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Successful Measures Met; Opportunities Exist for Further Enhancements' 
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Office of the Inspector General: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

August 2009: 

Four People Performance Measures: 

Many Attributes of Successful Measures Met; Opportunities Exist for 
Further Enhancements: 

GAO-OIG-9-3: 

GAO/OIG Highlights: 

Objectives: As part of the Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) 
commitment to periodically review the reliability and validity of GAO’s 
performance measures, OIG evaluated four of the agency’s people 
measures—staff development, staff utilization, leadership, and 
organizational climate. OIG based its evaluation largely on an 
assessment of whether these measures met nine specific attributes that 
earlier GAO work cited as key to successful performance measures. 

Findings: OIG’s evaluation showed that, for fiscal year 2007, GAO 
accurately calculated the four performance measures reviewed. Of the 
nine attributes of successful performance measures identified by 
previous GAO work, staff utilization and organizational climate met all 
of the attributes, and staff development and leadership met many of the 
attributes. All four measures’ scores are derived from GAO’s Employee 
Feedback Survey. 

For the staff development and leadership measures, OIG found that GAO 
had not fully disclosed in its annual performance report that (1) it 
calculates these scores by excluding survey respondents that answered “
no basis to judge/not applicable” (no basis/NA) and (2) the exclusion 
of these respondents has the effect of changing the two measures’ 
scores. A more complete interpretation of the scores would be possible 
with additional disclosures in the report’s tables. 

In addition, the score for the leadership measure was significantly 
affected by the large number of no basis/NA respondents for one of its 
10 questions. In fiscal year 2007, 45 percent of surveyed respondents 
answered no basis/NA to the question about supervisors’ effectiveness 
in handling equal employment opportunity (EEO) and discrimination 
issues. GAO officials stated this large number most likely reflects the 
relatively few formal discrimination cases and the safeguarding of 
private information related to these cases. GAO’s employee survey has 
recently added other questions on diversity that could provide more 
useful information and do not have large numbers of no basis/NA 
respondents. 

Further, although GAO’s leadership measure captures information about 
employees’ satisfaction with their immediate supervisors, it does not 
include the employees’ survey responses about satisfaction with the 
strategic leadership of GAO. As a result, the measure’s name differs 
from what is being measured. 

Finally, GAO was not timely in reporting changes made to its staff 
development measure that resulted in performance data no longer being 
comparable. In response to OIG’s work, GAO made this disclosure in its 
fiscal year 2008 annual performance report. However, the agency does 
not have written procedures that would help ensure the timely reporting 
of future changes to measures. 

Recommendations: OIG recommends that GAO take the following four 
actions: 

* Disclose in its annual performance report’s tables that the four 
measures’ scores are calculated by excluding no basis/NA respondents 
and that this approach, when the number of these respondents is large, 
has the effect of changing the scores for two measures. 

* Determine for the leadership measure whether the current EEO and 
discrimination question should be retained or replaced. 

* Consider (1) a more descriptive name for the leadership measure or 
(2) incorporating survey results about GAO’s strategic leadership. 

* Develop written procedures to ensure changes made to measures and any 
effects on performance data comparability are promptly reported. 

[End of section] 

GAO/OIG: 

Memorandum: 

Date: August 31, 2009: 

To: Acting Comptroller General – Gene L. Dodaro: 

From: [Signed by] Inspector General – Frances Garcia: 

Subject: Four People Performance Measures: Many Attributes of 
Successful Measures Met; Opportunities Exist for Further Enhancements: 

GAO relies on a talented, multidisciplinary workforce to deliver 
accurate, high-quality results and fulfill its mission of helping 
Congress improve the performance and ensure the accountability of the 
federal government. Salaries and benefits for this workforce represent 
a significant investment—almost 80 percent of GAO’s budget. In 
addition, recent retirements and changing demographics in the agency 
are creating a younger, less experienced workforce, as well as giving 
rise to knowledge and skill gaps at the middle management and senior 
levels. For such reasons, GAO continues to identify human capital as 
one of its most important management challenges and has committed to 
creating better and more comprehensive performance measures to improve 
its human capital management. 

Congress enacted the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 
(GPRA) to help resolve the long-standing management problems that 
undermined the federal government’s efficiency and effectiveness and to 
provide greater accountability for results.[Footnote 1] GPRA requires 
federal agencies to develop strategic plans with long-term, outcome-
oriented goals and objectives, annual goals linked to the long-term 
goals, and annual reports on the results achieved. As a legislative 
branch agency, GAO is not required to comply with GPRA, but generally 
does follow the intent of this law. GAO uses a strategic planning and 
management process based on strategic goals and objectives, as well as 
performance goals identified for the agency. One of its strategic goals—
maximizing the value of GAO by being a model federal agency and world-
class professional services organization—addresses human capital 
management. To monitor how well the agency is managing its human 
capital, GAO has developed eight “people measures” and, similar to 
executive branch agencies, reports their results as part of its annual 
Performance and Accountability Report. 

