In any design science such as public management, the importance of measurement is central to both scholarship and practice. Research built on measures that are not valid or reliable can generate misleading results and produces little value in the world of practice. This article applies measurement theory to administrators’ self-perceptions of organizational performance, measures commonly used in the literature. Such measures can be prone to common source bias whereby spurious results are highly likely. This article uses measurement theory to show why common source bias can be a problem and then introduces an empirical test for bias based on a data set that includes both perceptual measures of performance and archival measures. The empirical...
Results from the incentive literature suggest that performance measures are often distorted, eliciti...
As Bill Starbuck observes, measures of performance do not perform very well. They are compromised by...
This paper maps 20 years of survey research on performance measurement (PM) practices in public sect...
The measurement of public organizations’ performance is a central issue in public administration bot...
Public management studies are increasingly using survey data on managers' perceptions of performance...
Public management studies are increasingly using survey data on managers' perceptions of performance...
Several prominent public management data sets rely on administrators' and sometimes bureaucrats' sel...
We review the organisational performance (OP) measurement literature highlighting the limitations of...
We review the organisational performance (OP) measurement literature highlighting the limitations of...
Public administration scholars are beginning to pay more attention to the problem of com-mon source ...
This paper examines the common-measure bias phenomenon in a Balanced Scorecard (BSC) environment. Co...
Debate about the best way to measure performance in studies of management in public organizations is...
This study examines public officials\u27 preferences for different performance measures. Understandi...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Underlying perfor...
Organizational performance is one of the most important constructs in management research. Reviewing...
Results from the incentive literature suggest that performance measures are often distorted, eliciti...
As Bill Starbuck observes, measures of performance do not perform very well. They are compromised by...
This paper maps 20 years of survey research on performance measurement (PM) practices in public sect...
The measurement of public organizations’ performance is a central issue in public administration bot...
Public management studies are increasingly using survey data on managers' perceptions of performance...
Public management studies are increasingly using survey data on managers' perceptions of performance...
Several prominent public management data sets rely on administrators' and sometimes bureaucrats' sel...
We review the organisational performance (OP) measurement literature highlighting the limitations of...
We review the organisational performance (OP) measurement literature highlighting the limitations of...
Public administration scholars are beginning to pay more attention to the problem of com-mon source ...
This paper examines the common-measure bias phenomenon in a Balanced Scorecard (BSC) environment. Co...
Debate about the best way to measure performance in studies of management in public organizations is...
This study examines public officials\u27 preferences for different performance measures. Understandi...
New Public Management popularized performance measurement in public organizations. Underlying perfor...
Organizational performance is one of the most important constructs in management research. Reviewing...
Results from the incentive literature suggest that performance measures are often distorted, eliciti...
As Bill Starbuck observes, measures of performance do not perform very well. They are compromised by...
This paper maps 20 years of survey research on performance measurement (PM) practices in public sect...