 2010, with the 
majority retiring during the peak years of 2007 through 2009. During 
these peak retirement years, SSA expected to lose about 3,000 
employees per year, which would be more than double the average 
retirement rate from the previous decade. SSA officials believed that 
if the retirement wave were left to run its course unabated, the 
agency would be faced with an institutional knowledge gap coupled with 
an increased demand to recruit and train new employees that would be 
difficult and expensive to meet. 

In order to have experienced employees in critical areas during the 
peak workload years, after the 1998 study SSA revised the eligibility 
requirements of its voluntary retirement program to focus on 
mitigating the effects of projected peak year retirements. In contrast 
with earlier versions of the program, which were targeted to employees 
in noncritical administrative and managerial positions, the redesigned 
early retirement program was expanded to include all employees who 
provide direct service to the public. However, SSA has generally 
excluded employees with substantial workloads and skills critical to 
achieving its mission, such as administrative law judges, from 
participating in the early retirement program. 

SSA officials evaluate the combined impact of the redesigned early 
retirement program and other factors during both their annual 
assessment and strategic planning cycles. At the end of each fiscal 
year, SSA measures the number of actual retirements, compares it to 
the previously projected number, and considers how these numbers 
affect the future retirement wave. SSA also updates its retirement 
wave study triannually.[B] Based on results from the annual and 
triannual studies, SSA determines possible strategies for managing the 
projected retirement wave, including again offering voluntary 
retirements. If it decides to offer additional voluntary retirements, 
SSA presents a business case to OPM demonstrating its need for early 
retirement authority. However, SSA officials have found that personal 
considerations, legislative changes in retirement systems, economic 
conditions, and other factors contribute to an employee’s decision to 
retire. Because of the variety and significance of these factors, SSA 
has concluded that it cannot clearly identify a cause-and-effect 
relationship between its retirement incentives and actual retirements. 

SSA’s efforts to monitor the number of employees who are retiring is 
part of a broader effort that the agency believes will help it 
transition its workforce to effectively deliver services to its 
current and future customers. We have not evaluated SSA’s 
implementation of its broader workforce transition effort. However, as 
we stated in our January 2003 report on SSA’s management challenges, 
SSA needs to consider decisions on early retirements and other 
strategies to build its workforce within the context of a concrete 
service delivery plan that provides details on how and when it will 
provide service in the future.[C]

[A] U.S. General Accounting Office, SSA Customer Service: Broad Service 
Delivery Plan Needed to Address Future Challenges, [Hyperlink, http://
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/T-HEHS/AIMD-00-75] GAO/T-HEHS/AIMD-00-
75 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 10, 2000).

[B] The most recent update, completed in 2000, shows that since the 
voluntary retirement program was refocused on addressing the expected 
retirement peak, SSA's projected number of retirements has decreased. 
About 37 percent of the workforce is projected to retire through 2010, 
compared with the 1998 projections that showed that about 42 percent 
would retire during the same period. Furthermore, 400 to 500 fewer 
employees will be retiring during the peak years of demand for SSA's 
services.

[C] U.S. General Accounting Office, Major Management Challenges and 
Program Risks: Social Security Administration, [Hyperlink, http://
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-117] GAO-03-117 (Washington, D.C.: 
Jan. 1, 2003).

[End of figure]

Concluding Observations:

There is an increasing awareness that federal agencies need to 
transform themselves into more efficient, results-oriented 
organizations if they are to meet the many fiscal, management, and 
policy challenges of the 21st century. To meet these challenges, 
federal managers will need to direct considerable time, energy, and 
targeted investments toward efforts that make the best use of the 
government's most important resource--the people that agencies employ 
now and in the future. They will also need effective strategic 
workforce planning to identify and focus these investments on the long-
term human capital issues that most affect their ability to attain 
mission results. The principles presented here can enhance the 
effectiveness of an agency's strategic workforce planning by helping 
the agency focus on the issues it needs to address, the information it 
needs to consider, and the lessons that it can learn from other 
organizations' experiences. By doing so, agencies can better ensure 
that their strategic workforce planning processes appropriately address 
the human capital challenges of the future and better contribute to the 
agencies' major efforts to meet their missions and goals.

Agency Comments:

We provided a draft of this report to the Secretary of Labor, the 
Executive Director of PBGC, the Director of NIH, the Administrator of 
GSA, and the Commissioner of SSA. Each of these organizations provided 
comments on the draft report and agreed with the information presented. 
DOL's Director of Workforce Planning and Diversity; PBGC's Chief Human 
Capital Officer; and GSA's Program Management Officer, Office of the 
Chief People Officer, also provided written technical comments to 
clarify specific points regarding the information presented. Where 
appropriate, we have made changes to reflect those technical comments. 
NIH and SSA officials did not provide technical comments.

