Sammenlign metoder
Gjennomgå de valgte metodene side om side; rader som avviker, er uthevet.
| Balanced Scorecard for Public Sector× | Government Performance Dashboard× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fagfelt | Public Administration | Public Administration |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Opprinnelsesår≠ | 1992 | 2003 |
| Opphavsperson≠ | Robert S. Kaplan & David P. Norton | Robert D. Behn; CompStat / CitiStat tradition |
| Type≠ | Strategic performance management framework | Performance monitoring and management routine |
| Opprinnelig kilde≠ | Kaplan, R. S., & Norton, D. P. (1992). The Balanced Scorecard—Measures That Drive Performance. Harvard Business Review, 70(1), 71–79. link ↗ | Behn, R. D. (2003). Why Measure Performance? Different Purposes Require Different Measures. Public Administration Review, 63(5), 586–606. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Public Sector Balanced Scorecard, Government Balanced Scorecard, Public BSC, Strategy-Linked Scorecard | Public Performance Dashboard, Government Stat System, Performance Stat Dashboard, Agency Performance Dashboard |
| Relaterte | 4 | 4 |
| Sammendrag≠ | The Balanced Scorecard is a strategic management framework that translates an organisation's mission and strategy into a coherent set of performance measures spread across multiple perspectives, so that managers see the business from more than the financial angle alone. Introduced by Robert Kaplan and David Norton in their 1992 Harvard Business Review article and expanded in their 1996 book, it was conceived for firms but has been widely adapted to government and non-profit settings. In the public-sector adaptation the perspectives are reordered: the mission and the citizen or stakeholder outcome sit at the top, while financial resources become an enabling constraint rather than the ultimate goal. | A government performance dashboard is a visual, regularly updated display of an agency's key performance indicators against targets, designed to make results visible at a glance and to drive a disciplined cycle of review and action. The dashboard is rarely an end in itself: its power comes from the management routine around it — the CompStat and CitiStat 'stat' tradition of frequent, data-driven accountability meetings pioneered in New York policing and Baltimore city government. Robert Behn's work on why and how governments measure performance underpins the discipline, and national platforms such as the U.S. performance.gov institutionalise public dashboards of agency priority goals. |
| ScholarGateDatasett ↗ |
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