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Start Right Guide

Publication type:
Resources
Published by:
Policy Project
Part of:
Policy Project
Issue status:
Current
Issue date:
Tuesday, 27 February 2018
Additional details
Publication category:
Resources
Last updated:
Friday, 27 November 2020
Copyright:
© Crown Copyright, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

This document outlines how to apply the Start Right approach to initiating a policy project, so it's set up for quality and success.

The HTML is provided for accessibility purposes. Please do not print the HTML or use it as the primary source for this information. The PDF is the primary product and should be used for distribution and printing.

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Start Right Guide#

Guidance on how to get policy projects off to a great start

This document outlines how to apply the Start Right approach to initiating a policy project, so it is set up for quality and success.

Start Right is designed to be applied early in the life of every policy development project - by the manager commissioning the work and the policy practitioner doing the work.

The 'Start Right' approach to starting a policy project - key steps#

  1. Commissioning Conversations
    Capture the key details of the request for policy advice and kick-off.

  2. Exploration
    Spend time exploring possible approaches. Check in with others and refine your approach based on what you hear.

  3. Get the Green Light
    Communicate your thinking and agree it with your authorisers. Move forward knowing you're off to a good start.

  4. Check in as you iterate
    Expect things to change as new information is discovered. Match governance and communication to the level of complexity and certainty.

The Start Right approach is applied early in every policy initiative#

Applying Start Right during the early stages of a policy initiative sets the project up for quality and success.

Experience shows that early and small interventions can drive bigger improvements in policy quality.

Start Right applied at an early stage in the policy process translates a Commissioning Conversation into a Green Light for progress through Exploration.

Benefits of Start Right#

  • Focus - through up-front consideration of all relevant factors, strong analysis and critical thinking.
  • Clarity - through shared understanding of the rationale for an approach within policy teams and fewer 'lost in translation' moments.
  • Speed and Timeliness - through reducing unnecessary work and through planning and management.

Behaviours and skills underpin quality policy#

Experience shows that certain behaviours - especially early in the policy project - are the key to driving high quality, timely and clear advice on policy. These are the behaviours that skilled and experienced policy commissioners and teams typically demonstrate in the early stage of policy projects.

Curiosity and openness#

  • When you're starting out, focus on outcomes, impact and objectives, rather than jumping to solutions or policy options.
  • Seek out a range of voices and opinions, including on what the problem is.

Political savvy#

  • Test your thinking with senior people or experienced and trusted advisors.
  • Ask “who are all the people who need to agree to this?”

Stewardship#

  • Know the views of your minister but ask what a future or different minister might want.
  • Ask what the impact is on the next generation of people in New Zealand.

Agility#

  • Ask what would change if a major assumption turned out to be incorrect.
  • Think about what you would do differently if you had half the time or resources. What if you had double?

Courage and honesty#

  • Ask for more clarity, if necessary, from busy or difficult commissioners.
  • Admit that you don't have all the skills and resources to do the job, and seek support by partnering with others.

1. Commissioning Conversations#

Commissioning Conversations are a best practice approach to policy advice requests.

These conversations openly share the scope for the policy and the desired outcomes. Quality conversations are the starting point for quality policy.

Commissioning conversations are an input, rather than a directive or mandate in themselves.

Commissioning Conversations trigger work, and provide valuable information for exploring the issue and the approach. They are an opportunity to start well by sharing vital information, and to build understanding and buy-in.

Resources for your commissioning#

  • Start Right Prompts for Commissioning Conversations
  • Your agency's policy commissioning tools (where available)

Questions to consider#

  • What is the context and purpose? Why this, why now? Who wants it and what for?
  • Who will benefit or lose out?
  • What is the appetite for risk and change?
  • What is the decision-maker's intent and desired impact?
  • Are there any sensitivities we need to manage?
  • What are the parameters you know of so far?

2. Exploration#

An Exploration allows you to pause for consideration rather than moving directly from commission to commencement.

Exploration can make the difference between success and failure, or between getting it right first time and repeated rework.

Exploration involves:

  • considering the key dimensions of a policy project
  • improving understanding within the policy team and amongst key stakeholders
  • iteration and refinement (rather than a linear process).

2.1 Exploration - tailoring for the purpose#

Scale and scope your Exploration to fit your policy project.

Policy projects come in all shapes and sizes. The depth and focus of your Exploration should fit your policy project.

