What Gets Measured Becomes the Mission

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News
Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

When Numbers Replace Judgment

Institutions do not drift into abuse because individuals suddenly abandon ethics. They drift because measurement systems quietly redefine success. What is tracked becomes what matters. What matters becomes what is pursued. Over time, judgment gives way to metrics, and metrics take on a moral authority they do not deserve.

This is not a flaw unique to government. It is a structural problem inherent to large organizations. But when applied to enforcement power, the consequences are profound.

The Appeal of Measurable Performance

Metrics are attractive because they simplify complexity. Arrest counts, detention numbers, case closures, and compliance rates can be summarized, graphed, and presented to oversight bodies. They provide an appearance of control.

What they rarely capture is proportionality, necessity, or harm avoided.

Quiet successes—situations resolved without escalation, compliance achieved without force, restraint exercised under pressure—do not produce impressive numbers. They do not photograph well. As a result, they are undervalued or ignored.

How Metrics Become Objectives

Once performance indicators are established, they begin to shape behavior. Staff learn what is rewarded. Managers learn what advances careers. Agencies learn what secures funding.

The original purpose of the metric is gradually forgotten. The metric itself becomes the mission.

This process does not require bad faith. It requires repetition. When people are evaluated on outputs rather than outcomes, rational behavior shifts toward maximizing countable activity rather than meaningful resolution.

Enforcement as Output, Not Outcome

In enforcement contexts, this distortion is especially dangerous. Activity is easy to count. Justice is not.

An agency that measures success by the number of detentions will detain more people. An agency that measures success by the speed of case processing will favor rapid decisions over careful ones. An agency that measures toughness will display force.

None of these metrics ask whether the action was necessary. They ask only whether it occurred.

The Illusion of Objectivity

Metrics carry an aura of neutrality. Numbers appear objective, even when they encode subjective choices. What to count, how to define categories, and which indicators to prioritize are policy decisions disguised as measurement.

Once embedded, these choices are difficult to challenge. Questioning the metric is treated as questioning performance itself. Over time, the system defends the number rather than the principle it was meant to serve.

Why Oversight Misses the Problem

Oversight bodies often rely on the same metrics they are meant to evaluate. Reports summarize activity rather than assess judgment. Hearings focus on trends rather than consequences.

This creates a closed loop. Agencies present numbers. Oversight reviews numbers. Both conclude that the system is functioning because the data exists.

The absence of abuse in the dataset is mistaken for the absence of abuse in reality.

The Long-Term Effect

When metrics dominate decision-making, institutional culture adapts. New staff are trained into the system as it exists. Deviating from the metric becomes risky. Exercising restraint becomes an anomaly rather than a virtue.

Over time, enforcement becomes procedural rather than principled. The law is followed formally, but its spirit is lost.

This is how systems drift without malice—and why correcting them later is so difficult.

Why This Matters Now

Understanding metric-driven drift is essential because it explains how institutions repeatedly arrive at the same outcomes despite reforms, apologies, and policy statements.

As long as success is defined numerically, behavior will follow the numbers. Changing outcomes requires changing what is measured—and, just as importantly, what is rewarded.

The next essay in this series will examine how this dynamic allows abuse to emerge without villains, and why focusing on intent consistently misses the point.

From Alamo to Anarchy argues that saving U.S. democracy requires breaking Texas into five states. In a sharp Zoomer voice, Dorah Zurino traces Texas from slave republic to today’s “lab of extremes” (Rangers, Jim Crow, ERCOT, SB8) and maps a constitutional, step-by-step plan to un-monopolize power and let real communities govern.
https://books2read.com/u/mdBD9R

APA References

Moynihan, D. P. (2008). The dynamics of performance management. Georgetown University Press.

Power, M. (1997). The audit society: Rituals of verification. Oxford University Press.

U.S. Government Accountability Office. (2017). Performance measurement and management challenges in federal agencies. GAO Reports.

#enforcementCulture #governmentAccountability #institutionalDrift #metrics #performanceManagement #publicAdministration #systemsAnalysis

A few weeks ago my students in the Systems Analysis and Modelling subject closed the semester with an award ceremony prising the most accomplished assignment projects. Though perhaps the most abstract subject these #ComputerScience undergraduates tackle, they had a nice opportunity to experience #SystemsAnalysis in a real world context.

https://tecnico.ulisboa.pt/pt/noticias/campus-e-comunidade/tecnico-e-jeronimo-martins-distinguem-estudantes-em-premio-de-merito/

Técnico e Jerónimo Martins distinguem estudantes em Prémio de Mérito 

Sete equipas de estudantes da Licenciatura em Engenharia Informática e de Computadores apresentaram soluções inovadoras para desafios reais do setor AgriRetail.