As part of our commitment to periodically review the reliability and 
validity of GAO’s performance measures, we evaluated four of the agency’
s people measures—staff development, staff utilization, leadership, and 
organizational climate.[Footnote 2] We based our evaluation largely on 
an assessment of whether these measures met nine specific attributes 
that earlier GAO work cited as key to successful performance measures. 
Table 1 is a summary of the nine attributes, including the potentially 
adverse consequences if they are not met. [Footnote 3] 

Table 1: Nine Key Attributes of Successful Performance Measures: 

Attribute: 1. Linkage; 
Definition: Measure is aligned with division and agencywide goals and 
mission and clearly communicated throughout the organization; 
Potentially adverse consequences of not meeting attribute: Behaviors 
and incentives created by measure do not support achieving division or 
agencywide goals or mission. 

Attribute: 2. Clarity; 
Definition: Measure is clearly stated and the name and definition are 
consistent with the methodology used to calculate it; Potentially 
adverse consequences of not meeting attribute: Data could be confusing 
and misleading to users. 

Attribute: 3. Measurable target; 
Definition: Measure has a numerical goal; Potentially adverse 
consequences of not meeting attribute: Cannot tell whether performance 
is meeting expectations. 

Attribute: 4. Objectivity; 
Definition: Measure is reasonably free from significant bias or 
manipulation; Potentially adverse consequences of not meeting 
attribute: Performance assessments may be systematically over- or 
understated. 

Attribute: 5. Reliability; 
Definition: Measure produces the same result under similar conditions; 
Reported performance data is inconsistent and adds uncertainty. 

Attribute: 6. Core program activities; Definition: Measures cover the 
activities that an entity is expected to perform to support the intent 
of the program; Potentially adverse consequences of not meeting 
attribute: Not enough information is available in core program areas to 
managers and stakeholders. 

Attribute: 7. Limited overlap; 
Definition: Measures should provide new information beyond that 
provided by other measures; Potentially adverse consequences of not 
meeting attribute: Manager may have to sort through redundant, costly 
information that does not add value. 

Attribute: 8. Balance; 
Definition: Balance exists when a suite of measures ensures an 
organization’s various priorities are covered; Potentially adverse 
consequences of not meeting attribute: Lack of balance could create 
skewed incentives when measures over-emphasize some goals. 

Attribute: 9. Governmentwide priorities; Definition: Each measure 
should cover a priority, such as quality, timeliness, and cost of 
service; Potentially adverse consequences of not meeting attribute: A 
program’s overall success is at risk if all priorities are not 
addressed. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

For our assessment, we reviewed prior GAO reports and guidance 
regarding government agencies’ performance measures and spoke with GAO 
experts and an external expert on developing performance measures and 
using performance information. We interviewed GAO staff to determine 
how they used performance information and to identify agency practices 
that may facilitate or hinder the use of these measures. We also 
reviewed relevant standard operating procedures and internal controls 
for developing and publicly reporting these measures. In addition, for 
the annual Employee Feedback Survey that provides data regarding staff 
satisfaction with these measures, we consulted with GAO survey design 
methodologists to understand how the survey was created and related 
issues of survey design. To assess the accuracy and method of 
calculation for data reported in GAO’s Performance and Accountability 
Report for fiscal year 2007,[Footnote 4] we analyzed survey data for 
questions pertaining to these four people measures. We conducted this 
performance audit from August 2008 to August 2009 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards. Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, 
appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence 
obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions 
based on our audit objectives. 

Results in Brief: 

Our evaluation showed that performance scores for the staff 
development, staff utilization, leadership, and organizational climate 
people measures were accurately calculated according to GAO’s 
established methodology and that these measures met many of the nine 
attributes of successful performance measures. For example, staff 
utilization and organizational climate met all nine attributes. In 
addition, all four measures met the linkage, measurable target, core 
program activities, limited overlap, balance, and governmentwide 
priority. All attributes are not equal and failure to have a particular 
attribute does not necessarily indicate that there is a weakness in 
that area or that the measure is not useful; rather, it indicates an 
opportunity for further refinement. 

Two measures—leadership and staff development—did not fully meet all of 
the attributes. Specifically: 

Clarity attribute. We found that the leadership measure does not fully 
meet this attribute because it provides information about employees’ 
opinions about their immediate supervisors and captures information on 
the agency’s top managers–who set agency’s policies, priorities, and 
goals–only in their role as supervisors. The clarity attribute requires 
a measure’s name and definition to be consistent with the methodology 
used to calculate it. GAO has several options to better meet this 
attribute. For example, the agency could adopt a more descriptive name 
reflecting that the measure is based on opinions about immediate 
supervisors. Another option would involve the agency revising its 
leadership measure to include employee survey results regarding GAO’s 
Executive Committee, team management leadership, or both. GAO’s Chief 
Human Capital Officer noted that it is common in both the public and 
private sectors to include information about senior leadership as part 
of a leadership measure. 