Tailor your Exploration depending on whether the project is about small or transformational change. Be mindful of each consideration to ensure that there is shared understanding and agreement on the way forward.

How much time to invest in the Start Right process is a judgement call based on:

  • risk - what could go wrong?
  • impact - what is the size and scale of the change, positive and negative?
  • uncertainty - what don't we know?
  • complexity - how much do we know about how the system will respond?
  • uniqueness - what can we learn from elsewhere or previous change?
  • authorisation - who needs to agree, formally and informally, to ensure success?

2.2 Exploration - clarify drivers for action#

Clarifying the drivers for action before starting analysis ensures you're solving the right problem.

Constructively challenging the problem or opportunity early in the process leads to higher quality advice, less wasted effort and fewer requests for rework. It also helps to aim policy at the root cause, rather than the symptoms.

Clarify the drivers for action by considering:

  • previous policy advice and settings
  • domain knowledge and customer data
  • the views of partners, stakeholders and users
  • operational staff and data.

Resources for your Exploration

  • The Treasury
    • Regulation
    • Investment Logic Mapping
    • Better Business Case guidance
  • UK Government
    • Understanding Policy Problems

Questions to consider

  • What does success look like?
  • Why is this being considered now? What is the trigger?
  • What is the rationale for government action and what is the intent?
  • Do we know what the real problem or opportunity is? How do we know?
  • What are people experiencing? Who is being affected, and what is the scale and distribution of impact, where? How is it changing over time?
  • Why is this happening? What are the root causes?
  • What is the evidence or insights driving us? What are the gaps in our knowledge? How might we fill those gaps?
  • What prior advice and decisions should I know about? What has been done before and what was the impact?

2.3 Exploration - select the right approach#

The analysis approach you choose will impact the way you understand the problem.

You can get off to a better start by scoping what you need to know and how you'll collect and analyse information.

The start of the project is a good opportunity to consider your analysis approach to test early thinking about:

  • the lines of inquiry you'll pursue
  • the analytical frameworks you'll use to make sense of available information.

Resources for your Exploration

  • Superu: Making sense of evidence
  • UK Government: Discovery | Aqua Book

Questions to consider

  • What information, evidence and insights do we need and how will we gather them?
  • What is our role and the role of other actors in the system - inside and outside of government?
  • What are the decision-makers' appetites for risk, change and innovation?
  • What are the policy levers that could make the right impact?
  • What analytical frameworks will we use to understand the problem or opportunity and to assess options?
  • Are there mandatory approaches that apply in this circumstance? (e.g. Regulatory Impact Analysis, CBAX etc?)
  • What are the implications for the approach to the policy project and required skills, resources and timeframes?

2.4 Exploration - validation concerns#

Early testing of our assumptions can lead to an agreed direction of travel and set the basis for successful collaboration and stakeholder engagement.

Test and verify your early thinking about the problem or opportunity with:

  • other parts of your organisation
  • other agencies
  • trusted stakeholders and user groups.

This can help you deliver innovative, customer-centred perspectives for policy analysis and options.

Early collaboration and engagement builds trust. It can also help bring out diverse perspectives that could disrupt the process later if not considered beforehand.

Resources for your Exploration

  • Test your thinking with partners, stakeholders or 'critical friends' (e.g. the Treasury, delivery organisations, other agencies)

Questions to consider

  • Who should we test our thinking with? Are there any sensitivities to early engagement?
  • What are the views of partner agencies, affected stakeholders, and interested parties?
  • Do we understand the whole delivery or value chain?
  • How do different views influence the choice of analysis approach?
  • What is the right way to validate and test? How can we leverage our relationships?

2.5 Exploration - plan to influence and implement#

Policy advice is more likely to translate into long term impact if it's politically and socially acceptable, the proposals can be implemented, and it includes considerations for the future.

Policy teams must give sufficient time and resources to building legitimacy and support for how a policy issue is defined, and the decisions on how best to address it - with stakeholders, the public, decision-makers and other authorisers.

Operational and implementation considerations should never be an afterthought. Thinking about this early is crucial for success.

High quality policy advice answers 'how will we know this is working?' It involves building in feedback loops that support timely adjustment, data on performance, and ways to measure impact.

