Recently, I noticed that two concepts are often discussed together but rarely separated clearly: reference models and assessment models.
At first glance, they seem closely related. The more assessments I perform, however, the more convinced I become that they answer two fundamentally different questions.
What Good Looks Like
Whenever we assess something, we implicitly compare reality against a picture of what “good” looks like. In testing, this might include test strategy, test automation, defect management, governance and continuous improvement. In data quality, it might include ownership, controls, monitoring and remediation processes. In architecture, it might include standards, principles and governance.
Before we can assess anything, we need a view of the desired state. That is the role of the reference model. A reference model describes the capabilities, practices and characteristics that define success in a particular domain.
It answers the question:
What does good look like?
Understanding Reality
Once we have defined the desired state, a second question emerges. Where are we today?
This requires a different kind of model.
- Interviews.
- Workshops.
- Evidence collection.
- Observations.
- Document reviews.
- Scoring methods.
- Analysis techniques.
- This is the assessment model.
The assessment model does not define excellence. Instead, it defines how we evaluate reality. It answers the question:
How do we determine where we are today?
The Same Structure Everywhere
What fascinates me is how consistently this pattern appears, in testing, data quality, cybersecurity, agile maturity, organizational capability, leadership development. The domain changes. The structure remains remarkably similar:
First, define what good looks like. Then assess the current state against that definition.
Different objects, same underlying mechanism.
Why the Distinction Matters
Separating the two models turns out to be surprisingly useful. Without a reference model, assessment findings become subjective. Without an assessment model, the reference model remains theoretical.
The two complement each other, but they should not be confused. In fact, many disagreements during assessments are not disagreements about findings at all. They are disagreements about one of the underlying models. Sometimes people disagree about what good looks like. Sometimes they disagree about the evidence. Separating the models makes those discussions much easier to navigate.
A Broader Observation
The more I think about it, the more I suspect this distinction extends beyond formal assessments. Every evaluation contains some form of reference model. Often it is implicit. Sometimes it is undocumented. Occasionally it is not even shared by the people involved. Yet it is usually there.
Whenever we judge quality, maturity, effectiveness or success, we are comparing reality against some notion of what good looks like. The assessment simply makes that comparison explicit.
An Open Reflection
I used to think of assessments primarily as activities. A sequence of interviews, workshops and analyses.
Increasingly, I see them as the interaction between two separate models: one model describing the desired state. Another model describing how we evaluate reality.
The distinction feels obvious once noticed. Yet I find myself returning to it repeatedly. Perhaps because many discussions become clearer the moment the two are separated. And perhaps because the same pattern appears in far more places than I initially expected.