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BPSR rates NCC high in institutional work processes

By Adeyemi Adepetun
05 April 2017   |   4:43 am
Director-General (DG) of BPSR, Dr. Joe Abah, presented the report and plaque to the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) of the NCC, Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta, at the NCC Headquarters in Abuja, yesterday.

Director-General (DG) of BPSR, Dr. Joe Abah, presented the report and plaque to the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) of the NCC, Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta, at the NCC Headquarters in Abuja, yesterday.

Very strong business organisational structure, policies and practices that facilitate effective and efficient service delivery were some of the high points, the Bureau of Public Service Reforms (BPSR) considered before naming the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) tops in institutional work processes in the country.

Director-General (DG) of BPSR, Dr. Joe Abah, presented the report and plaque to the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) of the NCC, Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta, at the NCC Headquarters in Abuja, yesterday.

In arriving at this conclusion the BPSR boss also listed accountabilities and responsibilities for set Standardized Operating Procedure (SOP) manuals of the Commission’s 19 departments.

Accurate measurement of Responsibilities and Performance assigned to staff were the parameters for the evaluation of the Commission. In terms of governance, the Bureau said “NCC strategic objectives are prioritized for potential impact using standardized principles including the balanced score card.”

The Bureau said NCC’s vision, strategy and impacts complement other sectors organizational direction, adding that: staff can articulate what the Commission wants to achieve, its role and purpose; strategy is considered by the management team regularly throughout the year because and NCC has a sense of where it is going and how it should get there.

It rated NCC very high in procurement processes saying the Commission “has adequate systems, processes and experienced personnel responsible for executing its procurement activities in line with extant provisions of the Public Procurement Act”.

BPSR commended the establishment of NCC central store at Mbora, Abuja where all procurement records are archived electronically from loss. The Bureau also listed in its report that “NCC demonstrates that formal performance management processes are clearly understood, constantly applied and seen by all staff to be a valuable activity, that individual performance targets are clearly assigned with the team, business unit and overall organizational performance targets”.

The report that was presented to Prof. Danbatta by Dr. Adah took 15 months to go through evaluation during which period the BPSR team had a meeting with the Human Capital Department (HCD) team of NCC. Based on the approval of the EVC, the evaluation of the work processes took place thereafter whereby top management, senior and junior management staff were nominated to assess the work processes of the Commission under nine main areas covering 117 questions supervised by officials of BPSR.

According to a statement by the Director, Public Affairs, NCC, Tony Ojobo, after the BPSR presentation, signed by the NCC boss, Prof. Danbatta said as someone from the academia, he is very conversant with empirical analysis and criticisms and welcomed the Bureau’s report.

These bring out the best of the situation. He thanked the DG for this rare show of professionalism by making the presentation himself. This conclusion by BPSR has further justified NCC’s position as a foremost regulator in Africa whose robust regulatory activities are based on international best practices.

On the grey areas of Quality of Service (QoS), Prof. Danbatta said that the Commission will leave no stone unturned to ensure that telephony service improves. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that define QoS, have been put in place for Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) assessment. The result of the assessment in the 1st quarter of 2017 has shown improvement in Quality of Service.

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