310 likes | 475 Views
Chapter 6 Measuring Indicators. © David O’Sullivan. Reflections. Define a stakeholder for a particular organization. Explain the terms transactional and contextual requirements . Define strategic thrust . List up to five strategic thrusts suitable for an organization such as a hospital.
E N D
Chapter 6Measuring Indicators © David O’Sullivan
Reflections • Define a stakeholder for a particular organization. • Explain the terms transactional and contextual requirements. • Define strategic thrust. • List up to five strategic thrusts suitable for an organization such as a hospital. • Explain why strategic plans should be concise. • Discuss how to evaluate strategic objectives. • Name four common or emergent objectives currently discussed in strategy literature.
Activities [Discussion of selected student ‘Activities’ from previous chapter]
Learning Targets • Describe the difference between financial and nonfinancial indicators • Understand the importance of indicators for motivating employees • Explain the balanced scorecard technique • List a number of current or emergent indicators used in many organizations • Create a simple form for capturing the critical data for an indicator • Indicate the key data points in a performance chart
Why Measure? • Corporate accounting scandals • Overdependence on financial measures which few understand • Inability for organisations to implement strategy
Performance Indicators • Performance indicators are a measurable way of defining and monitoring goals • Financial and non-financial metrics
Performance Indicators • Indicators that show progress towards organisational goals • Key questions: • What has happened ? • Why has it happened ? • Is it going to continue ? • What are we going to do about it ?
Weakness of sole financial focus • Inconsistency with today’s business realities • Reliance on historical data (“driving by rearview mirror”) • Tendency to reinforce functional silos • Sacrifice of long-term thinking • Lack of relevance to many levels of the organization • Lack of connection to strategic objectives
Defining Indicators • Indicators show progress toward defined performance targets and motivate people to achieve goals • Key questions addressed include: • What has happened in the organization? • Why has it happened? • Is the trend going to continue? • What impact have efforts had on the trend?
Macro Measures • Cost • Quality • Time • (Flexibility) • (Environment) • (Culture)
Indicator Attributes • Related directly to strategic objectives • Repeatable over time, allowing comparisons • Fosters improvement rather than monitoring • Reliable and verifiable • Mix of financial and nonfinancial metrics • Maximum number of measures • Simple and easy to use • Provide fast feedback • Linked hierarchically
Indicator Examples • Operations • Productivity (hours/unit) • Throughput (units per day) • Utilization (output/capacity) • Sales and Marketing • Sales per region • Sales per model • Marketing costs • People • Labor turnover • Overtime • Absenteeism • Research and Development • R&D expenditure • Failure rates • Additional revenue created • Environment • Emissions • Scrap and wastage • Accidents
‘Innovation Process’ Indicators • Percentage of revenue attributable to recent innovations • Percentage of ideas migrating to projects • Number of projects per member of staff • Percentage of staff involved in the generation of ideas or problems • Percentage of actions originating outside the organization • Percentage of indicators without actions • Number of projects per strategic thrust • Percentage of strategies without actions • Percentage of actions delivered within planned constraints • Percentage of actions abandoned during the innovation process • Cost–benefit ratio of the portfolio undertaken
Outcomes vs. Drivers • Reflect theresults or outcomes of strategies • Also called “lagging metrics” (show past performance) • Examples: profitability, market share, customer satisfaction. • Reflect how to drive the outcomes to be achieved • Also called “leading metrics” (show early signs of strategy success) • Examples: cycle time, defect rates, efficiency, performance versus plan
Balanced Scorecard • Developed by Robert Kaplan and David Norton (1996) • Approach to strategic management and associated performance measurement and development initiatives • Four perspectives:
Implementing the Balanced Scorecard • Translate strategic objectives into operational actions • Measure strategic objectives through leading indicators • Make strategy a continuous and active process • Allow strategy to be a periodic agenda item at meetings
Invisible Thread Goals Actions Business Unit Department Individual Top Down Planning Bottom Up Implementation
Summary • Describe the difference between financial and nonfinancial indicators • Understand the importance of indicators for motivating employees • Explain the balanced scorecard technique • List a number of current or emergent indicators used in many organizations • Create a simple form for capturing the critical data for an indicator • Indicate the key data points in a performance chart
Search Online • Keyword: ‘Balanced Scorecard’ • http://www.ted.com • Chris Anderson on the four key stages of any viable technology • Yochai Benkler on collaborative projects • Charles Leadbeater that innovation isn't just for professionals anymore