Objectivity attribute. Our evaluation also showed that the leadership 
and staff development measures could better meet this attribute with 
more disclosure about their performance scores in GAO’s annual 
performance reports. Greater disclosure would help assure that GAO is 
meeting the objectivity attribute requirement that performance 
assessments are not misinterpreted as over- or understated. Agency 
performance scores generally constitute the percentage of survey 
respondents that chose two favorable responses (such as strongly agree 
and generally agree) on a five-point scale. GAO has reported that it 
calculates these scores by excluding respondents that answered “no 
basis to judge/not applicable” (hereafter referred to as no basis/NA 
respondents) in its detailed description of these measures, but not in 
tables presenting the actual performance scores. GAO has made such 
disclosures in tables presenting performance scores in its own audit 
and evaluation reports.[Footnote 5] The disclosure in table notes is 
particularly important, for example, because GAO has used these tables 
to report on its performance in its annual testimonies before its 
appropriations subcommittees. In addition, GAO has not disclosed in its 
annual performance reports that its approach of excluding no basis/NA 
respondents has the effect of changing the leadership and staff 
development measures’ scores, by 6 percentage points and 13 percentage 
points, respectively. According to our technical advisers, such 
disclosure is needed to provide a complete interpretation of the scores 
and for transparency. This disclosure is important when questions 
constituting a measure have relatively large numbers of no basis/NA 
respondents. With smaller numbers of no basis/NA respondents, the 
effect on scores is negligible and the importance of disclosure is 
diminished. 

In addition, our work raises a concern about whether the leadership 
measure’s question about how effectively immediate supervisors deal 
with equal employment opportunity (EEO) and discrimination issues is 
providing useful information. This question has the largest number of 
no basis/NA respondents among the 21 questions constituting the four 
measures we reviewed. In addition, it is the primary reason for the 
change in the leadership performance score since almost half of this 
question’s respondents answered no basis/NA. According to GAO 
officials, the high number of no basis/NA respondents most likely 
reflects the relatively few formal discrimination cases and the steps 
taken to safeguard the private information related to these cases. GAO 
has recognized the need for better information to monitor its progress 
in creating an inclusive culture that values differences and 
consequently added three questions to its Employee Feedback Survey in 
2008. These questions compose the Support for Diversity index developed 
by the Partnership for Public Service. This index is part of their Best 
Places to Work in the Federal Government ranking, which is used to 
evaluate employee satisfaction across the federal government in 279 
agencies and subcomponents, such as inspector general offices. The 
agency’s top diversity officials and Chief Human Capital Officer said 
that they believe the new survey questions could provide more useful 
information to the leadership measures than the current EEO and 
discrimination question. 

Reliability attribute. We found that the staff development measure 
could better meet this attribute through more timely disclosures about 
changes made to the measure. GAO published two annual performance 
reports for fiscal years 2006 and 2007 without disclosing that it had 
changed this measure or describing limitations in the comparability of 
the measure’s 5-year trend data resulting from these changes. The 
reliability attribute, as defined by GAO, refers to a measure producing 
the same results under similar conditions. We are reporting not that 
the data are not reliable, but rather that the agency could better meet 
this attribute by more timely disclosure of changes to this measure. 
After we brought this matter to responsible officials’ attention, the 
fiscal year 2008 Performance and Accountability Report was revised to 
clarify the measure had been changed and that the 5-year trend data 
were not comparable. We identified that the agency does not have 
written procedures to ensure that changes to measures and any effects 
on comparability of performance data are disclosed in a timely manner. 
GAO’s guidance for evaluating agency’s performance reporting states 
that when standard operating procedures are not used, changes to 
measures that result in noncomparable data can occur.[Footnote 6] 

To improve GAO’s performance measures, this report recommends that GAO 

* consider adopting a more descriptive name, or revising the leadership 
measure to incorporate survey questions about team management, the 
Executive Committee, or both; 

* more fully disclose in tables in its annual performance report that 
the four measures’ scores are calculated by excluding no basis/NA 
respondents and that this approach, when the number of these 
respondents are relatively large, has the effect of changing the scores 
for two measures; 

* determine for leadership measure whether the current EEO and 
discrimination question should be retained or if one or more of the 
survey’s three diversity and inclusiveness questions would provide more 
useful information; and; 

* develop written procedures to ensure changes made to measures and any 
effects on the comparability of performance data are promptly reported. 

Background: 

In its audit and evaluation work, GAO has reported that effective 
performance measures can be a key tool in assessing how well an agency 
is managing its human capital.[Footnote 7] Effective measures can 
provide practical information that alerts managers to the existence of 
problems, helps managers take timely corrective action, and suggests 
effective problem-solving approaches. GAO has also reported that to 
fully realize the benefits of this tool, performance measures must be 
used by decision makers at all levels and that improving the usefulness 
of performance information and measures is a key practice in enhancing 
agency performance. In addition to its performance measures, GAO has 
other information to identify areas for improving its human capital 
management. For example, employee and management concerns about the 
agency’s performance appraisal system have been obtained through the 
Employee Advisory Committee, its annual customer satisfaction survey, 
International Federation of Professional and Technical Employee Union 
representatives, its recent African-American Performance Assessment 
Study,[Footnote 8] and regular management meetings. Based on this 
information, GAO is involved in a comprehensive review of its 
performance appraisal system. In addition to the staff development 
performance measure, GAO collects and analyzes direct participant 
feedback on the course materials and instructors for all classes taught 
through GAO’s Learning Center (internal training). 

