SECY-20-0049, Agencywide Transformation Performance Measures

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SECY-20-0049: Agencywide Transformation Performance Measures
ML20149K586
Person / Time
Issue date: 05/29/2020
From: Margaret Doane
NRC/EDO
To:
NRC/OCM
References
SRM-M191029-2 SECY-20-0049
Download: ML20149K586 (9)


Text

May 29, 2020 SECY-20-0049 FOR: The Commissioners FROM: Margaret M. Doane Executive Director for Operations

SUBJECT:

AGENCYWIDE TRANSFORMATION PERFORMANCE MEASURES PURPOSE:

The purpose of this paper is to provide the response to Staff Requirements Memorandum (SRM) M191029, dated November 20, 2019, wherein the Commission directed the staff to provide it with information on transformation-related performance measures. The paper does not address any new commitments or resource implications.

BACKGROUND:

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissions (NRC) transformation vision is to become a modern, risk-informed regulator. We adopted this vision because we recognized that many of the NRCs processes and approaches to the agencys safety, security, and environmental mission were based on regulating 20th century technology. Many seminal regulations and procedures were developed more than 30 years ago. As a safety regulator, rooting our decisions in well-thought-out regulatory principles has served us well over the years. We have, however, not always been sufficiently introspective. Other government agencies and other high-performing organizations have been using state-of-the-art approaches that the NRC can take advantage of to better meet our mission. Further, the regulated community has pivoted to new and advanced reactor technology and state-of-the-art ways of doing business; these changes have highlighted our need to modernize our own processes, and in some areas, our regulatory programs, to continue to meet our safety and security mission.

To gain insights on how to meet future challenges, in January 2019, the NRC concluded a scenario-based assessment of what the future external environment, within which the NRC would carry out its mission, might look like through 2030 and beyond, as documented in The Dynamic Futures for NRC Mission Areas (Agencywide Documents Access and Management System Accession No.: ML19022A178). The scenarios ranged from activities significantly diminishing in many of the areas that we regulate to taking off and seeing vast technological advancements, for both our reactor and materials work. Using this report, which included discussion of the potential future scenarios, the staff held an all-agency Futures Jam, in June 2019. The Futures Jam was a 3-day virtual discussion with NRC staff and management.

All staff were encouraged to join the conversation and identify areas where the agency should focus its transformation activities and be successful in any potential future scenario.

The Commissioners 2 On October 29, 2019, the NRC staff provided a briefing to the Commission entitled, Transformation at the NRCBecoming a Modern, Risk-Informed Regulator. In that briefing, the staff discussed with the Commission the strategic aspects of transforming the NRC to better inform our decisions and prepare us for the future. The staffs presentations highlighted key insights that were gained through the Futures Jam and outlined the structured framework for planned transformation-related activities. The transformation framework is organized around four focus areas: 1) attracting and retaining staff, 2) innovation, 3) being risk smart, and

4) using technology. Our work in these focus areas is divided into seven initiatives. The seven transformation initiatives, summarized in the following table, contain Horizon 1 activities, that are in large part coming to a close within the next 6 months as the activities are completed or are subsumed into office-level transformation activities. Additional activities have been identified that will further advance our progress on transformation. These Horizon 2 activities are currently under development.

Horizon 1 Initiative and Objective Activities Target Date Agency-Desired Culture - Conduct assessment to identify current Fall 2021 Aligning our behaviors and and ideal culture, identify behavior shifts, mindsets with our transformation develop implementation plan, imbed vision. behaviors, and conduct a re-baseline assessment.

Career Enhancement - Identifying Human capital assessment and Completed and communicating how the development of infographic tool to Spring 2020 agencys human capital programs enable staff to remain educated about support current and future our various human capital tools to help workforce needs. them to better inform their career decisions.

InnovateNRC 2.0 - Designing and Obtain an innovation platform, conduct Summer implementing a best-in-class community training on new program and 2020 program to help create a culture platform, create a reward and recognition that supports an innovative program to aid behaviors and mindsets mindset. of innovation, and launch platform.

Signposts and Markers - Identify key indicators and develop an Completed Determining which external factors interactive dashboard that will be used to Spring 2020 will have the greatest effect on the monitor factors that are most likely to agencys future mission portfolio, affect our future work.

and developing an approach to measure and track signposts and markers to support strategic decision-making.

