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Practical Work and Experience With Performance Management

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... require good international information from other ANSPs in a timely fashion. ... NAV CANADA supports the industry effort lead by CANSO for global benchmarking. 20 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Practical Work and Experience With Performance Management


1
  • Practical Work and Experience With Performance
    Management
  • ICAO Performance Management Symposium
  • John Crichton, President and CEO
  • NAV CANADA
  • March 28, 2007

2
Agenda
  • Unique, customer driven private company
  • Why NAV CANADA measures performance
  • Some examples of internal performance measures
  • What we have learned about performance
    measurement
  • Some NAV CANADA comments regarding international
    performance measures

3
NAV CANADAS Unique Structure
  • NAV CANADA assumed control of the Canadian ANS on
    November 1, 1996.
  • The Companys creation was driven by its
    customers need for improved and cost effective
    ATM services.
  • The Company is a completely private, non-share
    equity enterprise, funding both the 1.5 billion
    purchase and ongoing capital needs through
    publicly traded debt.
  • The board of 15 represents all major
    stakeholders including 5 customer
    representatives.

4
2006 Marked the 10th Anniversary of NAV CANADA
  • November 1, 2006 was our 10th anniversary
  • Company has been aggressive in controlling costs
    while ensuring the system remains safe and
    efficient
  • The impact of our efforts can be seen in these
    comparisons to our former life

5
Managing Head Count
  • Year End Head Count

6
Capital Spending FY 1991 to FY 2006
7
A Strong Safety/ Customer Value Focus
  • As a natural and statutory (ATC) monopoly,
    ensuring transparency is essential to be
    accountable to customers.
  • The Company is fundamentally based on three
    pillars of value creation for our customers
  • Safety
  • Cost effectiveness
  • Service Quality
  • These pillars drive the overarching objectives
    established by our Board of Directors.

8
Overarching Objectives
  • Maintaining a safety record in the top decile of
    the major ANSPs worldwide.
  • Maintaining customer service charges in the
    bottom quartile (lowest charges) of the major
    ANSPs worldwide.
  • Implementing and maintaining a modern
    cost-efficient ANS technology platform in the top
    quartile of Major ANSPs worldwide.
  • Ensuring that growth in costs of providing air
    navigation services do not exceed the growth in
    charging units, thereby resulting in a decline in
    customer service charges over the long term.
  • Creating a productive and fulfilling work
    environment which places NAV CANADA amongst the
    best employers in Canada.

9
Overarching Objectives Drive Measurement
  • Our overarching objectives are the ultimate
    performance measures.
  • All our internal measures relate to the
    overarching objectives.
  • These objectives focus our performance
    measurement efforts thereby keeping the number of
    high level measures manageable.
  • Having a reasonable number of measures also
    recognizes the significant resource requirements
    that can arise.

10
Why Does NAV CANADA Measure Performance?
  • A score card on how we measure up to our
    objectives.
  • To demonstrate value to customers, or lack
    thereof.
  • An early warning system to identify deficiencies
    especially with respect to safety.
  • A way to rank our Company against ourselves and
    with other ANSPs around the world.
  • A tool to identify areas of improvement or best
    practices

11
Internal Performance Measures
  • Performance measurement occurs throughout the
    Company.
  • Individual managers goals are linked back to the
    Corporate objectives.
  • High level performance measures focus on customer
    concerns.
  • The following examples are high level measures in
    Safety, Cost Effectiveness and Service Quality,
    the three pillars.

12
SAFETYIFR to IFR Losses of Separation
13
COST EFFECTIVENESS Customer Costs Per Flight Hour
14
COST EFFECTIVENESSFlight Hours Per Employee
15
Traffic Is Growing
16
SERVICE QUALITYYYZ Arrival Delays
17
SERVICE QUALITYEquipment Outages
18
What NAV CANADA Has Learned
  • Good consistent data based on clear definitions
    is essential.
  • Data must be relevant to customers.
  • Measures must be related to objectives.
  • Collecting, analyzing and reporting on
    performance measures requires resources.
  • Measure whats relevant not whats nice to have.
  • Must avoid demand driven comparisons

19
International Performance Measures
  • NAV CANADAs overarching objectives require good
    international information from other ANSPs in a
    timely fashion.
  • Secretariat paper is helpful but too many
    different performance indicators to be useful.
  • Operational Concept has 11 key performance areas
    and more than 32 KPIs. This is too many.
  • International measurement must recognise that
    different ANSPs serve different customers.
    Measures must be relevant to those ANSPs.
  • Avoid prescriptive metrics.
  • NAV CANADA supports the industry effort lead by
    CANSO for global benchmarking.

20
Conclusion
  • NAV CANADA is committed to safety, cost
    effectiveness and quality service to customers.
  • Using appropriate performance measures ensures
    that NAV CANADA stays focused on customers
    concerns.
  • Timely and validated international performance
    measures would be very useful for ANSPs and their
    customers.
  • The development of ICAOs performance measures
    must take into account local and regional
    differences, leaving ANSPs and their customers to
    determine the measures that work best for them.
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