One way that GAO measures how well it is doing and identifies areas for 
improvement is through an annual Employee Feedback Survey. This Web-
based survey is conducted by an outside contractor to ensure respondent 
confidentiality and is administered to our employees once a year. GAO 
developed the survey using a methodically rigorous approach that 
included extensive focus groups and pretests to decrease survey errors. 
The total survey consists of more than 100 questions and allows 
employees to indicate what they think about the agency’s overall 
operations, work environment, and organizational culture, as well as 
how they rate three levels of managers—their immediate supervisor, team 
or unit managers, and the Executive Committee—on key aspects of their 
leadership styles.[Footnote 9] 

From the Employee Feedback Survey, GAO uses the responses to 21 
questions to provide the data for the four people measures we evaluated 
(see attachment 1). GAO selected the subset of questions used for each 
measure based on senior management’s judgment about the questions’ 
relevance to the measure and specialists’ knowledge about the 
development of indexes. To establish scores for the measures, GAO uses 
the responses of staff expressing opinions on the five-point scale for 
each measure’s questions. The agency excludes the number of survey 
respondents who (1) leave the question blank or check “no answer” and 
(2) check “no basis to judge/not applicable.” For example, as shown in 
figure 1, the five-point scale generally consists of two favorable 
responses, one neutral response, and two unfavorable responses. To 
compute a score, GAO divides the total number of respondents who 
express a favorable response by the total number of respondents who 
expressed an opinion on the five-point scale.[Footnote 10] These scores 
are calculated agencywide and for each individual team or unit. 

Figure 1: Example of Response Options to GAO’s Employee Survey Staff 
Utilization Question: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

1. During the last 12 months (less if you came to GAO more recently), 
how often did each of the following occur? 

a. My job made good use of my skills and abilities: 
Always or almost 
Always: 
Most of the time: 
About 1/2 of the time: 
Some of the time: 
Never or almost never: 
No basis to judge/Not applicable: 
No answer: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

GAO Measures Met Many Attributes of Successful Performance Measures: 

Our evaluation showed that the staff development, staff utilization, 
leadership, and organizational climate people measures were accurately 
calculated according to GAO’s established methodology and that these 
measures met many of the nine attributes of successful performance 
measures. For example, as summarized in table 2, staff utilization and 
organizational climate met all nine attributes. 

Table 2: Inspector General Analysis of Attributes of Successful 
Performance Measures for Four GAO People Measures: 

Attribute: 1. Linkage; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 2. Clarity; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Empty]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 3. Measurable target; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 4. Objectivity; 
Measure: Staff development: [Empty]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Empty]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 5. Reliability; 
Measure: Staff development: [Empty]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 6. Core program activities; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 7. Limited overlap; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 8. Balance; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

Attribute: 9. Governmentwide priorities; 
Measure: Staff development: [Check]; 
Measure: Staff utilization: [Check]; 
Measure: Leadership: [Check]; 
Measure: Organizational climate: [Check]. 

[Check]: indicates measure met attribute. 

Source: IG analysis of GAO information. 

[End of table] 

Table 2 also shows that all four measures met the following attributes: 
linkage, measurable target, core program activities, limited overlap, 
balance, and governmentwide priority. 

* Linkage. We determined the measures met the linkage attribute because 
they align with GAO’s strategic goal of being a model federal agency 
and its objective of becoming a professional service employer of 
choice. Also at the team or unit level, we identified a clear linkage 
between the team’s scores on the four measures and efforts to improve 
their operations and the day-to-day activities of staff. Specifically, 
after reviewing their scores, managing directors used focus groups and 
other efforts to better understand their scores and take corrective 
actions. For example, to improve staff development scores, one team 
developed a separate survey to obtain more specific information on 
employee dissatisfaction with external training–the focus of one of the 
survey questions for this measure. Based on the results of this survey, 
the team made changes to better inform staff of external training 
opportunities. 

* Measurable target. GAO sets a quantifiable, numerical target for each 
measure. Performance data for each measure are reported as both a 
current year target and actual results. For example, for fiscal year 
2007, the target for staff development was a 75 percent favorable 
response rate and the actual result was 76 percent. Quantifiable 
measures make it easier for managers to compare actual results to 
expected performance. 

* Core program activities. The measures generally cover the activities 
needed to provide managers with useful information and the survey 
questions constituting the measures can be considered significant core 
activities, given GAO’s mission. 

* Limited overlap. Our work found that each measure provides distinct 
information beyond that given by other measures. Specifically, a 
selected number of employee satisfaction survey questions are used to 
develop each measure. Questions for one measure do not overlap with 
questions from another measure. 

* Balance. We found that the four measures are part of a balanced suite 
of performance measures. In addition to the four people measures we 
reviewed, GAO has measures to assess the benefits resulting from its 
work, client satisfaction (i.e., Congress), and the effectiveness of 
internal administration services. 

* Governmentwide priority. These four measures focus on GAO’s human 
capital management challenge, which is also a governmentwide concern: 
ensuring the federal government has a highly skilled and knowledgeable 
workforce for the 21st century. 