In addition to technical comments, GSA noted that while the report 
presents a case study on workforce planning efforts of one region, GSA 
has used and continues to use a robust agencywide workforce planning 
process. We have clarified the report to recognize that our example is 
limited to the activities of one GSA region and does not address the 
agency's overall workforce planning efforts.

We are sending copies of this report to other interested congressional 
parties, the Director of OPM, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of 
Health and Human Services, the Commissioner of the Social Security 
Administration, the Director of the National Institutes of Health, and 
the Executive Director of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. In 
addition, we will make copies available to others upon request. The 
report will also be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] http://www.gao.gov.

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me or 
William Doherty on (202) 512-6806. Others who contributed to this 
report were Bob Lilly, Adam Hoffman, Andrew Edelson, and Candyce 
Mitchell.

Signed by: 

J. Christopher Mihm: 
Director, Strategic Issues:

List of Requesters:

The Honorable Susan M. Collins: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Committee on Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate:

The Honorable Daniel K. Akaka: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Financial Management, the Budget, and International 
Security: 
Committee on Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate:

The Honorable George Voinovich: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard J. Durbin: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the Federal 
Workforce, and the District of Columbia:  
Committee on Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate:

The Honorable Thad Cochran: 
United States Senate:


[End of section]

Appendixes:

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:

To identify strategic workforce planning principles and illustrative 
agency examples, we gathered and analyzed information from a variety of 
sources. We reviewed our own guidance, reports, and testimonies on 
federal agencies' workforce planning and human capital management 
efforts, and guidance available through the Internet and leading human 
capital periodicals, such as the Workforce Planning Resource Guide for 
Public Sector Human Resource Professionals issued by the International 
Personnel Management Association. We also met with officials from 
organizations with governmentwide responsibilities for or expertise in 
workforce planning, such as the Office of Personnel Management and the 
National Academy of Public Administration, to identify additional 
guidance available and to obtain their recommendations of federal 
agencies engaged in effective workforce planning. We synthesized 
information from these meetings, reports, and guidance documents and 
our own experiences in human capital management to (1) derive five 
principles that appeared most important to effective strategic 
workforce planning and (2) identify agencies we would contact for 
examples of workforce planning that illustrated these principles.

We then selected five examples of agencies' workforce planning 
activities (one example corresponding to each of the five workforce 
planning principles) to present in the report. We met with human 
capital and program officials and analyzed documents related to these 
examples to more fully understand the specific workforce planning 
issues associated with the examples and how the agencies addressed 
these issues.

We selected the examples that in our judgment collectively illustrated 
these principles across a diverse set of federal programs. Because our 
review objectives did not include evaluating the effectiveness of 
agencies' workforce planning processes, we did not evaluate these 
processes nor did we require the presence of evaluations or other 
evidence demonstrating planning effectiveness as a criterion for 
selecting examples. We did exclude from consideration, however, 
processes that agencies were just beginning or that were not complete 
enough for agencies to be willing to present them as successful 
planning efforts.

The fact that an agency is profiled to illustrate the principles of a 
particular planning step is not meant to imply complete success for 
addressing the matter or lack of success for addressing other aspects 
of workforce planning. Furthermore, the efforts in the examples do not 
represent all the potential ways that an agency can implement workforce 
planning or address the specific human capital issue being discussed.

We conducted our work in Washington, D.C., from March 2002 through 
October 2003, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards.

:

[End of section]

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Highlights of a GAO Roundtable: The Chief Operating Officer Concept: A 
Potential Strategy to Address Federal Governance Challenges. 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-192SP] GAO-03-
192SP. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2002.

Results-Oriented Cultures: Using Balanced Expectations to Manage Senior 
Executive Performance. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-02-966] GAO-02-966. Washington, D.C.: September 27, 2002.

Human Capital Flexibilities. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-02-1050R] GAO-02-1050R. Washington, D.C.: August 9, 2002.

Results-Oriented Cultures: Insights for U.S. Agencies from Other 
Countries' Performance Management Initiatives. [Hyperlink, http://
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-862] GAO-02-862. Washington, D.C.: 
August 2, 2002.

HUD Human Capital Management: Comprehensive Strategic Workforce 
Planning Needed. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-
839] GAO-02-839. Washington, D.C.: July 24, 2002.

NASA Management Challenges: Human Capital and Other Critical Areas Need 
to Be Addressed. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-
945T] GAO-02-945T. Washington, D.C.: July 18, 2002.

Managing for Results: Using Strategic Human Capital Management to Drive 
Transformational Change. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-02-940T] GAO-02-940T. Washington, D.C.: July 15, 2002.

Post-Hearing Questions Related to Federal Human Capital Issues. 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-719R] GAO-02-
719R. Washington, D.C.: May 10, 2002.

