Читать книгу Public Health Services A Complete Guide - 2020 Edition - Gerardus Blokdyk - Страница 9

Оглавление

CRITERION #3: MEASURE:

INTENT: Gather the correct data. Measure the current performance and evolution of the situation.

In my belief, the answer to this question is clearly defined:

5 Strongly Agree

4 Agree

3 Neutral

2 Disagree

1 Strongly Disagree

1. The approach of traditional Public health services works for detail complexity but is focused on a systematic approach rather than an understanding of the nature of systems themselves, what approach will permit your organization to deal with the kind of unpredictable emergent behaviors that dynamic complexity can introduce?

<--- Score

2. What evidence is there and what is measured?

<--- Score

3. Where is the cost?

<--- Score

4. Where is it measured?

<--- Score

5. How do you prevent mis-estimating cost?

<--- Score

6. How do your measurements capture actionable Public health services information for use in exceeding your customers expectations and securing your customers engagement?

<--- Score

7. What do people want to verify?

<--- Score

8. How do you verify and develop ideas and innovations?

<--- Score

9. What happens if cost savings do not materialize?

<--- Score

10. Are the Public health services benefits worth its costs?

<--- Score

11. How do you verify if Public health services is built right?

<--- Score

12. Was a business case (cost/benefit) developed?

<--- Score

13. What would be a real cause for concern?

<--- Score

14. What do you measure and why?

<--- Score

15. What is the cost of rework?

<--- Score

16. How will effects be measured?

<--- Score

17. How is performance measured?

<--- Score

18. How much does it cost?

<--- Score

19. What are the Public health services key cost drivers?

<--- Score

20. Do you aggressively reward and promote the people who have the biggest impact on creating excellent Public health services services/products?

<--- Score

21. What causes mismanagement?

<--- Score

22. What are your customers expectations and measures?

<--- Score

23. What are your key Public health services organizational performance measures, including key short and longer-term financial measures?

<--- Score

24. Is the cost worth the Public health services effort ?

<--- Score

25. When are costs are incurred?

<--- Score

26. What causes investor action?

<--- Score

27. How do you control the overall costs of your work processes?

<--- Score

28. What is the total fixed cost?

<--- Score

29. Has a cost center been established?

<--- Score

30. What could cause you to change course?

<--- Score

31. How sensitive must the Public health services strategy be to cost?

<--- Score

32. How do you measure efficient delivery of Public health services services?

<--- Score

33. How do you verify the Public health services requirements quality?

<--- Score

34. How do you quantify and qualify impacts?

<--- Score

35. Does the Public health services task fit the client’s priorities?

<--- Score

36. What is the root cause(s) of the problem?

<--- Score

37. What does losing customers cost your organization?

<--- Score

38. What are the types and number of measures to use?

<--- Score

39. What are the costs of delaying Public health services action?

<--- Score

40. How are costs allocated?

<--- Score

41. How do you verify and validate the Public health services data?

<--- Score

42. How do you verify your resources?

<--- Score

43. Is the solution cost-effective?

<--- Score

44. How do you verify Public health services completeness and accuracy?

<--- Score

45. What harm might be caused?

<--- Score

46. What is your decision requirements diagram?

<--- Score

47. How do you verify the authenticity of the data and information used?

<--- Score

48. What are hidden Public health services quality costs?

<--- Score

49. What relevant entities could be measured?

<--- Score

50. Have you made assumptions about the shape of the future, particularly its impact on your customers and competitors?

<--- Score

51. Do you have a flow diagram of what happens?

<--- Score

52. How will you measure success?

<--- Score

53. Are there measurements based on task performance?

<--- Score

54. How can a Public health services test verify your ideas or assumptions?

<--- Score

55. Are supply costs steady or fluctuating?

<--- Score

56. What are your primary costs, revenues, assets?

<--- Score

57. Why a Public health services focus?

<--- Score

58. What measurements are possible, practicable and meaningful?

<--- Score

59. How can you reduce costs?

<--- Score

60. Are you able to realize any cost savings?

<--- Score

61. What are the costs?

<--- Score

62. Are the measurements objective?

<--- Score

63. How is the value delivered by Public health services being measured?

<--- Score

64. What are the strategic priorities for this year?

<--- Score

65. Are there any easy-to-implement alternatives to Public health services? Sometimes other solutions are available that do not require the cost implications of a full-blown project?