Leadership Measure Could Better Meet the Clarity Attribute: 

We determined that the leadership measure does not fully meet the 
clarity attribute because the measure does not capture information 
about the strategic leadership of GAO. As defined by GAO, a successful 
performance measure has clarity when its name and definition are 
consistent with the methodology used to calculate it. In designing its 
Employee Feedback Survey, the agency recognized that leadership 
encompasses three different management levels—immediate supervisor, 
team management, and the Executive Committee. Currently, the leadership 
measure is based on survey responses to questions about immediate 
supervisors and not the strategic leadership that sets agency policies, 
priorities, and goals. The measure does capture information about 
Executive Committee and team managers but only in their role as 
immediate supervisors. Most immediate supervisors are not in these two 
management levels. 

Similarly, in evaluating employee satisfaction across federal agencies, 
the Partnership for Public Service in its Best Places to Work in the 
Federal Government also recognizes different levels of leadership, in 
particular senior leaders and supervisors. In conjunction with American 
University’s Institute for the Study of Public Policy Implementation, 
the partnership uses data from the Office of Personnel Management’s 
Federal Human Capital Survey[Footnote 11] to produce detailed rankings 
of employee satisfaction for best places to work and 10 workplace 
environment (“best in class”) categories such as effective leadership. 
The rankings are designed to inform a broad audience of job seekers, 
researchers, federal employees, and government leaders. In its 2009 
rankings, the Partnership for Public Service also assessed which 
factors shape employees’ views of their leadership and found that, 
while conventional wisdom holds that the greatest influence on 
employee’s satisfaction is their immediate supervisor, it is actually the 
quality of an agency’s senior leadership that has the greatest bearing 
on employees’ job satisfaction. In addition, GAO’s Chief Human Capital 
Officer stated including senior leadership as part of a leadership 
performance measure is a common public and private sector practice. 

To better meet the clarity attribute, the agency has several options. 
It could adopt a more descriptive name that reflects the measure is 
based on opinions about immediate supervisors. For example, the 
Partnership for Public Service has two indices, Effective Leadership–
Senior Leaders and Effective Leadership–Supervisors Another option 
would be to revise the measure to include employee survey results 
regarding GAO’s Executive Committee, team management leadership, or 
both. To make such revisions, GAO would need to consider that all 10 
survey questions constituting this measure are asked of both immediate 
supervisors and team management, while only 7 of these 10 questions are 
currently asked about the Executive Committee. Three of the 10 
questions were dropped because they had large percentages of staff 
responding that they had no basis to judge for these questions. The 
dropped questions asked whether the Executive Committee (1) gave the 
employee the opportunity to do what he/she does best, (2) made 
decisions in a timely manner, and (3) dealt effectively with EEO and 
discrimination issues. 

Additional Disclosure Would Help Two Measures Better Meet the 
Objectivity Attribute: 

Our work showed that the staff development and leadership measures 
could better meet the objectivity attribute with more disclosure that 
would allow a more complete interpretation of these performance scores. 
Specifically, the agency could be more transparent in reporting that 
these scores are based only on survey respondents who answered the 5-
point scale and that this choice of not including no basis/NA 
respondents has the effect of changing the scores by 6 percentage 
points or more. In addition, our work showed that management attention 
is needed to determine if the leadership measure’s EEO and 
discrimination question is providing useful information. 

More Disclosure Is Needed to Interpret Performance Scores for Two 
Measures: 

For transparency and a complete interpretation of scores, GAO survey 
design methodologists and an external performance measurement expert 
who provided us technical advice told us that, at a minimum, the agency 
should disclose any significant effects associated with its approach 
for calculating performance scores. Because scores can be calculated 
either by consistently including or excluding no basis/NA respondents, 
our advisers said the approach taken and any related effects should be 
disclosed. For example, as the number of no basis/NA respondents 
increase the two approaches can result in different scores. In its 
annual performance reports GAO has publicly disclosed that it excludes 
no basis/NA respondents when calculating performance scores in the 
report’s detailed description of these measures, but not in the report’
s tables presenting the performance scores. At the same time, the 
agency has not disclosed anywhere in its annual performance reports 
that its approach of excluding no basis/NA respondents has the effect 
of changing the scores for these two measures. If the number of no 
basis/NA respondents is relatively large, disclosing such information 
in table notes is important so that the tables if removed and used in 
other publications provide complete information. For example, GAO used 
these tables to report on its performance in its annual testimonies 
before its appropriations subcommittees. By making such disclosures, 
greater transparency and a more complete interpretation of scores would 
be possible. 

The agency’s approach of not including no basis/NA respondents has the 
effect of changing performance scores for the staff development and 
leadership measures by 13 percentage points and 6 percentage points, 
respectively.To illustrate how these scores may be misinterpreted, for 
fiscal year 2007, GAO reported a satisfaction score of 76 percent for 
the staff development measure, which could be misinterpreted as 76 
percent of all surveyed employees were satisfied. Instead, the score 
reflects (1) 63 percent of respondents to the measures’ questions 
answered they were satisfied on the 5-point scale and (2) the number of 
no basis/NA respondents for the measure’s three questions (12 percent 
for two questions and 28 percent for a third). For fiscal year 2008, 
the percentage of no basis/NA respondents for these questions remained 
the same or increased by about 2 percentage points. 