Human Capital: Major Human Capital Challenges at SEC and Key Trade 
Agencies. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-662T] 
GAO-02-662T. Washington, D.C.: April 23, 2002.

Managing for Results: Building on the Momentum for Strategic Human 
Capital Reform. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-
528T] GAO-02-528T. Washington, D.C.: March 18, 2002.

A Model of Strategic Human Capital Management. [Hyperlink, http://
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-373SP] GAO-02-373SP. Washington, 
D.C.: March 15, 2002.

Foreign Languages: Human Capital Approach Needed to Correct Staffing 
and Proficiency Shortfalls. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-02-375] GAO-02-375. Washington, D.C.: January 31, 2002.

Human Capital: Attracting and Retaining a High-Quality Information 
Technology Workforce. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-02-113T] GAO-02-113T. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2001.

Securities and Exchange Commission: Human Capital Challenges Require 
Management Attention. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-01-947] GAO-01-947. Washington, D.C.: September 17, 2001.

Human Capital: Practices That Empowered and Involved Employees. 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-1070] GAO-01-
1070. Washington, D.C.: September 14, 2001.

Human Capital: Building the Information Technology Workforce to Achieve 
Results. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-1007T] 
GAO-01-1007T. Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2001.

Human Capital: Implementing an Effective Workforce Strategy Would Help 
EPA to Achieve Its Strategic Goals. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-
bin/getrpt?GAO-01-812] GAO-01-812. Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2001.

Single-Family Housing: Better Strategic Human Capital Management Needed 
at HUD's Homeownership Centers. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-
bin/getrpt?GAO-01-590] GAO-01-590. Washington, D.C.: July 26, 2001.

Human Capital: Taking Steps to Meet Current and Emerging Human Capital 
Challenges. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-965T] 
GAO-01-965T. Washington, D.C.: July 17, 2001.

Office of Personnel Management: Status of Achieving Key Outcomes and 
Addressing Major Management Challenges. [Hyperlink, http://
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-884] GAO-01-884. Washington, D.C.: 
July 9, 2001.

Managing for Results: Human Capital Management Discussions in Fiscal 
Year 2001 Performance Plans. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/
getrpt?GAO-01-236] GAO-01-236. Washington, D.C.: April 24, 2001.

Human Capital: Major Human Capital Challenges at the Departments of 
Defense and State. [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-
01-565T] GAO-01-565T. Washington, D.C.: March 29, 2001.

Human Capital: Meeting the Governmentwide High-Risk Challenge. 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-357T] GAO-01-
357T. Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2001.

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:

FOOTNOTES

[1] Pub. L. No. 107-296, November 25, 2002.

[2] See Commercial Activities Panel, Improving the Sourcing Decisions 
of the Government (Washington, D.C.: April 2002), and National 
Commission on the Public Service, Urgent Business for America: 
Revitalizing the Federal Government for the 21st Century (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 7, 2003).

[3] U.S. General Accounting Office, High-Risk Series: An Update, GAO-
01-263 (Washington, D.C.: January 2001), and High-Risk Series: An 
Update, GAO-03-119 (Washington, D.C.: January 2003).

[4] See GAO-01-263 and U.S. General Accounting Office, Performance and 
Accountability Series - Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: 
A Governmentwide Perspective, GAO-01-241 (Washington, D.C.: January 
2001). In addition, see the accompanying 21 reports (numbered GAO-01-
242 through GAO-01-262) on specific agencies.

[5] In October 2002, OPM released a Human Capital Assessment and 
Accountability Framework that expands on and integrates previous 
guidance on workforce planning, such as the 1999 model, and other human 
capital elements of the President's Management Agenda.

[6] NAPA issued a 1999 report on federal workforce planning models and 
a 2000 report that provided guidance on implementing its version of a 
generic model. In 2002, IPMA published its version of a generic 
workforce planning model.

[7] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Results-Oriented Cultures: 
Implementation Steps to Assist Mergers and Organizational 
Transformations, GAO-03-669 (Washington, D.C.: July 2, 2003); 
Highlights of a GAO Forum: Mergers and Transformation: Lessons Learned 
for a Department of Homeland Security and Other Federal Agencies, GAO-
03-293SP (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 14, 2002); Human Capital: Effective 
Use of Flexibilities Can Assist Agencies in Managing Their Workforces, 
GAO-03-2 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 6, 2002); and Human Capital: Key 
Principles from Nine Private Sector Organizations, GAO/GGD-00-28 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 31, 2000).

[8] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: Insights for 
U.S. Agencies from Other Countries' Succession Planning and Management 
Initiatives, GAO-03-914 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 15, 2003).

[9] U.S. General Accounting Office, Container Security: Expansion of 
Key Customs Programs Will Require Greater Attention to Critical Success 
Factors, GAO-03-770 (Washington, D.C.: July 25, 2003).

