Journal: People Science - Human Capital Management & Leadership in the public sector Volume 1, Issue 2 Spring/Summer 2014 | Page 29
Figure 1: Types and Levels of Data
Level 0: Input
Measurement Focus
Typical Measures
Inputs into the program, including
indicators representing projectÕ scope,
s
efficiency, and costs
Types of projects, number of projects,
number of people involved, hours of
involvement, cost of program
Level 1: Reaction
Measurement Focus
Typical Measures
Reaction to the program, including
perceived value of the program
Relevance, importance, usefulness,
fairness, appropriateness, motivation,
necessity
Level 2: Learning
Measurement Focus
Typical Measures
Learning to use the content, materials,
and system, including the confidence to
make the project successful
Skills, knowledge, capacity,
competency, confidence, contact
Level 3: Application and Implementation
Measurement Focus
Typical Measures
The actions taken, use of content,
materials, and technology in the work
environment, including progress with
implementation
Extent of use, task completion,
frequency of use, actions completed,
success with use, barriers to use,
enablers to use
Level 4: Impact
Measurement Focus
Typical Measures
The consequences of action and the
use of the content, materials, and
technology expressed as business
impact measures of output, quality,
cost, and time
The consequences of action and the
use of the content, materials, and
technology expressed as business
impact measures of output, quality,
cost, and time
Level 5: ROI
Measurement Focus
Comparison of a programÕ
s
monetary benefits to program
costs
People Science
Typical Measures
Benefits/costs ratio (BCR)
ROI (%)
Payback period
Spring 2014
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