Showing posts with label Corporate Performance Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corporate Performance Management. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Five Distinct Views of Scorecards – and Their Implications


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

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Business Intelligence Platforms 2009


Recently, Gartner published its report called Magic Quadrant for Business Intelligence Platforms 2009. This report is Gartner's opinion about the market of BI and their main vendors. Gartner defines the report: Early in 2008, the megavendors took ownership of a majority share of the business intelligence platforms market via acquisition. The repercussions of that consolidation are still working through the market, with a growing split in buying behavior becoming evident.

Gartner also published two other reports:

- Magic Quadrant for CPM Suites
Gartner defines the report: The market landscape for corporate performance management suites continues to dramatically change and grow. Users should evaluate vendors carefully according to business needs and their broader business intelligence and performance management strategies.

- Magic Quadrant for Data Warehouse Database Management Systems
Gartner defines the report: The data warehouse DBMS market is expanding at a record pace with new vendors, new offerings and high growth. We discuss this, the growth of appliance offerings and how data warehouse DBMS software-only vendors are responding with enhanced functionality and low-cost, market-entry solutions.

In the three reports, Gartner separates the vendors in four quadrants, considering the ability to execute and the completeness of vision. The reports define the market overview and also the strengths and the cautions of each vendor mentioned.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

CPM: Achieving value by effectively anticipating and managing change


I read a very good text called Corporate Performance Management: Achieving value by effectively anticipating and managing change, published by PricewaterhouseCoopers, and written by PricewaterhouseCoopers and Oracle professionals.

They divided the text in three topics: The heart of the matter, An in–depth discussion and What this means for your business. Below is the summary of the text:

1- The heart of the matter
They started with a question: How does Corporate Performance Management (CPM) give you the right mix of standardization and flexibility to deliver predictable results and sustainable execution of your strategy?

Management systems today do a good job of budgeting, financial and management reporting, and rudimentary business intelligence analysis, but these information and process islands are usually disconnected from real-world decisions and corporate actions.

The promise of CPM is to bring together these processes and technologies into an integrated system and unified way of managing your business that is more powerful than its individual parts. A true “management system” integrates all areas of the business from a common strategy and vision, through a common business language, and establishes a culture of accountability and results.

2- An in-depth discussion
Executing your strategy is the challenge of every executive and manager in every organization; in fact, it’s everyone’s job. Add to that the challenge of day-to-day performance pressures from:
- Globalization and demographic change
- Technology advancements
- Environmental and sustainability requirements
- Disintermediation, social networks, and customer intelligence
- Commoditization and competition

Why it matters
What does this means for your business? Managing your business depends on the processes and technology being aligned to deliver the right mix of standardization and flexibility so you can:
- Believe in the numbers and report with confidence
- Set accurate expectations and anticipate results
- Deliver the right visibility to the right people at the right time, and hold them accountable for results
- Spend less time on non-value-add activities, so you can focus on what matters
- Execute with confidence and stand up to scrutiny

CPM is the glue that brings it all together
You should approach CPM with an enterprise-wide view, including finance, operations, HR, IT, sales and marketing, both functionally and at the operating level, touching all levels of the organization:
- It connects strategy, through planning, to sustained execution
- It connects people, process, technology, and data
- It’s built on connected process components including budgeting, planning & forecasting, financial consolidation, reporting & analysis, business intelligence, modeling, scorecarding, and master data management
- It’s connected with adjacencies such as GRC (governance, risk & compliance), including Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, close and consolidation, revenue growth, M & A services, cost management, operations, and many other business initiatives
- It supports the management processes of aligning strategy to plans and resource allocations, evaluating performance and understanding what actions to take, and sustaining execution including rewarding stakeholders appropriately.

How technology leads to a viable CPM strategy
CPM directly enables the five capabilities of the agile enterprise:
1. Anticipating the future and planning for business opportunities
2. Simplifying and integrating business activities so they can be analyzed for cost and value
3. Focusing on innovation within the existing boundaries of your businesses
4. Integrating new business capabilities continuously, rapidly, and cost effectively
5. Managing change through people

How to build an agile foundation for change
Agility is your new core competency. Being able to anticipate change and quickly react to it should be built-in to your company management operating system.

3- What this means for your business
Before you decide which application or applications are right for you, consider these elements:

Strategic
- Make sure you have a long-term CPM vision into which your current and short-term portfolio of finance, IT, and operational initiatives fit
- Decide where CPM “lives” in your organization: Finance, IT, Operations or a
cross-functional center of excellence
- Determine and document the business case for CPM, including:
- Revenue growth
- Cost management
- Systems rationalization
- Cash cycle velocity
- Fixed-asset utilization
- Visibility and accountability

Operational
- Connect CPM to your management system, and look at CPM processes to create competitive advantage
- Connect financial and operational models and scenarios into your planning processes
- Provide financial, operational, and predictive analytics to your business analysts and managers
- Integrate your IT roadmap with CPM
- Inventory your CPM processes and align them with your roadmap

Tactical
- Leverage your technology investments
- Rationalize systems and standardize where appropriate
- Upgrade to functionality that gives you business benefit
- Leverage your data assets
- Expose data quality issues
- Implement the CPM umbrella on-top of your transactional systems and data warehouses
- Implement a robust data governance policy and methodology

They finished with: "An integrated CPM system, the backbone of your management operating system, is the foundation for building an agile enterprise."