TheoryEvalTechniques
From E-Consultation Guide
Methods and techniques for evaluating e-consultation
This is the list of techniques suggested in the E-valuing E-consultation workshop at the 6th European Conference on E-Government in Marburg on 27th Apr. 2006. The instructions were:
List every evaluation methodology or technique you can think of that might be used to measure, assess or understand e-consultation.
- Numbers
- Number of actual respondents
- Number of hits on the e-consultation site (Webstats)
- Range of types of participants
- representativity study of participants: are they a good sample of the affected population.
- Number of "e-consultation" words being cited in journal
- Accounting
- Value for Money study
- Return on Investments (ROI)
- Return on relationship (ROR) measurement which includes indirect benefits ##Cost benefit analysis
- Impact analysis
- Did it work - did it bring up a solution?
- Surveys
- Stakeholders satisfaction survey
- Satisfaction survey: a consultation worked if, after the complete cycle (once decisions were taken and participant received feedback) all involved parties -including the consulters- feel it was useful, think that the decission making will improve as a result of it and are willing to participate again on such process
- e-Poll on e-consultation website
- Content analysis
- were all relevant points of view represented in the process?
- discourse analysis of questions, feedback
- Garrison's Theory of Critical Thinking (content analysis)
- Number of ideas used in preparation of documents discussing decision to be made
- social network analysis of communications among stakeholders in networked governance
- Qualitative
- qualitative interviews with consulters and consultees before, during and after the process
- focus groups with consultees after the process
- Focus group with projective questions on the experience
- Structured interviews with decision makers
- real time blogs and/or forums
- get people to tell their story of the consultation on the city website
- interviews with range of LG officers on quality of participation
- Long term
- longer term impact
- longitudinal study of return visits to consultations
- longditudinal study of citizens attitudes to a local government
- one year down the track return to consultees for reflection
- Comparative
- construct ontologies of consultation types
- comparative studies with like consultations elsewhere
- deriving patterns from case studies
They need to be assigned to value categories.