Results Washington
When Washington Governor Jay Inslee took office in 2013, the state was struggling with performance management. The state had a long history of improvement efforts, with much of that work occurring within agencies or divisions. Additionally, the existing Government Management and Accountability Program (GMAP) had rankled some leaders because it was mandatory and sometimes seen as punitive. One state official explained, “there was about a 50-50 like-hate for [GMAP].”
Consequently, when Inslee established Results Washington, a new performance management system, he and his staff focused on taking the best of past efforts and identifying goals that mattered most to Washingtonians. To that end, the governor’s team met with more than 50 state agency directors and dozens of stakeholder groups, including representatives of business, labor, the environment, education, health and public safety. It was critical to vet the goals with these partners, Results Washington Director Wendy Korthuis-Smith said, to make sure that “everyone was pulling on the rope in the same direction.” The result was more than 200 goals and indicators in five key areas: education, the economy, the environment, healthy and safe communities, and effective government.
The next step was to create a “goal council” for each of the five areas. Every council consisted of 12-15 state agency directors, and each had the power to bring in partners as needed. Goal council members were tasked with coming up with data-driven strategies to make progress on the their group’s overarching goal and the different objectives embedded within it. The councils meet monthly to assess progress, discuss strategies, and design collaborative solutions. Each month, the governor meets with a different goal council – plus invited partners, customers and stakeholders – to discuss progress. These “results review” meetings are open to the public and televised.
Results Washington officials simultaneously reached out to local leaders, a dialogue that helped them to realize quickly that they needed to demonstrate and disseminate results. Rich Roesler, Results Washington’s Engagement Manager, recalled one exchange in which a school superintendent said, “Until you show me some results…I’m just going to keep pressing the delete button when I get your emails.” Results Washington officials have therefore shared data, highlighted savings and service improvements, and documented results quantitatively and qualitatively.
To Korthuis-Smith, employing diverse metrics has been crucial to tracking progress on the organization’s big-picture objectives. “We could measure things that were really easy,” she explained, “but [the governor] said, ‘let’s go bold, let’s look at poverty, let’s look at graduation rates, let’s look at clean air. Let’s look at the things that Washingtonians care most about.’”
In less than two years, this approach is showing significant promise. Results Washington and its partners have demonstrated improvements in high school graduation rates, air quality, child vaccinations, youth smoking, worker safety, teen pregnancy rates, speed-related traffic deaths, and recidivism among juvenile offenders. Meanwhile, at dozens of state agencies, employee-driven changes have led to faster services, better outcomes, streamlined processes, easier-to-understand forms, cost-avoidance, more transparency, and higher customer satisfaction.
Results Washington has, as Korthuis-Smith explained, created “a sandbox” in which groups that had been operating in silos have come together to “innovate.”