Articles archive
Does Management Development
Add Value?
Author: Keith Patching, Cranfield School of Management
First published: 1999
Both here in the UK and elsewhere, organisations
are becoming more anxious to measure the value of executive development.
It seems that the halcyon days of executive education for its own
sake have passed, and those of us in the business of providing
development
are being called to task. The message is, 'Prove your worth, or
we'll find another way.'
It seems perfectly reasonable to move beyond the simplistic
approach to measurement of value: a sign above the desk which says,
'If you think education is expensive, try ignorance,' no longer
constitutes 'proof. There is, in consequence, a growing body of
research into ways of testing the hypothesis that executive development
does add value.
One of the key considerations in measuring the value
of executive development is to recognise that development is not
education. By education we refer to the more or less speculative
investment in the dissemination of new knowledge in the hope that
it will come in useful some time in the future. It still has a role,
but measuring its value is very difficult.
By executive development we refer to a much more focused
set of learning activities which address issues facing individuals
and organisations. This enables us to work with executives to define
the specific outcomes the development activity is designed to help
achieve.

Measuring ROI
Amongst the most visible of these ways is the return
on investment approach, best exemplified in the work of Jack Phillips
(Phillips 1997). This approach demonstrates how to put a firm financial
figure on the benefit of training and performance improvement programmes.
It is a thorough and rigorous approach which has a great deal to
commend it.
For one thing, it cites numbers of programmes which
have been subjected to this kind of analysis, and which have delivered
returns on investment as high as 1,031 per cent and 741 per cent
(op.cit.:187,195). For another, it attempts to address most of the
caveats which, over the years, have been raised about the difficulties
of measuring things like the monetary value of improved morale,
and lower staff turnover.
Many organisations have adopted the ROI approach,
and are demanding of their providers of education and development
that they apply these kinds of measures of worth to their activities.
For some of these organisations, the debate is over. It's ROI or
nothing.
One reason why others shy away from this kind of evaluation
is that it can also produce gloomy results. In a series of studies
cited by Goleman a large proportion of programmes 'were found to
be utterly worthless' (Goleman, 1998: 247). For those that promised
some kind of financial pay back, some estimates suggested that the
payback period would be up to seven years.
One problem with these kinds of financially based
measures is that the formulae contain a number of elements which
are based upon estimates of the value of both costs and benefits.
Given the ease with which statistics can be manipulated, it is not
surprising that the same kinds of programmes can be seen to produce
staggeringly high returns, while others seem to deliver no value
at all.
Part of the problem is that there is no universally
accepted way of gathering review data. The many methods include:
- end of programme evaluations (happy sheets);
- productivity measures;
- staff and customer satisfaction surveys;
- post-programme questionnaires;
- one to one interviews;
- 360º appraisals;
- focus groups;
- follow up workshops;
- critical incident recording analysis;
- personal strategy implementation plans;
- cultural audits/comparative snapshots.
This is not an exhaustive list. But it does illustrate
that, given the wide range of choice, comparing like with like is
difficult. It also raises the question of which methods will be
best suited to the task. Such choices provide freedom to tailor
evaluation to specific needs, but they make any attempt at a 'science'
of evaluation the more tenuous.
Methodological issues
However rigorous we may want our evaluations to be,
we do need to take into account that we face a number of methodological
issues which will challenge that rigour. The choices of data-gathering
methods are just the tip of the iceberg. Evaluating interventions
is a complex social scientific activity (Chen, 1990).
One of the most significant issues lies in the fact
that there are likely to be multiple stakeholders involved in any
executive development activity. Although the 'bottom line' (the
goal of the ROI approach) should be of interest to most of these
stakeholder groups, there may be other factors of greater or more
immediate interest. Some stakeholders may be comfortable with a
pay back period of several years, if they believe that they are
laying the foundations for a change of culture. Others may be content
to take a loss over the short term for the sake of developing knowledge,
skills and attitudes which will enable the organisation to be ahead
of the game as markets change.
There is also the perennial problem of potential bias
in the methods. of data collection. Deciding what to focus on, what
questions to ask, how to .ask those questions, who to involve in
both the gathering of data and the provision of answers, and so
on, are non-trivial issues which can influence results enormously.
One also needs to be clear about the mood and motivations of those
providing data. If questionnaires are used, for example, researchers
need to take it on more. than simple trust that respondents will
answer truthfully. Why should they? What's in it for them?
There is also the problem of 'unintended consequences'.
The more rigorously a research instrument is designed to weed out
'noise' and achieve comparative data, the more it becomes blind
to what may be highly significant outcomes which fall outside the
scope of the investigation. But if the research is totally unstructured,
it is unlikely to produce data which can be useful to any 'rigorous'
ROI analysis.
Finding the link
Not all writers are convinced of the efficacy of the
search for ROI. Citing a number of studies of links between a range
of HR investments and business financial results, Ulrich says, 'The
questions of why this relationship exists and how it operates. "remain
unanswered. Unless and until the path of intermediate steps linking
these two factors can be traced, such research may be more academic
than useful' (Ulrich 1998: 5).