Similarly, for the leadership measure in fiscal year 2007, GAO reported 
a satisfaction score of 79 percent. This score reflects that 73 percent 
of surveyed employees who answered on the 5-point scale were satisfied. 
The difference in the percentages is primarily caused by excluding 45 
percent of respondents who answered no basis/NA to one of the measure’s 
10 questions, which is about EEO and discrimination issues.[Footnote 
12] For fiscal year 2008, the percentage of no basis/NA respondents for 
this question increased to 49 percent. 

Leadership Measure’s EEO and Discrimination Question Warrants Further 
Management Attention: 

Our work raises a concern about whether the leadership measure’s EEO 
and discrimination question is obtaining useful employee feedback and 
should be retained as part of the measure. This question’s narrow focus 
on EEO legal issues is responsible for almost half of the respondents 
answering no basis/NA, according to agency officials. They explained 
that since GAO has so few formal discrimination cases and takes steps 
to keep information related to these cases confidential, many employees 
do not have direct knowledge about how supervisors and/or managers deal 
with such issues. 

While we could not find any guidance that specifically addressed 
acceptable no basis/NA response rates for survey data that are used to 
establish performance scores, we did identify GAO guidance that 
response rates of at least 70 percent are acceptable when individual 
questions (survey items) are expected to be key to a report message. 
[Footnote 13] While no basis/NA respondents are not item 
nonrespondents, GAO survey design methodologists we consulted said GAO’
s guidance for item nonresponse could reasonably serve as criteria for 
no basis/NA respondents. As a result, we believe GAO management should 
reconsider whether the EEO and discrimination question should continue 
to be used in its leadership measure since almost half of the 
respondents answered no basis/NA—which falls well below the 70 percent 
response rate. In addition, removing this question from the leadership 
measure would reduce (1) the impact on the performance score caused by 
excluding no basis/NA respondents in its calculations and (2) the 
likelihood for misinterpretation of this score. 

One alternative would be to substitute one or more of the recently 
added diversity and inclusiveness questions for the question on EEO and 
discrimination issues. Recognizing the need for additional information 
on diversity and inclusiveness, GAO in 2008 added the three questions 
to its Employee Feedback Survey that constitute the Support for 
Diversity index developed by the Partnership for Public Service as part 
of its Best Places to Work in the Federal Government ranking. The 
questions are: 

* Supervisors/team leaders in my work unit are committed to a workforce 
representative of all segments of society. 

* Policies and programs promote diversity in the workplace (for 
example, recruiting minorities and women, training in awareness of 
diversity issues, mentoring). 

* Managers/supervisors/team leaders work well with employees of 
different backgrounds. 

According to knowledgeable staff, these questions were selected to 
enable GAO to benchmark its results with federal governmentwide survey 
data and address a recommendation from the African-American Performance 
Assessment Study. The recommendation suggested that the agency use the 
Employee Feedback Survey to monitor the extent to which employees 
believe GAO has an inclusive culture that values differences. 

These new questions may provide more useful information than the 
current question and more staff should be able to respond. GAO’s 
Special Assistant to the Comptroller General for Diversity and the 
Acting Managing Director of GAO’s Office of Opportunity and 
Inclusiveness stated the new questions should offer more useful data 
since they directly address how supervisors and other managers support 
creating an inclusive and diverse culture and most staff should have 
direct knowledge and experiences that will enable them to provide an 
answer. For example, in the fiscal year 2008 survey between 10 percent 
and 16 percent of respondents answered “do not know” in response to the 
new questions while 49 percent of respondents answered no basis/NA to 
the EEO and discrimination question. In addition, GAO’s Chief Human 
Capital Officer also thought the new questions would provide more 
useful information than the current EEO question. 

Written Procedures Would Help Ensure Full and Timely Disclosure about 
Changes to Performance Measures: 

After making changes to its staff development measure in fiscal year 
2006, GAO published two annual performance reports that did not 
disclose that this measure had changed. GAO’s detailed description of 
the measure did describe the revised questions and responses but not 
that they had changed from the prior year. The agency also did not 
disclose limitations in the comparability of the measure’s 5-year trend 
data resulting from these changes. As a result, there was no way to 
discern that the measure had been changed. In October 2008, after we 
notified GAO management of this issue, the agency reported changing 
this performance measure in its fiscal year 2008 Performance and 
Accountability Report[Footnote 14] and disclosed that the staff 
development performance data for fiscal years 2004 and 2005 are not 
comparable with the data for fiscal years 2006 to 2008. 

In fiscal year 2006, GAO made two changes to the staff development 
measure. Originally, the measure was composed of responses to four 
questions about internal training, computer-based training, external 
training, and on-the-job training. The first change, as shown in table 
3, was to revise the responses to the internal training question from 
two to three favorable responses.[Footnote 15] According to agency 
officials, GAO’s Chief Learning Officer proposed this change because 
she believed the revision would better capture staff satisfaction with 
internal training, which was undergoing significant changes. The second 
change was to drop the computer-based training question because this 
training was a significant part of (and therefore included in) the 
measure’s other questions. 

