Overall, we have 11 strategic objectives.
We broke our organization down, looking at it in a number of ways, looking at our internal processes, looking at how we manage our people, looking at the product that we produce externally. We looked at our organization through a number of different lenses and came up with these 11 strategic objectives. Then, for each strategic objective we looked for indicators to help us understand whether we are achieving that objective or not. That's out of the whole list of performance indicators that we have in the reports.
In terms of the particular indicator that you talked about, in order to get the results of that, we do a survey at the end of every audit, of the people we have audited. Setting those targets is a little difficult.
I would say that fundamentally we want everybody to believe and understand that we are approaching our work independently and objectively. I think that the probable reason that we set it lower than 100% was that sometimes some of the audits are difficult, and on occasion, I think departments will use the survey tool as their opportunity to express that they weren't necessarily happy with the way that the audit rolled out.
It may or may not be a real indication. It's probably more that they're expressing some concern about whether they felt we were objective, not about the independent or non-partisan side. Sometimes I think departments will wonder whether we were objective.
We do a lot of work to try to make sure that we are being objective, so getting their point of view is important for us to help improve on the audit, but I don't think we ever get too many questions about us being independent or non-partisan. I think it's more that sometimes departments feel that we haven't understood their point of view enough, even though we spend a lot of time trying to make sure we do.