In recent years, I have spent a significant amount of time helping organizations assess their capabilities.
Quality assurance.
Testing.
Data quality.
Processes.
Governance.
Organizations routinely evaluate how well these capabilities perform and where improvement is needed.
Yet a question occurred to me:
Who assesses the assessor?
The Invisible Capability
When conducting an assessment, we tend to focus on the subject being assessed. We discuss the quality of testing. The maturity of data management. The effectiveness of governance. The assessment itself is often treated as a neutral instrument. A means to an end.
But what if assessment is not merely an activity? What if assessment is a capability in its own right? If so, it should be subject to the same scrutiny as any other capability.
Separating the Subject from the Assessment
A useful distinction is the separation of a reference model from an assessment model. The reference model describes what good looks like. The assessment model describes how we evaluate against it. Most discussions stop there.
However, there is a third question:
How do we know the assessment itself is any good?
A poor assessment can produce misleading conclusions, inappropriate recommendations, and misguided investments. In other words, the quality of improvement initiatives is often limited by the quality of the assessment that precedes them.
Assessment as a Professional Discipline
One reason this question is rarely asked may be that assessment is often viewed as an extension of domain expertise. If someone understands testing, they assess testing. If someone understands data quality, they assess data quality.
Yet experience suggests that understanding a domain and assessing a domain are different capabilities. Domain expertise helps us understand what is happening. Assessment expertise helps us determine what it means. The best assessments typically emerge from collaboration between both forms of expertise.
What Makes a Good Assessment?
If assessment is a capability, it should be possible to describe what good assessment looks like.
Some characteristics immediately come to mind:
- Clear scope and objectives
- Structured methodology
- Evidence-based conclusions
- Traceability from findings to recommendations
- Balanced stakeholder engagement
- Appropriate challenge of assumptions
- Consideration of alternative explanations
- Actionable recommendations
Most professionals would recognize these as indicators of assessment quality. Yet they are rarely evaluated explicitly.
Learning from Other Disciplines
Other professions routinely evaluate their own methods. Researchers subject their work to peer review. Auditors perform quality reviews. Architects conduct architecture reviews. Scientists continuously challenge the validity of their findings.
The assessment profession should be no different. Assessments should be open to challenge, critique, and improvement. In fact, the strongest assessments are often those that have survived the most scrutiny.
A Working Hypothesis
This leads me to a simple hypothesis:
Assessment is a capability in its own right and should therefore be assessed like any other capability.
Organizations routinely evaluate testing, quality, governance, and architecture. Perhaps it is time to evaluate assessment as well.
After all, if we believe in assessment as a mechanism for improvement, it seems reasonable to ask:
Who assesses the assessor?