[10] U.S. General Accounting Office, Securities and Exchange 
Commission: Preliminary Observations on SEC's Spending and Strategic 
Planning, GAO-03-969T (Washington, D.C.: July 23, 2003).

[11] U.S. General Accounting Office, Energy Markets: Concerted Actions 
Needed by FERC to Confront Challenges That Impede Effective Oversight, 
GAO-02-656 (Washington, D.C.: June 14, 2002).

[12] U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: Major Human Capital 
Challenges at SEC and Key Trade Agencies, GAO-02-662T (Washington, 
D.C.: Apr. 23, 2002).

[13] In August 2003, we reported that the Department of the Army had 
not taken adequate steps to ensure the reliability of projections made 
by its Civilian Forecasting System, which is a workforce planning model 
that the Department of Defense (DOD) and other agencies are considering 
adopting. The Department of the Army is taking actions that in effect 
implement our recommendation to better document the model's forecasting 
capabilities. See U.S. General Accounting Office, DOD Personnel: 
Documentation of the Army's Civilian Workforce-Planning Model Needed to 
Enhance Credibility, GAO-03-1046 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 22, 2003).

[14] U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: Agency Actions to 
Integrate Human Capital Approaches with Strategies for Accomplishing 
Organizational Missions, GAO-03-446 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 11, 2003).

[15] GAO-03-914.

[16] U.S. General Accounting Office, FBI Reorganization: Progress Made 
in Efforts to Transform, but Major Challenges Continue, GAO-03-797T 
(Washington, D.C.: June 18, 2003).

[17] Our March 2002 exposure draft identified these factors, plus 
strategic workforce planning, as cornerstones of an effective human 
capital program. See U.S. General Accounting Office, A Model of 
Strategic Human Capital Management, GAO-02-373SP (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 15, 2002).

[18] There are also individual-related factors that affect an 
employee's capability to contribute to an agency's goal. For example, 
an agency needs individuals who have, in addition to specific skills 
and competencies, the motivation necessary to capitalize on their 
inherent skills and the resiliency to positively respond to temporary 
setbacks that may arise in the course of their work.

[19] GAO-03-2.

[20] For an expanded list of human capital flexibilities available to 
federal agencies, see GAO-03-2 and U.S. Office of Personnel Management, 
Human Resources Flexibilities and Authorities in the Federal Government 
(Washington, D.C.: July 25, 2001).

[21] GAO-03-2.

[22] For guidance on possible education efforts, see U.S. General 
Accounting Office, Human Capital: A Guide for Assessing Strategic 
Training and Development Efforts in the Federal Government, GAO-03-893G 
(Washington, D.C.: July 1, 2003).

[23] U.S. General Accounting Office, Results-Oriented Cultures: Using 
Balanced Expectations to Mange Senior Executive Performance, GAO-02-966 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 27, 2002). See also, GAO-03-669 and U.S. 
General Accounting Office, Results-Oriented Cultures: Creating a Clear 
Linkage between Individual Performance and Organizational Success, GAO-
03-488 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 14, 2003).

[24] As with the other illustrative examples, the example addresses 
only one part of GSA's overall workforce planning efforts.

[25] The Homeland Security Act of 2002 requires that OPM design a set 
of systems that include appropriate metrics for assessing agencies' 
human capital management, including metrics for closing skill gaps in 
mission-critical occupations and aligning human capital strategies with 
the missions, goals, and organizational objectives of agencies.

[26] In creating and using performance measures, the number of measures 
for each strategy should be limited to the most vital. As our previous 
work evaluating the results of agencies' Government Performance and 
Results Act (GPRA) efforts has noted, those vital measures should cover 
the key performance dimensions that will enable an organization to 
assess the success of the human capital strategy. Organizations that 
seek to manage large numbers of performance measures may risk creating 
confusing excess data that will obscure rather than clarify 
performance.

[27] U.S. General Accounting Office, Results-Oriented Government: Using 
GPRA to Address 21st Century Challenges, GAO-03-1166T (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 18, 2003).

[28] GAO-03-893G.

[29] U.S. General Accounting Office, Performance and Accountability: 
Reported Agency Actions and Plans to Address 2001 Management Challenges 
and Program Risks, GAO-03-225 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 31, 2002).

[30] Our review focused on the human capital challenges facing the SEC, 
the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, and trade-related 
components of the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture.

[31] GAO-02-662T.

[32] For more information on OPM's Human Capital Assessment and 
Accountability Framework, visit http://apps.opm.gov/HumanCapital/tool/
purpose.cfm.

[33] U.S. General Accounting Office, Major Management Challenges and 
Program Risks: Office of Personnel Management, GAO-03-115 (Washington, 
D.C.: January 2003).

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