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Measure Outcomes & Make Improvements

To develop, improve, and justify your organization’s well-being program, it will be important to continually evaluate the success of individual program elements (e.g., attendance/participation) and measure overall progress on well-being indicators (e.g., engagement).

The Kirkpatrick model (and related models) is most often used to evaluate development programs. It recommends evaluating multiple factors as indicators of success. Possible measures include:

• Satisfaction with and attitudes toward well-being programs;

• Extent of learning new information and skills;

• Behavioral change growing out of the programs;

• Measures of lawyer well-being and organizational success.

Workplace Well-Being Measurement Tools:

Recommendations

Short Term (1 Year)

Potential measurement indicators:

  • Program commitment from management
  • Level of interest and participation rates
  • Changes in team cohesion
  • Level of staff awareness of chronic disease risk factors
  • Other outcomes that are valuable to participants and employer

Potential data sources:

  • Records of participation
  • Activity and event log*
  • Staff survey*
  • Referral number records (EAP, Quit SA, worksite nurse enquiries)
  • Healthy workplace audit (benchmark results)*
  • Record of (new or reviewed) policies and procedures
  • Record of facility usage (showers, stairs, lunchrooms, fridge)
  • Formal and informal (participants and non) staff and management feedback

Medium Term (1-2 Years)

Potential measurement indicators:

  • Changes in attitudes, knowledge and behavior towards health and/or the workplace
  • Changes in workplace environment (facilities, infrastructure, culture, policies)
  • Increase in staff retention, job satisfaction, productivity
  • Improvement of organizational image
  • Other outcomes valued by participants and employer

Potential data sources:

  • Staff satisfaction &/or culture survey
  • Records of workplace environment changes: Healthy workplace audit (follow up results)*
  • Interviews with management, employees and committee
  • HR records on staff retention and attraction

Long Term (3-5 Years)

Potential measurement indicators:

  • Changes in sick leave and return to work rates
  • Workplace health profile / health status of staff
  • Other outcomes valuable to participants and employer

Potential data sources:

  • Interviews with management, employees and committee
  • Human Resources &/or Work Health and Safety records on sick leave, retirement rates, injuries, workers compensation data

Organizational Well-being Evaluation

Evaluate organizational well-being strategies

Potential measurement indicators:

  • Implemented as planned
  • Quality assured
  • Appropriate for participants needs and interests
  • Equity of access
  • Effective co-ordination
  • Ability to meet action plan in intended timeframe, budget and resourcing

Potential data sources:

  • Project/program reports
  • Staff needs assessment survey results (and repeats)*
  • Activity and event logs
  • Records of participation
  • Records of communication and engagement: Promotion plans
  • Committee review
  • Workplace champion notes and reflection
  • Staff feedback – formal and informal, participants and nonparticipants

Evaluate well-being program learnings and sustainability

Potential measurement indicators:

  • What barriers and enablers made a difference to the outcome?
  • What skills of workplace champions, health and wellbeing committee and others maximized program outcomes?
  • Can the program be sustained with available resources?
  • Other learnings?

Potential data sources:

  • Interviews with stakeholders
  • Workplace champion notes and reflection
  • Committee review and reflections
  • Staff survey

Join the Colorado Lawyer Well-Being Leadership Cohort to gain in depth skills in measuring the success of your organization’s well-being program!

flyer reading colorado lawyer wellbeing leadership cohort, with chairs in nature