13.4 Performance and effectiveness - concepts, issues and approaches Flashcards
“Performance” is a measure of the actual application of the strategic intent - i.e. how does the actual performance compare to the strategic perception of what that performance looks like? There are two phrases frequently used to measure this:
1) Organisational e_________ - does the performance enable the realisation of the s_______ goals?
2) Organisational e_________ - has the performance made optimal use of the s________ resources available?
effectiveness
strategic
efficiency
stakeholder
Organisational effectiveness and efficiency can be measured in two ways:
1) Q________ - a consideration of the performance from narrative data - i.e. a “subjective” approach.
2) Q________ - a consideration of the performance from numerical data - i.e. an “objective” approach.
Qualitative
Quanitative
The opening of Heathrow’s Terminal 5 was disastrous, with 23,000 bags misplaced and 500 flights cancelled in the first five days due to staff and maintenance issues.
How did the opening of Heathrow’s Terminal 5 demonstrate poor strategic effectiveness and efficiency?
Effectiveness - the goals of the terminal were not realised, as a lack of staff training and maintenance factors meant that bags were lost and flights cancelled (BA lost £16m)
Efficiency - the opening did not make optimal use of stakeholder resources - the necessary efficiency measures were not in place to ensure that the opening ran smoothly.
“You can’t manage what you can’t measure” - Peter Drucker.
In the assessment of any organisation, it is important to understand:
- how to m______ and assess performance and behaviour and the different l_____ at which these can be measured.
- what is going to c____ as a result of having made the measurement and assessment,
measure
change
At the highest level, the measurement of strategic performance can be divided into two categories - what are these?
Financial measures
Performance measures
What are some examples of financial measures that could be used to evaluate strategic performance?
Profitability - has the performance delivered the anticipated return in line with the target?
Liquidity - has the performance delivered the anticipated liquidity?
Wealth - has the performance delivered the anticipated shareholder wealth?
What are some examples of productivity measures that could be used to evaluate strategic performance?
People - is the existing human resource used to enable individuals to reach their potential?
Product - is the product/service in line with expected quality?
Resources - Are all the resources being utilised optimally?
Why can measures such as EBITDA be confusing when used to compare companies?
Different companies may measure different aspects differently - e.g. earnings can be measured in a number of different ways.
An alternative approach to organisational control is to consider how effectively stakeholder r______ are being used. This is referred to as an i_____ measure and assumes that organisations derive success through maximising the efficient use of resources.
resources
input
Daft (2013) researched the impact of stakeholder expectations as measures of effectiveness:
Owners - f_______ return
Employees - worker s_______, pay, supervision
Customers - q_____ of goods and services
Creditors - creditworthiness
Community - Contribution to c______ affairs
Suppliers - Satisfactory transactions
Government - c________ with laws and regulations
financial satisfaction quality community compliance