Knowing whether a programme has delivered a
good return on investment is one thing. Understanding why one
programme appears to deliver results while another does not is a
more daunting challenge.
Lying at the heart of many pseudo-scientific methods
of measuring the value of executive development is an unspoken assumption,
which can be illustrated like this:

The unspoken assumption is that the 'raw materials'
of the education process do not affect the process itself. But
executive
development is not something which is done to executives; it is
an activity in which executives are intimately involved. Evaluating
executive development demands a much stronger focus on the process
itself. Otherwise the risk is to play the 'post hoc ergo propter
hoc' game. This is trial and error rather than effective learning
design based upon good learning theory.
Truly understanding value depends upon the underpinning
(often unspoken) theory of learning. The 'educational black box'
is underpinned by an unconscious model of passivity on the part
of the learner:
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Far better is to explore the learning process itself
and accept that learning is more than simply the transfer of knowledge.
It involves at least four distinct stages:
This model, which is explored in depth in Management
and Organisation Development (Patching, 1999: 293-308), takes
a learner-centred approach to executive development. Used for both
learning design and evaluation, it recognises that learning and
development involve different aspects of the personality, and produces
different kinds of outcome.
Effective learning involves:
- the acquisition of new knowledge (what to do);
- intellectual understanding of the underlying processes
of the topic (why do it like this);
- alignment with personal values (a commitment to
doing things differently);
- the capability to make it happen (breaking old
habits).
Executive development programmes can be very good
in some of these areas, but poor in others. And this is as much
a function of the personalities, histories, current pressures, expectations
and motivations of learners as it is of the 'programme' itself.
In other words, what (if anything) needs to be measured is not an
independent 'thing' (an executive development programme), but a
series of interactions, each of which will vary widely according
to the specific psychodynamics of each iteration of that programme.
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Assessing value
In our experience at Cranfield, few sponsors
of management development interventions, and few participants in
those interventions undertake executive development simply to achieve
a positive ROI. The purposes of interventions are many and varied.
The clue to successful evaluation lies in this sense of purpose.
Post hoc measurement fails not only because it is
based upon an irrelevant set of assumptions about what goes on during
a learning event, but also because it is rarely aligned with this
sense of purpose. Effective evaluation starts with clarity about
outcomes.
Our approach to evaluation starts when we work with
sponsors and participants on the desired outcomes from an event.
The process informs both evaluation and design. We work together
to define what people will be doing differently if the intervention
is to be judged as successful. We ask, 'How will you know if the
programme has achieved its aims?' We also ask, 'What will happen
if you don't undertake this executive development?' As we refine
the picture of the behaviours, skills and attitudes the intervention
is expected to help bring about, we also identify those aspects
of this picture which are beyond the scope of the intervention itself.
We identify factors such as reward systems, structures and internal
processes which will either enhance or get in the way of progress
towards those goals.
Finally, we ask, 'If we can help bring about this
set of behaviours, would this be of value to you?' If the answer
is 'yes', then achieving these behaviours is considered to have
added value in the eyes of the buyer.
This simple approach masks more detailed discussions.
We have to agree over what period of time the changes in behaviour
are to be assessed. Value for money is considered by the buyer as
he or she recognises how much the intervention will cost, in terms
of price, opportunity cost, and other factors. But at all times,
it is up to the buyer to determine the value.
Value is not inherent in an executive education intervention,
but in the perceptions of the buyer of the worth of the outcomes.
If, at a later date, ROI measures are to be imposed, that is for
the buyer to decide. If he or she. thinks that they cannot in any
other way be sure about the value to them of the outcomes from an
intervention, then they are free to undertake whatever confirmation
takes their fancy.
Does executive development add value?
Few of our clients undertake ROI analyses. For them,
such a detailed and complex investigation is unnecessary, since
it is up to them, as senior managers, to make judgements of value.
By taking an outcomes-oriented approach, we help clients make those
judgements.
The overwhelming majority of such outcomes-oriented
judgements are positive. Executive development can, and frequently
does, achieve those desired outcomes. New skills, knowledge, attitudes,
and behaviours are seen as valuable by the buyers.
Any attempt to replace this apparently subjective
concept of value with ROI analysis or other quantitative means would
be rigorous but, in the end, pointless.
Value is not an objective 'thing' to be measured in
the abstract. It is deeply rooted in the visions of the future in
which executive development plays a significant, and valuable part.
References
Chen, Huey-Tsyh (1990) Theory-driven Evaluations,
Sage Publications, Newbury Park, California.
Goleman, Daniel (1998) Working with Emotional Intelligence,
Bloomsbury Publishing, London.
Patching, Keith (1999) Management and Organisation
Development: Beyond Arrows, Boxes and Circles, Macmillan, London.
Phillips, Jack J. (1997) Return on Investment in
Training and Performance Improvement Programs, Gulf Publishing
Company, Houston Texas.
Ulrich, Dave (1998)Delivering Results: A New mandate
for Human Resource Professionals, Harvard Business Review Books,
Boston, Mass.