Resources for your Exploration

  • Public Value: Understanding Public Value
  • UK Government: Magenta Book

Question to consider

  • What are the views of decision-makers and key influencers about the policy issue and policy options?
  • If the direction of change is clear at the outset, which stakeholders or groups need to support or agree to the change? How will they be involved, informed or convinced?
  • Once policy options are developed, how will we identify the operational impacts, wider ramifications? How will operational or delivery staff be involved in the process?
  • What are the possible long-term implications of policy choices (if these can be identified at this stage)?
  • How will indicators be developed to show performance and impact? How will this information be used to adjust and refine policy later on?
  • How will evidence, monitoring and evaluation inform this policy and future policies?

2.6 Exploration - select the right management approach#

The right management approach depends on your policy circumstances.

Agreeing the right governance and management approach to reflect your project's context is a key component of getting a Green Light.

There's no single best approach to project management - it won't always be Agile or Prince2. You might need a lot of formal oversight even for small projects if they are high risk. Building in time for all the right steps is a key part of success.

Early on is the best time to build in time for maintaining policy quality, including feedback from previous policy quality assurance processes.

Resources for your Exploration

  • Use your agency's project management tools and systems
  • Agile Policy Project Management

Questions to consider

  • What is the scope of the policy project, the resources required to implement it, and the responsibility of all contributing parties?
  • How will the project be governed and how will decisions be made? Is multi-agency governance necessary, and if so how will it work?
  • What are key milestones and timeframes? What mandatory processes need to be built in?
  • Do we have the skills and capabilities we need to deliver? How will we partner for success?
  • What is the best approach to ensure quality throughout? Who will act as a quality coach?
  • How will acceptance and implementation be managed?
  • What are the main risks to the success of the project? How will risk and change be managed?
  • How will we incorporate lessons from previous policy projects?

3. Policy Project Green Light#

Getting a Green Light to proceed is the end product of the Start Right process, and the start of a successful policy project.

By agreeing the outputs of analysis in the Exploration with the people who commissioned the advice, policy managers and teams will have clarity and a mandate to deliver high quality advice.

A Green Light should be formalised in proportion to the policy project size or risk, and may make use of existing agency practices (e.g. Project Mandate or Plan, or Project Initiation Document signed off by Project Sponsor). The Green Light or its equivalent should be revisited regularly and updated appropriately when circumstances change.

Resources for your Exploration#

  • Start Right Green Light Framework
  • Use your agency's project management tools and systems
  • Public Sector Intranet Templates
    • Project
    • Programme

Questions to consider#

  • Have we clarified and agreed the key factors under each Exploration dimension?
  • Have we gained agreement across all authorisers and appropriate stakeholders?
  • How will we iterate and refine as the project goes on?
  • What levels of complexity and uncertainty remain? What does this mean for the level of communication and iteration as we work?

After the Green Light#

Getting the Green Light is the end of Start Right, and the start of 'getting on with it'.

The way a policy project proceeds will depend on the context, but there are common things that experienced professionals know about how to get on with it, and stay on track.

As you develop your policy project, the world changes, so the process must involve learning and refinement. For projects of any length, regularly reconfirming your Green Light is best practice.

Continue at pace, but be agile and adjust your response to new views, information or changing circumstances.

Continuing to check in with authorisers is the key to ensuring the Green Light remains valid. Make time to periodically reconfirm your direction.

Resources for your Exploration#

  • Your agency's project management tools and systems
  • Public Sector Intranet Templates
    • Project
    • Programme

Questions to consider#

  • How will we reconfirm our Green Light throughout the policy process?
  • How will we remain aware of changes in the wider environment that affect the process?
  • How will we manage variation in scope and focus when responding to change?
  • How can we document lessons from this process that can inform future projects?
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Table of Contents

  1. Start Right Guide
  2. The 'Start Right' approach to starting a policy project - key steps
  3. The Start Right approach is applied early in every policy initiative
    1. Benefits of Start Right
  4. Behaviours and skills underpin quality policy
    1. Curiosity and openness
    2. Political savvy
    3. Stewardship
    4. Agility
    5. Courage and honesty
  5. 1. Commissioning Conversations
    1. Resources for your commissioning
    2. Questions to consider
  6. 2. Exploration
    1. 2.1 Exploration - tailoring for the purpose
    2. 2.2 Exploration - clarify drivers for action
    3. 2.3 Exploration - select the right approach
    4. 2.4 Exploration - validation concerns
    5. 2.5 Exploration - plan to influence and implement
    6. 2.6 Exploration - select the right management approach
  7. 3. Policy Project Green Light
    1. Resources for your Exploration
    2. Questions to consider
  8. After the Green Light
    1. Resources for your Exploration
    2. Questions to consider

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