Instituto Superior Técnico

The Illegibility Crisis: Instrumentation for AI-Era Leadership https://leanpub.com/illegibility_crisis by Paul LaPosta is the featured book on the Leanpub homepage! https://leanpub.com #Ai #Leadership #DevOps #EngineeringManagement #ExecutiveCoaching #SystemsAnalysis

Find it on Leanpub!

The Illegibility Crisis

Diagnostic protocols and field kits for CTOs, VPs, and technical leaders governing AI-heavy systems. Crown jewel mapping, decision tracing, real instruments.

Leanpub

Contemplate this now

Folks who do #systemsanalysis have a great belief in ‘leverage points.’ These are places within a complex system… where #asmallshift in one thing can produce #bigchanges in everything.”

https://open.substack.com/pub/jimstewartson/p/how-to-mount-a-cognitive-insurgency-36e?r=1elr0&utm_medium=ios

How to Mount a Cognitive Insurgency: Know. Name. DISRUPT. — Part III

sabotage — deliberately destroy, damage, or obstruct (something), especially for political or military advantage

MindWar: The Psychological War on Democracy

I have seen this quote in many places. I understand the sentiment, but it doesn't match my personal observations.

“When I criticize a system, they think I criticize them—and that is of course because they accept the system and identify themselves with it." - Thomas Merton

https://r.flora.ca/p/i-dont-hate-white-people

#SystemsTheory #SystemsAnalysis #CriticalTheory #CriticalRaceTheory #CRT

#Racism #Sexism #Anthropocentrism #Canada #USA #WhiteNationalism

I don’t hate "White People" (British/English, French, etc)

I have seen this quote in many places.

Russell's Lifelong Learning

I heard Annihilation was about grief or relationships. I'm interested af in Scavenger's Reign.

I feel like we have a rough indentation / substructure of how we will process things from birth, but that every event thereon will shape it further.

As well, we know ourselves in reference to others: "I'm like A, not like B, but most like C. What lies beyond C? I might see myself reflected best over there."

"Rules do not exist to bind you; they exist so you may know your freedoms."
Parameters outline a given environment within which to experiment and explore. It's one antidote to Blank Page Syndrome, for example.

https://nebula.tv/videos/talefoundry-fiction-about-nobody/

#art #sociology #psychology #neuroscience #neurodivergent #neurodiverse #neurodiversity #human #humans #people #person #personal #InTheLabDoingStuff #learning #philosophy #ontology #science #ScienceMastodon #ScienceOfScience #ScienceMatters #sci #SciPost #study #research #learn #explore #anthropology #system #systems #SystemsThinking #SystemsAnalysis #CriticalThinking #CriticalAnalysis #fun #interesting

Fiction About Nobody

Nebula

I have to disagree entirely about personifying the automated house in There Will Come Soft Rains (fantastic name), but otherwise yes. This is exactly my understanding.

https://nebula.tv/videos/talefoundry-fiction-about-nobody/

It's also a good description of why I feel so confused by others.
People tend to feel more secure (than I do) in their identities as individuals, group members, and (neurotypical / neurodefault / neurorigid) humans.

#art #sociology #psychology #neuroscience #neurodivergent #neurodiverse #neurodiversity #human #humans #people #person #personal #InTheLabDoingStuff #learning #philosophy #ontology #science #ScienceMastodon #ScienceOfScience #ScienceMatters #sci #SciPost #study #research #learn #explore #anthropology #system #systems #SystemsThinking #SystemsAnalysis #CriticalThinking #CriticalAnalysis #fun #interesting

Fiction About Nobody

Nebula

"Asked by the Club of Rome to show how major global problems — poverty and hunger, environmental destruction, resource depletion, urban deterioration, unemployment — are related and how they might be solved,

[Jay] Forrester made a computer model and came out with a clear leverage point: Growth."

#DonellaMeadows,

https://donellameadows.org/archives/leverage-points-places-to-intervene-in-a-system

(1/3)

#SystemsAnalysis #JayForrester #ClubOfRome #growth #DeGrowth

Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System

The Academy for Systems Change