Be RiskSMART - Developing and Develop a framework and diagnostic tool Fall 2020 implementing a systematic for everyone to share a common framework that supports consistent understanding of risk and how it can be processes and guidance that give used in decision making across the staff confidence in accepting well- agency, develop case studies to train managed risks in our staff on the use of the framework, and decision-making without establish a group of ambassadors to compromising the NRCs mission. create a community of practice.

The Commissioners 3 Horizon 1 Initiative and Objective Activities Target Date Process Simplification - Assess current processes for Winter Enhancing the efficiency and congressional hearing preparations, 2020/2021 effectiveness of agency work communication plans, and document processes, such as document development and concurrence and production and concurrence. enhance guidance to streamline these processes, encouraging the use of modern information technology capabilities.

Technology Adoption - Provide Office 365 training, create an IT Summer Enhancing adoption and training Champions network and 2020 for information technology services communications channels to create a to ensure the services have long-standing framework to enhance maximum impact on day-to-day technology adoption across the agency.

agency work.

In addition to these Office of the Executive Director for Operations (OEDO)-led initiatives, many other efforts supporting the transformation framework are under way at the office level. These office-level activities also support the four focus areas identified above.

DISCUSSION:

Measurement Methodology Performance measures have been under consideration from the earliest stages in building out the agency transformation framework. The OEDO specifically selected an approach that had been applied to guide transformation in modern, high-performing organizations and has decided to go forward with the Objectives and Key Results (OKR) framework. The OKR methodology was developed at Intel in the 1970s and was later more widely popularized as discussed in the book Measure What Matters. OKRs have since been adopted by many organizations, including Google, the Gates Foundation, and TED.

Put simply, in the OKR model, the objective is a statement of what is to be achieved; the key results reflect how the objective will be achieved. While the OKR framework is not a specific methodology for performance management, it is a collaborative goal-setting tool used by organizations to set challenging, ambitious, aspirational goals with measurable results. In developing its OKRs, the staff consulted with Dr. Ryan Brown of Rice University. He explained that well-formulated objectives are clear, action oriented, and inspiring. Further, the key results (KRs) are specific, reliably measurable, and time bound. They are both necessary and sufficient to determine that the objective has been met. OKRs are also suited to organizations with a hierarchical structure, such as the NRC, wherein work units at different levels contribute to a common mission. OKRs established for the agency as a whole can be used to formulate OKRs for offices and regions, thereby facilitating the alignment of vision and goals. It is important to note that OKRs are not static, but rather are regularly assessed and adapted to reflect both work that has been accomplished and evolving priorities.

The Commissioners 5 Agency Objectives and Key Results for Transformation In line with the vision of transformation into a modern, risk-informed regulator, the OEDO established the following objective:

Empower every employee to use innovation to make timely and better-quality decisions to promote safety, security, and protect the environment.

This objective encompasses the four transformation focus areas. Empower every employee involves focusing on our people to ensure that they are engaged and invested in the transformation. Use innovation means that employees are given both the tools and the creative freedom to explore new ways of doing our work. Make timely and better-quality decisions means that employees have the confidence to accept well-managed risks in decisionmaking without compromising the NRCs mission, while using technology to realize efficiencies in our work processes.

To support this objective, the OEDO established the following KRs:

KR 1: Deliver impactful solutions that meet the near-term goals identified in the Transformation Roadmap and the fiscal year 2020 Office Transformation Plans by September 30, 2020.

KR 2: Free staff time to support better quality and more timely decision-making by each office improving at least three processes, either programmatic or corporate.

KR 3: Improve employee engagement and demonstrate it by improving our overall Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey (FEVS) employee engagement score to 80 percent, the highest score ever achieved by the NRC. (Multiyear stretch goal)

The three KRs represent distinct elements of the agencys approach to transformation. KR1 refers to both the Transformation Roadmap, which is the master schedule of the agencywide initiatives led by the OEDO, and the Office Transformation Plans, which account for the decentralized transformation work ongoing throughout the agency. Therefore, this KR reflects that transformation, writ large, will be accomplished by the integrated work of staff at all levels of the organization. Moreover, the Transformation Roadmap and Office Transformation Plans recognize the need for systematic planning and sequencing of transformation activities to keep a coherence of messaging and to avoid overburdening staff.

