06 Performance Management and KPI Flashcards
Mention some of the (9) benefits of corporate performance management:
- Increase motivation: friendly competition among peer groups, urge people to work harder to reach goals.
- Consistent view of business: common definitions about metrics and what is cosidered as right.
- Reduce costs and redundancy: consolidate reporting systems and avoid silos.
- Empower users: give users self-service for information and analysis.
- Deliver actionable information: unable users to take actions.
- Communicate strategy: translate strategy and targets into concrete measures, clear picture of strategic objectives.
- Refine strategy: allowing minor strategic course corrections.
- Increase visibility: display daily operations and future performance estimations, avoiding to be surprised by unforeseen business developments.
- Increase coordination: departments working together, foster dialogue between staff and managers.
What is the clasification of the (3) performance dashboard applications?
- Purpose: Monitoring > Convey information at a glance.
- Components: dashboard scorecard, BI portal, “right time” data, alerts, agents.
- Purpose: Analysis > analyze exception conditions and drill to detail.
- Components: multidimensional analysis, time-series analysis, reporting, what-if modeling, statistical modeling.
- Purpose: Management > improve alignment, coordination and collaboration.
- Components: strategy maps, initiative management, collaboration annotation, workflow, usage monitoring.
Explain the difference between a Dashboard and a Scorecard:
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Dashboard:
- Measures performance
- Used by supervisors and specialists
- Focus on acting
- Intraday-daily updates
- Gives detailed data
- Displays charts & tables
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Scorecard:
- Charts/represents progress
- Used by executives and managers
- Focus on reviewing
- Weekly, Quartely updates
- Summarized data
- Displays charts and comments
Explain Balanced scorecard as a performance management tool:
- BSC is a quite common framework in practice
- Presents mixture of financial and non-financial measures
- Empirical nature (primarily lagging indicators)
- Narrows down corporate objectives to a short number of metrics (aprox. 20)
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Criticism:
- BSC don’t give a baseline with clear recommendations
- Fails to reflect the needs of stakeholders
- Bias on financial stakeholders over the rest
Explain the “Going MAD” (Monitor, Analyze, Detail):
Monitor > Graphical data > Executives (Strategic decisions)
Analyze > Dimensional data > Analysts (Tactical decisions)
Detail > Transactional data > Workers (Operative decisions)
What are the (4) steps of the Performance Management Framework?
- Strategize = vision, mission, values, objectives and incentives.
- Plan = budgets, plans, targets, initiatives.
- Monitor/Analyze = alerts, reports, dashboard, scorecards.
- Act/Adjust = decisions, actions, forecasts, scenarios.
=> Consistent Data & Metrics
What is a metric and what is a KPI?
Metric = is a measurement of business activity (examples: number of customers, total sales….)
KPI = a metric (business activity) measured against a goal (business objective) (examples: customer satisfaction, average sale amount, task completion rate).
What are the differences between outcome metrics and driver metrics? Give examples of each of them.
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Outcome metrics (lagging indicators) = measure the output of business activity intended to be achieved by a strategy. Past activity that has already happened, often financial in nature.
- Revenues, profits, customer satisfaction, patients healed..
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Driver metrics (leading indicators) = measure business activity that influences the results of the outcomes of KPI. Activity that happens between periods, track of current activity to make necessary adjustments.
- Weekly, daily sales. Clients meetings. Customer contacs. Customer complaints. Open opportunities.
Mention and define the characteristics of effective performance metrics:
- Strategic = good performance metrics embodies a strategic objective, monitors if an organization is on track.
- Simple = employees must understand what is measured and how it is calculated.
- Owned = every metric needs an owner responsible for the outcome.
- Actionable = employees should know corrective actions. Empowered employees are needed.
- Timely = metrics being updated frequently enough.
- Referencable = metrics having options to view its metadata (users can trust and use them).
- Accurate = “garbage in, garbage out”.
- Correlated = ensure metrics measure the desired output.
- Game-proof = ensure workers cannot circumvent metrics.
- Aligned = align performance metrics with corporate objectives.
- Standardized = distributed across departments and organizational levels and groups.
- Relevant = considering life cycles of performance metrics, must be refreshed, revised and/or discarded.
Mention some criticism to KPIs:
- Importance on KPIs tend to be exaggerated
- Myopic view on the company (focus on reports…)
- Unilateral focus on financial targets
- Decision-making biases
- Key figure inflation