<--- Score

66. How do you measure lifecycle phases?

<--- Score

67. At what cost?

<--- Score

68. Which costs should be taken into account?

<--- Score

69. When a disaster occurs, who gets priority?

<--- Score

70. What causes extra work or rework?

<--- Score

71. What are the costs of reform?

<--- Score

72. When should you bother with diagrams?

<--- Score

73. What are the costs and benefits?

<--- Score

74. Where can you go to verify the info?

<--- Score

75. What measurements are being captured?

<--- Score

76. How will measures be used to manage and adapt?

<--- Score

77. What drives O&M cost?

<--- Score

78. Does a Public health services quantification method exist?

<--- Score

79. Will Public health services have an impact on current business continuity, disaster recovery processes and/or infrastructure?

<--- Score

80. What is the cause of any Public health services gaps?

<--- Score

81. Did you tackle the cause or the symptom?

<--- Score

82. How do you focus on what is right -not who is right?

<--- Score

83. Have you included everything in your Public health services cost models?

<--- Score

84. What does a Test Case verify?

<--- Score

85. What is an unallowable cost?

<--- Score

86. Do you verify that corrective actions were taken?

<--- Score

87. What is the total cost related to deploying Public health services, including any consulting or professional services?

<--- Score

88. Do you have an issue in getting priority?

<--- Score

89. What tests verify requirements?

<--- Score

90. Are indirect costs charged to the Public health services program?

<--- Score

91. What is measured? Why?

<--- Score

92. Do you effectively measure and reward individual and team performance?

<--- Score

93. What does your operating model cost?

<--- Score

94. Is there an opportunity to verify requirements?

<--- Score

95. What does verifying compliance entail?

<--- Score

96. Who should receive measurement reports?

<--- Score

97. Are you aware of what could cause a problem?

<--- Score

98. How long to keep data and how to manage retention costs?

<--- Score

99. What are your operating costs?

<--- Score

100. Among the Public health services product and service cost to be estimated, which is considered hardest to estimate?

<--- Score

101. What details are required of the Public health services cost structure?

<--- Score

102. What are you verifying?

<--- Score

103. How can you reduce the costs of obtaining inputs?

<--- Score

104. What are the uncertainties surrounding estimates of impact?

<--- Score

105. What are the Public health services investment costs?

<--- Score

106. What are the operational costs after Public health services deployment?

<--- Score

107. How do you measure success?

<--- Score

108. Have design-to-cost goals been established?

<--- Score

109. What causes innovation to fail or succeed in your organization?

<--- Score

110. Are missed Public health services opportunities costing your organization money?

<--- Score

111. What would it cost to replace your technology?

<--- Score

112. How do you verify performance?

<--- Score

113. How do you measure variability?

<--- Score

114. How will you measure your Public health services effectiveness?

<--- Score

115. Why do the measurements/indicators matter?

<--- Score

116. What can be used to verify compliance?

<--- Score

117. Which Public health services impacts are significant?

<--- Score

118. How can you manage cost down?

<--- Score

119. Why do you expend time and effort to implement measurement, for whom?

<--- Score

120. What could cause delays in the schedule?

<--- Score

121. How do you stay flexible and focused to recognize larger Public health services results?

<--- Score

122. How do you aggregate measures across priorities?

<--- Score

123. Are you taking your company in the direction of better and revenue or cheaper and cost?

<--- Score

124. What potential environmental factors impact the Public health services effort?

<--- Score

125. How frequently do you track Public health services measures?

<--- Score

126. Which measures and indicators matter?

<--- Score

127. How are measurements made?

<--- Score

128. Are there competing Public health services priorities?

<--- Score

129. How frequently do you verify your Public health services strategy?

<--- Score

130. How will success or failure be measured?

<--- Score

131. What is your Public health services quality cost segregation study?

<--- Score

132. Who is involved in verifying compliance?

<--- Score

133. Are Public health services vulnerabilities categorized and prioritized?

<--- Score

134. Are the units of measure consistent?

<--- Score

135. What are the current costs of the Public health services process?

<--- Score

Public Health Services A Complete Guide - 2020 Edition

Подняться наверх