KR2 indicates that the agencys work processes have a direct bearing on the timeliness and quality of decisionmaking. The transformation will implement changes in order to realize the efficiency gains that are needed to allocate resources to matters that are most important to accomplishing the agencys mission. KR2 highlights both programmatic and corporate processes, recognizing that there are opportunities for improvement in both areas. This is a short-term goal, the duration of which will be determined on an office specific basis.

Finally, KR3 illustrates that the agency considers its staff to be one of its greatest resources and ultimately the wellspring of transformation. Staff engagement will be improved by investing individuals in the work of transformation, listening to their ideas, and giving them fulfilling career opportunities that affirm their talents, skills, and abilities. KR3 is referred to as a stretch goal, which is understood to be aspirational and outside the norm of attaining in the short-term, but it

The Commissioners 5 is still attainable over the course of a few years. Organizational research indicates that stretch goals motivate higher productivity and collaboration.

Initiative Objectives and Key Results As discussed previously, an important feature of OKRs is that they are readily translatable through the hierarchy of an organization where distinct work units contribute to a high-level, organization-wide objective. As such, the OEDO directed the initiative teams to develop their own OKRs in support of the agencywide transformation OKR. The teams objectives are those listed in the table in the Background section of this paper. The initiative teams KRs generally fall into two categories. The first category represents milestones for the completion of major activities. While these represent significant accomplishments, they are more process-oriented than performance-oriented. The second category of initiative team KRs relates to the adoption or implementation of the initiative teams end products and recommendations. The table below lists the initiative teams measurable KRs and their alignment to the agencywide KRs.

Initiative Initiative KR Corresponding Agencywide KR Agency Achieve improved scores on re-surveys of the Human KR1, KR3 Desired Synergistics Organization Culture Inventory and Culture Organizational Effectiveness, to be completed by October 2021, compared to the results of the baseline surveys conducted in March 2020.

Be Assess the use and performance of the framework by KR1, KR2 RiskSMART surveying at least 20 percent of all staff in each office and conduct a Jam session to identify whether the staff has confidence to use risk-informed decision-making with a 70-percent favorable response rate in each office no later than April 30, 2021.

Career Achieve at least a 30-percent increase in the number of KR1, KR3 Enhancement staff accessing a newly developed career enhancement infographic tool during the first 7 months following initial deployment, or by October 31, 2020.

InnovateNRC Show a trend of increased participation in the number of KR1, KR2, KR3 2.0 challenges and successes completed, during the first 6 months following program launch.

Process (1) Based on a survey of end users, at least 70 percent KR1, KR2 Simplification of staff rate the new processes as better than the previously existing processes for document production and concurrence, communication plans development, and congressional hearing preparation.

(2) Achieve a 30-percent reduction in the number of working days for concurrence on annual SECY papers completed in calendar year 2021 compared to the same SECY papers in calendar year 2020.

The Commissioners 6 Initiative Initiative KR Corresponding Agencywide KR Signposts and By May 30, 2021, complete an effectiveness evaluation KR1, KR2 Markers of the Signposts and Markers.

Technology Achieve an increase of at least 10 percent in KR1, KR2 Adoption collaboration and document sharing on Microsoft OneDrive and SharePoint between the start of the Technology Adoption Initiative and September 2020.

All of the initiative teams KRs are aligned with agencywide KR1 because they represent near-term goals identified in the Transformation Roadmap, particularly to implement ideas and address staff perspectives that were related in the NRC Futures Jam.

The initiative teams KRs that align with agencywide KR2 will allow for timelier and better quality decisionmaking in licensing, rulemaking, and regulatory oversight. For example, the staff will use the Be RiskSMART framework to consider information, including risk information, in a more systematic and consistent manner. This effort is anticipated to result in improved resource allocation to matters of greatest safety and security significance. Also, the indicators developed by the Signposts and Markers initiative will add key insights to the agencys existing budget formulation and strategic workforce planning processes. This effort will facilitate the alignment of resources with the actual workload and reduce the time and costs associated with reprogramming funds and redirecting staff. Next, the Process Simplification initiative will yield streamlined workflows and the wider adoption of modernized methods for generating important work products. Finally, the InnovateNRC 2.0 initiative will provide a platform for staff to contribute additional ideas to improve work process and inform decisionmaking, for instance on novel uses of data analytics.

