INTRODUCTION
The study argues that understanding public employees` use of performance information is an important challenge for scholarship on performance management. Consequently, the use of performance information has been well-explored (e. g. Melkers & Willoughby, 2005 etc), but insights from police institutions are quite rare. However, much about police officers’ usage of performance information and the factors associated with its use remains unknown.
The use of performance information in public organizations is controversially discussed (e. g. Van Dooren, Bouckaert & Halligan 2010). Within the police context, there are several specific challenges regarding the use of performance information (Collier 2001; Charbonneau & Riccucci 2008). Performance information may be used with reservations if it conflicts with a police force’s existing traditions, procedures, and processes. Furthermore, there is some indication that dysfunctional behavior by police officers could lead to distortion of performance information through manipulation, intentional misrepresentation, or, in extreme instances, unlawful conduct (e. g. Guilfoyle 2012).
Police authorities have devoted extraordinary effort to creating performance data, believing that such information will facilitate accomplishment of the mission. Since 2019 the police of Bavaria has run a statewide application, named COVER. The initiators are interested in whether and how the provided data are used. In line with previous research, the study investigates two research questions:
RQ1: How do police officers use performance information?
RQ2: What factors affect police officers’ information usage?
DIFFERENTIATION OF USER BEHAVIOR AND INFLUENCING FACTORS
In examining how police officers actually employ the performance information supplied to them, this study classifies their behavior into four usage categories:
• frequency
• instrumental or purposeful
• conceptual (knowledge acquisition, and comprehension)
• legitimating
Considering previous studies, the analysis here tests six factors as possible explanations for the four categories of user behavior. These factors are:
• user knowledge
• perceived quality of performance information
• acceptance by police officers
• superior’s/agency leadership’s attitude
• user’s age
• and agency size
DATA COLLECTION
Target population: 237 senior police officers (four Bavarian police agencies)
Data collection: standardized online questionnaire
Survey period: April 22, 2021 to May 10, 2021.
Sample composition: 139 completed and evaluable questionnaires (response rate: 58.64 %)
MAIN FINDINGS
• Ca. 70 % of the respondents use performance information 1-3 hours a week, 2.9 % do not use performance information at all.
• The usage of performance information varies across the different types of German police forces.
• Respondents use performance information mostly conceptually, and subsequently instrumentally or for legitimization.
• Acceptance of performance information proves to be the most important explanatory variable. It has a strong, statistically significant impact on all four kinds of performance information usage. Individual factors such as user´s age, and user’s knowledge have no statistically significant influence on performance information usage.
CONCLUSION
• The amount of variance in usage of performance information is explained by the six factors under investigation (with R2 varying from 24 % - 41 %).
• The type of usage under investigation is relevant when examining factors influencing the use of performance information. Thus, future studies should take usage type into consideration.