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What is Human Performance Technology...
Human Performance Technology (HPT) uses
a wide range of interventions that are drawn from many
other disciplines including, behavioral psychology, instructional
systems design, organizational development, and human
resources management. As such, it stresses a rigorous
analysis of present and desired levels of performance,
identifies the causes for the performance gap, offers
a wide range of interventions with which to improve performance,
guides the change management process, and evaluates the
results. Taken one word at a time, a description of this
performance improvement strategy emerges:
- Human: the individuals and groups
that make up our organizations
- Performance: activities and measurable
outcomes
- Technology: a systematic and systemic
approach to solve practical problems
Principles of Human Performance
Technology
Human Performance Technology has been
described as the systematic and systemic identification
and removal of barriers to individual and organizational
performance. As such, HPT is governed by a set of underlying
principles that serve to differentiate it from other
disciplines and to guide practitioners in its use.
HPT focuses on outcomes. Focusing on outcomes, that
is results, allows for questioning, confirming, and
reconfirming that people share the same vision and goals,
the job procedures support productivity, efficiency,
and quality, and that people have the knowledge, skills,
and motivation they require.
Where is there an opportunity or a performance gap,
a difference between the present and the desired levels
of performance? Outcomes or results of an intervention
will be measured to determine whether or not performance
has improved. Sometimes it is necessary to challenge
the assumed answer to a problem or the expected event
or activity of an intervention and instead focus on
the accomplishment or business need that is the client's
true priority.
HPT takes a systems view. Taking a
systems view is vital, because organizations are very
complex systems that affect the performance of the individuals
that work within them.
It is important to distinguish a systems approach from
a process model. A process contains inputs and outputs
with feedback loops. A system implies an inter-connected
complex of functionally related components. The effectiveness
of each unit depends on how it fits into the whole and
the effectiveness of the whole depends on the way each
unit functions. A systems approach considers the larger
environment that impacts processes and other work. The
environment includes inputs, but, more importantly,
it includes pressures, expectations, constraints, and
consequences.
HPT adds value. This is an assessment
that clients will be asked to make. Clients should be
offered a process that will help them fully understand
the implications of their choices, set appropriate measures,
identify barriers and tradeoffs, and take control.
While HPT requires a focus on intermediate goals (such
as improving quality, customer retention, and cost reduction),
its success is measured in improvements in desired business
outcomes (such as sales, profitability, and market share).
Alignment of individual performance to intermediate
and business outcomes is critical to the HPT methodology.
Measurement of results at both of these levels serves
two important purposes, that of communicating the importance
of what is being done while also assessing the amount
of performance improvement.
HPT establishes partnerships. Performance
improvement professionals work in partnership with clients
and other specialists. A collaborative effort involves
relevant stakeholders in the decision-making process
and involves working with specialists in their areas
of expertise.
Working collaboratively includes sharing decisions
about goals, next steps to take in the process, and
implementation strategies as shared responsibilities.
Partnerships are created from listening closely to clients
and colleagues, trusting and respecting each other's
knowledge and expertise.
Be systematic in the assessment of the need
or opportunity. Analysis occurs in the beginning
of the project. Needs or opportunity analysis is about
examining the current situation at any level or levels
(society, organizational, process, or work group) to
identify the external and internal pressures affecting
it. This process will determine the deficiencies or
performance gaps that are to be remedied. The output
is a statement describing the current state, the projected
future state, and the rationale or business case for
action or non-action.
Be systematic in the analysis of the work and
workplace to identify the cause or factors that limit
performance. Cause analysis is about determining
why a gap in performance or expectations exists. Some
causes are obvious such as new hires lack the required
skills to do the expected task. This step in the systematic
process will determine what should be addressed to improve
performance. The output is a statement of why performance
is not happening or will not happen without some intervention.
Job task analysis includes the identification of the
important tasks that employees must perform and the
knowledge, skills, and abilities to perform them. The
output is performance objectives that describe the desired
performance, delineate the conditions under which the
performance is done, and identify the criteria for successful
performance.
Be systematic in the design of the solution
or specification of the requirements of the solution.
Design is about identifying the key attributes of a
solution. The output is a communication that describes
the features, attributes, and elements of a solution
and the resources required to actualize it.
Be systematic in the development of all or
some of the solution and its elements. Development
is about the creation of some or all of the elements
of the solution. It can be done by an individual or
a team. The output is a product, process, system, or
technology. Examples include training, performance support
tools, a new or re-engineered process, the redesign
of a workspace, or a change in compensation or benefits.
Be systematic in the implementation of the
solution. Implementation is about deploying
the solution and managing the change required to sustain
it. The outputs are changes in or adoption of the behaviors
that are believed to produce the anticipated results
or benefits. This standard is about helping clients
adopt new behaviors or use new or different tools.
Be systematic in the evaluation of the process
and the results. Evaluation is about measuring
the efficiency and effectiveness of what was done, how
it was done, and the degree to which the solution produced
the desired results so that the cost incurred and the
benefits gained can be compared. This standard is about
identifying and acting on opportunities throughout the
systematic process to identify measures and capture
data that will help identify needs, adoption, and results.
The HPT process begins with a comparison of the present
and the desired levels of individual and organizational
performance to identify the performance gap. A cause
analysis is then done to determine what impact the work
environment (information, resources, and incentives)
and the people (motives, individual capacity, and skills)
are having on performance.
Once the performance gap and the causes have been determined,
the appropriate interventions are designed and developed.
These may include measurement and feedback systems,
new tools and equipment, compensation and reward systems,
selection and placement of employees, and training and
development. The interventions are then implemented
and the change process managed.
Evaluation is done after each phase of the process.
Initially, formative evaluation assesses the performance
analysis, cause analysis, intervention selection and
design, and intervention and change phases. Then evaluation
focuses on the immediate response of employees and their
ability and willingness to do the desired behaviors.
The final evaluations are centered on improvement of
business outcomes (such as quality, productivity, sales,
customer retention, profitability, and market share)
as well as determining return on investment for the
intervention.

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