Recently, I read an interesting article in
Dashboard Insight, written by
Gary Cokins, called
How Many Types of KPIs are There?, where Gary did a great summary of an article of
Brett Knowles, published in his firm’s Performance Measurement and Management newsletter. Brett is a balanced scorecard thought leader and founder of the
consulting firm PM2. In the article, titled “Five Distinct Views of Scorecards – and Their Implications”, Brett describes different types of KPIs for different purposes. Below, is the Gary's summary:
Valuation – There is a need to describe what the organization does in a way that the financial world can understand: monetary currency (e.g., dollars, Euros). All activities need to be financially valued, including tangible assets (e.g., buildings and inventories) and intangible assets (e.g., brand equity and customer loyalty). Several methodologies exist that grapple with this need, including EVA, ABC, etc.
The challenge is that more than 80% of value is created by intangible assets, yet traditional accounting systems do not do a good job of capturing intangibles. The scorecard has proven to be a great tool for making the intangible assets visible and valuable.
Information in this area needs to be:
* Centered on outputs, outcomes or deliverables,
* Closely related to existing valuation mechanisms,
Standard, repeatable and reliable.
Navigation – Internal managers need to make informed decisions on a frequent basis that are consistent with medium- and long-term strategy. Strategy, cascaded downward into the organization through a strategic scorecard and operational dashboards, is going to dictate both what should be done and how important it is. This creates alignment of employees’ actions and priorities across all functional and regional boundaries and consistency across time. This where performance management methodologies and analytics play a critical role.
Information in this area needs to be:
* Very responsive to shifts in the work activities,
* Process based,
* Related to overall effectiveness and efficiency.
Compensation – Scorecard frameworks lend themselves to rewarding employees for contributing to the success of the organization. Over-performers should be distinguished from under-performers. Compensation views differ from the previous two in that only a small portion of employees’ activities are closely related to the valuation of the organization and often the in-process information used for navigation is not results-oriented enough for effective compensation models.
Information in this area needs to be:
* Related to the value that the team can control and create,
* Output and outcome related,
* Accurately measurable and repeatable across locations and time.
Benchmarking – The only way to determine whether your organization is making progress is to compare it to other “things” (“comparatives”). There are many comparatives available: competitors, best-in-class, world-class. In the true sense, even target, forecast and revised-forecast are all comparatives too.
The challenge with benchmarks is that the data is sparse and with “dirty” quality. Also, there can be apples-and-oranges inconsistencies (e.g., including or excluding data, measuring different start-and-end times of processes). Comparatives do not, typically, go into enough detail to provide operational insights into diagnosing any identified issues, nor do they cover the full breadth of your strategy.
Information in this area needs to be:
* Available from other sources,
* Understandable and relatively comparable,
* Strategically related to your organization.
Evaluation – Periodically, there is the need to get an accurate measurement of how the organization is performing. Periodically the organization needs to undertake such activities as customer surveys, employee surveys, supplier assessments, etc.
These activities are too expensive and time consuming to be conducted often enough to be useful for navigation, but can be used to underpin selection and validation of navigation indicators, support compensation models and be used in reporting performance to outside stakeholders.
Information in this area needs to be:
* Survey based,
* Comprehensive and rigorous,
* Closely related to overall deliverables.
Gary Cokins commented: "Brett summarizes by stating that most organizations need to consider their organization’s performance in two or more of these views. Brett adds that it is important to note that in many organizations it is possible to merge these various views into fewer and eventually just one. It is difficult, though, to begin with just one, as the numerous stakeholders need to first develop some confidence that the scorecard model adequately describes their view of the organization. Consider building the various views as a trick to speed implementation of your pilot scorecard. A simple way to do this is to keep the one strategy map, but link different indicators to it for each of the views."
Gary finished the article with: "My feeling is Brett is on to something important. As I have mentioned numerous times there is confusion and lack of consensus as to what a balanced scorecard is and associated ambiguity. Further many organizations neglect to first construct a strategy map from which to derive its KPIs. Understanding that there are multiple views can bring clarification."
Gary Cokins wrote some books about Cost Management and Performance Management. Last year, he published a very good book entitled:
Performance Management: Integrating Strategy Execution, Methodologies, Risk, and Analytics
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