System Indicators Background Report

Prepared by the

System Indicators Team


Debra Giordano - Tompkins County, Captain

Alice Savino - Herkimer/Madison/Oneida

Butch Rehm - Saratoga/Warren/Washington

Danielle DeMatteis - Yonkers

David See - Niagara

Ed Kenny - Hempstead

Gail Breen - Fulton/Montgomery/Schoharie

Gene Faber - Oyster Bay

James Calnon - Clinton/Essex/Franklin/Hamilton

Joan Sinclair - Cattaraugus/Allegany

Judy Davison - Cayuga/Cortland

Karen Springmeier - Finger Lakes

Kevin Price - Chenango/Delaware/Otsego

Laura Quigley - Sullivan

Martin Delsignore - Jefferson/Lewis

Mary Alane Wiltse - Columbia/Greene

Pam Weisberg - Rockland


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

November 12, 2002


Table of Contents

Introduction.. 1

Meetings & Input Gathering.. 1

Defining System Indicators. 1

Market Penetration. 3

Return on Investment (ROI) 4

Total System Investment 6

Customer Satisfaction. 6

Business Customer Repeat Usage. 7

Establishing Operating Principles. 8

Development versus Performance. 8

System Focus. 9

Customers. 9

Data Collection. 10

Report Cards. 11

Continuous Improvement 13

System Integration. 13

Focus on Success. 13

Sharing Outcomes (Successes) 13

Attachments. 15

Attachment 1 - LWIB Retreat, July 16-17, 2002. 15

Attachment 2 - Local Partners’ Table Feedback on System Indicators. 19

Attachment 3 - SIT Subcommittee Meeting Agenda, August 16, 2002. 26

Attachment 4 - SIT Subcommittee Meeting Notes, August 16, 2002. 27

Attachment 5 - Comments Received via the Web-Board. 35



Introduction

The System Indicators Team (SIT) and SIT subcommittee met to: 1) establish operating principles for defining systems indicators; and 2) to define system indicators based on the principles.  This report presents background information on Meetings and Input Gathering, as well as the meeting discussion regarding Defining Systems Indicators and Establishing Operating Principles.

Meetings & Input Gathering

The following are SIT and Local Workforce Investment Board (LWIB) meetings and information gathering efforts:

Defining System Indicators

The following measures were identified through SIT and LWIB meetings and information gathering as potential system indicators:


1.      Market Penetration

2.      Market Share

3.      Market Diversity

4.      Jobseeker Entered Employment

5.      Employment Retention (30 days, 90 days, 6 months)

6.      Wage Levels, Gains & Replacement

7.      Job Order Fill rate

8.      Number of job openings in the local area and the area’s ability to fill the jobs

9.      Job order fill rate versus job opening fill rate

10.  Job placements

11.  Reduced Jobseeker Recidivism

12.  Job placements, identified by type and fill rate for job orders (should also be broken down in this area by general #'s as well as by employment type (sectors)

13.  Return on Investment (ROI)

14.  Total System Investment/Costs

15.  Cost per customer served

16.  Cost per entered employment

17.  Business Customer Satisfaction

18.  Jobseeker Customer Satisfaction

19.  Level of importance to customers

20.  Number and types of complaints, compliments and suggestions from customers and staff, as well as responses

21.  Staff capacity building sessions conducted in response to complaints, compliments and suggestions.

22.  Number of people trained

23.  Kinds of jobs filled/trained-for

24.  Cycle time

25.  GEDs obtained

26.  Customer Repeat Usage

27.  Customer Retention Rates

28.  Business Usage & Growth

29.  Jobseeker Usage & Growth

30.  Usage Growth Rate (last year versus this year)

31.  Repeat Business Usage

32.  Business Referrals

33.  Customer Referrals

34.  Public/Community benefit

35.  Reduction in public subsidy usage (e.g., SSI, Welfare roles

36.  Shorter Unemployment Insurance duration

37.  Reduced unemployment rates

38.  Expansion of Economic base

39.  System responsiveness

40.  Service continuum – other income supports

41.  Use of the workforce system

42.  Workforce Retention

43.  Brand identity, Product recognition, General Public and Legislative Opinions


The SIT Subcommittee identified five priority areas from this list, for further consideration as system indicators.  The priority areas are:

a.       Market Penetration

b.      Return on Investment (ROI)

c.       Total System Investment

d.      Customer Satisfaction

e.       Customer Repeat Usage

The following presents the SIT’s recommendations regarding each of these areas along with the underlying background discussion

Market Penetration

Recommendation

Market Penetration Rate – Business Customer            =            Business Customers

                        Total Number of Businesses

Market Penetration Rate – Jobseeker Customer            =            Jobseeker Customers

                        Local Civilian Labor Force

Discussion Points

A subset for Market Penetration:   # of Firms (numerator)

        # of Firms Hiring (denominator)

Return on Investment (ROI)

Recommendation

·         Do not develop a system indicator for Return on Investment (ROI), as the methodology and underlying assumptions for computing ROI are highly subjective.

·         Instead, focus on examining Total System Investment across the business and jobseeker customers.

Discussion Points

·         Calculating Return on Investment (ROI) of a public program requires placing a monetary value on both the cost of the program and the benefits derived from the program.  The methodology for computing these values is highly subjective, and gives rise to results that can vary considerably based on changes in the underlying assumptions about the costs and benefits attributable to system programs (e.g., reduced crime, reduced dependence on Family Assistance, Medicaid, Food Stamps, reduced UI duration, State tax revenues, economic multiplier effects attributable to employment income, etc.).

·         Most ROI studies tend to overstate the benefits relative to the costs.

·         On return on investment