The initiative teams KRs that align with agencywide KR3 will enhance employee engagement as measured by the FEVS. For the purpose of the FEVS, the Office of Personnel Management defines employee engagement as, An employees sense of purpose that is evident in their display of dedication, persistence, and effort in their work or overall attachment to their organization and its mission. The FEVS Employee Engagement Index reflects (1) employees perceptions of the integrity of leadership, as well as leadership behaviors such as communication and workforce motivation, (2) the interpersonal relationship between worker and supervisor, including trust, respect, and support, and (3) employees feelings of motivation and competency relating to their roles in the workplace.

The Agency Desired Culture initiative will address the norms and behaviors that affect the ways that staff members interact with one another and external stakeholders. The staff will identify how (and under what circumstances) the agencys current culture manifests as behaviors, such as acceptance of change, that align with the agencys transformation vision. Approaches will be put in place, as appropriate, to change certain aspects of the NRCs culture, and then positively reinforce these changes, to achieve and maintain the desired culture through coaching, training, and role modeling. In a complementary manner, the Be RiskSMART initiative will address staff engagement through the development and use of a diagnostic tool that allows organizations to identify the extent to which staff members take ownership of risk-informed decision-making.

Staff engagement will also be addressed as the Career Enhancement initiative looks at how staff members can navigate their careers. To retain talented and motivated staff members, they should be given the means to cultivate their skills, find fulfilling and meaningful job opportunities,

The Commissioners 7 and work to their fullest potential. Lastly, the InnovateNRC 2.0 initiative will have an important role in fostering a positive agencywide culture. Staff members will feel that their voices are being heard when they are given a platform to share their own ideas and collaborate to find solutions that can be implemented to solve the agencys challenges, as well as when innovative mindsets are rewarded.

Office and Region Objectives and Key Results At the direction of the OEDO (and, for Commission- and Chairman-reporting offices, as requested by the OEDO), offices and regions developed their own OKRs in alignment with those at the agency level. The three, agencywide KRs are, respectively, supported by one or two objectives and two to four KRs for each office and region. Overall coordination is performed by the OEDO for harmonization and standardization of the OKR structure within the transformation framework. Further details on office and region OKRs will be provided to the Commission as additional progress is made.

Tracking and Reporting Objectives and Key Results In the book Measure What Matters, the author relates that OKRs are more likely to be accomplished by an organization when they are shared with staff. Employees are more likely to be invested when they see how the actions and decisions of their work unit, or even those of the individual, contribute to the desired outcomes. Moreover, the visibility of OKRs brings to light barriers to success, including redundant initiatives, incompatible goals, and misaligned expectations.

This view of transparency is in keeping with both the NRC Principles of Good Regulation and the NRC organizational values. At the present, the agencywide OKRs and those of the seven Horizon 1 transformation initiatives can be viewed by the NRC staff on the OEDO SharePoint site. The staff is currently developing procedures for tracking and reporting the progress on the OKRs to address, among other things, the frequency with which updates will be made. It is also developing guidelines for sharing appropriate information with members of the public. The tracking and reporting framework will provide sufficient adaptability to encompass the OKRs of offices and regions as well.

CONCLUSION:

In SRM M191029, following the October 29, 2019, staff briefing to the Commission on Transformation at the NRCBecoming a Modern, Risk-Informed Regulator, the Commission directed the staff to provide information on transformation-related performance measures within 6 months. In accordance with the practices of a number of high-performing organizations, the staff has implemented an OKR methodology. An agencywide objective and KRs were established by the OEDO; these are in turn supported by the OKRs of the transformation initiative teams. Offices and regions also developed their own OKRs to support those at the agency level. The staff is assessing approaches to systematize and standardize the tracking and reporting of these OKRs across the NRC. As further progress is made, the staff will continue to share information on transformation-related performance measures with the Commission and other interested stakeholders.

The Commissioners 8 RESOURCES:

No additional resources beyond those currently identified in the agency budget are anticipated.

The staff continues to assess the resources associated with these activities as part of the normal budget development process.

COORDINATION:

The Office of the General Counsel has reviewed this paper and has no legal objection.

Margaret M. Doane Digitally signed by Margaret M. Doane Date: 2020.05.29 16:11:02 -04'00' Margaret M. Doane Executive Director for Operations

The Commissioners 9

SUBJECT:

AGENCYWIDE TRANSFORMATION PERFORMANCE MEASURES DATED: MAY 29, 2020 ADAMS Accession Number: PKG: LTR: ML20149K586 SRM-M191029-2

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