Table 3: Changes in Staff Development—Internal Training Question’s Five-
Point Response Scale: 

Original response scale: 

Very positive impact [highlighted]: 
Generally positive impact [highlighted]: 
Neither positive nor negative impact: 
Generally negative impact: 
Very negative impact: 

Revised response scale: 

Very greatly useful and relevant [highlighted]: 
Greatly useful and relevant [highlighted]: 
Moderately useful and relevant [highlighted]: 
Somewhat useful and relevant: 
Little or not useful and relevant: 

Source: IG analysis of GAO information. 

Note: Favorable responses are highlighted. 

[End of table] 

One cause for the delayed disclosures may be that the agency’s Office 
of Quality and Continuous Improvement does not have written procedures 
to ensure changes to performance measures and their effects to data 
comparability are disclosed in a timely manner. GAO’s guidance for 
evaluating agency’s performance reporting states that when standard 
operating procedures are not used, changes to measures can occur that 
result in noncomparable data.[Footnote 16] Further, GAO’s Standards for 
Internal Control in the Federal Government states that management is 
responsible for developing detailed procedures to ensure that they 
become an integral part of the agency’s operations. The standards also 
state that such internal controls should be clearly documented, and the 
documentation should be readily available for examination.[Footnote 17] 

Conclusions: 

GAO has taken significant steps in developing effective human capital 
performance measures and monitoring its human capital management 
activities, such as developing and implementing an annual Employee 
Feedback Survey. Consequently, two of the four measures met all of the 
agency’s attributes for successful performance measures, and two other 
measures met most attributes. We believe that adding greater clarity 
and transparency to the leadership and staff development measures and 
improving the processes for making changes to GAO’s performance 
measures would help avoid misinterpretations of data and further 
strengthen these measures’ usefulness. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To improve the performance measures GAO uses to address its human 
capital management challenge and the processes for developing these 
measures, we recommend that the Acting Comptroller General take the 
following four actions: 

* To help the leadership measure fully meet the clarity attribute, 
adopt a more descriptive name that better aligns with its focus on 
immediate supervisors or incorporate into the measure, additional 
employee survey questions about team management, the Executive 
Committee leadership, or both. 

* To help the staff development and leadership performance measures 
fully meet the objectivity attribute,
- disclose in tables presenting performance scores that the four 
measures’ scores are calculated by excluding no basis/NA respondents 
and that this approach, when the number of these respondents are 
relatively large, has the effect of changing the scores for two 
measures, and; 
- determine for leadership measure whether the current EEO and 
discrimination question should be retained or if one or more of the 
survey’s three diversity and inclusiveness questions would provide more 
useful information to gauge the agency’s progress in creating a more 
diverse work environment. 

* To help ensure the reliability attribute is fully met when 
performance measures are changed, direct the Managing Director, Office 
of Quality and Continuous Improvement, to develop written procedures to 
ensure that such changes and any effects on comparability of 
performance data are fully disclosed in a timely manner. 

Agency Comments: 

The Inspector General provided GAO with a draft of this report for 
review and comment. GAO generally agreed with our recommendations. The 
agency also provided technical comments that we incorporated, as 
appropriate. GAO’s written comments are reproduced in attachment 2. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-5748 or garciaf@gao.gov. OIG staff who made 
significant contributions to this report are Cathy Helm (Deputy 
Inspector General), Gwendolyn Jaffe, and Kurt Kershow. 

Attachments - 3: 

[End of section] 

Attachment I: Four People Performance Measures That GAO Uses to Assess 
Its Human Capital Management: 

Following are the four people performance measures—organizational 
climate, staff development, staff utilization, and leadership—that GAO 
uses to assess its human capital management. Each measure includes 
selected questions and possible responses taken from GAO’s Employee 
Feedback Survey. 

1. Organizational Climate: 

Thinking back over the last 12 months, how strongly do you agree or 
disagree with each of the following statements? 

1. A spirit of cooperation and teamwork exists in my work unit. 
2. I am treated fairly and with respect in my work unit. 
3. My morale is good.
4. Sufficient effort is made in my work unit to get the opinions and 
thinking of people who work here. 
5. Overall, I am satisfied with my job at GAO. 

2. Staff Development: 

How much positive or negative impact did the following developmental 
activities have on your ability to do your job during the last 12 
months? 

1. External training/conferences.
2. On-the-job training that I received. 
3. Internal (Learning Center) training courses. 

3. Staff Utilization: 

During the last 12 months, how often did each of the following occur? 

1. My job made good use of my skills and abilities. 
2. GAO provided me with opportunities to do challenging work. 
3. In general, I was utilized effectively. 

4. Leadership: 

In your opinion, how often was each of the following behaviors or 
attributes exhibited by your immediate supervisor during the last 12 
months? 

1. Gave me the opportunity to do what I do best. 
2. Treated me fairly.
3. Acted with honesty and integrity toward me. 
4. Ensured that there was a clear link between my performance and 
recognition of it. 
5. Gave me the sense that my work is valued. 
6. Provided me meaningful incentives for high performance. 
7. Made decisions in a timely manner. 
8. Demonstrated GAO’s core values of accountability, integrity, and 
reliability. 
9. Implemented change effectively.
10. Dealt effectively with equal employment opportunity and 
discrimination issues (e.g., ensures zero tolerance for 
discrimination). 

[End of section] 

Attachment II: Comments from the Office of the Comptroller General of 
the United States: 

GAO: 
Memorandum: 

Date: August 25, 2009: 

To: Inspector General - Frances Garcia: 

From: [Signed by] Gene L. Dodaro - Acting Comptroller General: 

Subject:Response to GAO Inspector General's Draft Report: Four GAO 
People Performance Measures: Attributes of Successful Measures Met, 
Opportunities Exist for Further Enhancements: 

Thank you for your draft report assessing GAO's people measures. We 
have made it a priority to enhance our human capital management 
practices and these measures help us to track our progress. We 
appreciate your recommendations and will consider how best to address 
them as we continue to improve our measurements going forward. 

While we intend to address these recommendations, we want to reiterate 
that GAO established its methodology for these measures based on the 
expert advice of the methodologists in our Applied Research and Methods 
team, which houses our experts on methodological approaches and 
analysis that help the agency address congressional requests. ARM also 
regularly solicits input from external survey experts to improve GAO's 
survey practices. GAO methodologists believed the measures, as 
constructed, are consistent with conventional survey practice and 
appropriate. They also believed the decision to exclude no basis/not 
applicable responses was a reasonable one, consistent with conventional 
survey practice and that it would provide a better measure because it 
represents only those employees who have an opinion on the questions. 
Nonetheless, in addressing your recommendations we will consider how 
best to report the results and, accordingly, will adapt our targets as 
appropriate. 

We will keep you informed of our progress in addressing your 
recommendations. 

cc: 
Sallyanne Harper, Chief Administrative Officer: Daniel I. Gordon, 
Acting General Counsel: 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Government Performance: Lessons Learned for the Next Administration on 
Using Performance Information to Improve Results. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1026T]. Washington, D.C.: July 24, 
2008. 

Managing for Results: Enhancing Agency Use of Performance Information 
for Management Decision Making. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-927]. Washington, D.C.: September 9, 
2005. 

Results-Oriented Government: GPRA Has Established a Solid Foundation 
for Achieving Greater Results. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-38]. Washington, D.C.: March 10, 
2004. 

Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax Filing Season 
Performance Measures. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-
143]. Washington, D.C.: November 22, 2002. 

The Results Act: An Evaluator’s Guide to Assessing Agency Annual 
Performance Plans. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-
10.1.20]. Washington, D.C.: April 1998. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GPRA, Pub. L. No. 103-62. 

[2] We reported the results of our evaluation of GAO’s other four 
people measures in our August 5, 2008, report, Fiscal Year 2007 New 
Hire, Acceptance, and Retention Rates Performance Measures Need 
Improvement and Alternative Measures Should be Considered. 

[3] GAO, Tax Administration: IRS Needs to Further Refine Its Tax Filing 
Season Performance Measures, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-143] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 22, 
2002). 

[4] GAO, Performance and Accountability Report: Fiscal Year 2007, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1SP] (Washington, D.C.: 
Nov. 15, 2007). 

[5] GAO, Government Performance: Lessons Learned for the Next 
Administration on Using Performance Information to Improve Results, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1026T] (Washington, 
D.C.: July 24, 2008); and Results-Oriented Government: GPRA Has 
Established a Solid Foundation for Achieving Greater Results, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-38] (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 10, 2004). 

[6] GAO, The Results Act: An Evaluator’s Guide to Assessing Agency 
Annual Performance Plans, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-10.1.20] (Washington, D.C.: April 
1998). 

[7] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1026T]. 

[8] Ivy Planning Group, African American Performance Assessment Study 
(Rockville, Md., April 2008). 

[9] GAO’s Executive Committee is currently composed of the Acting 
Comptroller General, Chief Administrative Officer/Chief Financial 
Officer, and Acting General Counsel. 

[10] GAO characterizes favorable responses to survey questions in four 
ways (1) “strongly agree” or “generally agree”; (2)“very positive 
impact” or “generally positive impact”; (3) “always or almost always” 
or “most of the time”; and (4)“very greatly useful and relevant,” “
greatly useful and relevant,” or “moderately useful and relevant.” 

[11] [hyperlink, http://www.fhcs.opm.gov]. 

[12] The difference is also due to the percentage of no basis/NA 
respondents—7 percent to 10 percent—for 3 other questions that are part 
of this measure. 

[13] GAO, Calculating and Reporting Response Rates and Addressing 
Nonresponse Issues (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 10, 2003). 

[14] GAO, Performance and Accountability Report: Fiscal Year 2008, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-1SP] (Washington, D.C.: 
Nov. 15, 2008). 

[15] GAO’s other 20 people measure survey questions have two favorable 
responses. 

[16] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-10.1.20]. 

[17] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] 
(Washington, D.C.: November 1999). 

[End of section] 

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of the following. (You may do so anonymously.) 

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