Monday, November 30, 2009

#35 The First of Three Things I Don't Like About The Balanced Scorecard

We have to applaud the Balanced Scorecard for the evolution it triggered in organisational performance measurement and strategy execution. But no model is without its limitations.

Certainly, on account of the Balanced Scorecard, we're now seeing the measurement of non-financial results rather than just the financial, and we're seeing strategies laid out in logical and cause-effect linked plans designed for execution rather than shelving.


But a few challenges continue to baffle those that embrace the Balanced Scorecard way. One of the challenges is easy and quick to remedy within the current Balanced Scorecard theory. But the other two, I believe, require a more radical re-think.


In this first part of a three part series, we'll look at one of those challenges that does indeed need a more radical re-think.


CHALLENGE 1: The Balanced Scorecard is hard to cascade meaningfully.

 
You might argue with me on this point, because part of the Balanced Scorecard's claim to fame is it's focus on strategy execution and cascading strategy to operational levels. But those famous four perspectives that were the revelation of this framework are also the limitation on meaningfully cascading strategy.


What Happens Is "Mini-me" Syndrome.

 
I call it the "Mini-me" syndrome (inspired by the Austin Powers movies), where what ends up being cascaded are localised scaled-down copies of the corporate scorecard. Each department or team has the same perspectives as the corporate scorecard, almost the same strategy map, but tailored to the scope of their work.


If injury reduction is in the corporate scorecard, then every department and team has injury reduction in their scorecard: even those departments where injury risk is infinitesimal. If cost reduction is in the corporate scorecard, then every department or team has cost reduction in their scorecard: even those departments (like Human Resources or Process Improvement, whose costs must increase in order for other areas' costs to decrease.


That's not true cause-effect thinking, and it leaves many managers and employees bemused and cynical about having to measure things that don't really matter to them, and that don't really focus on their specific and unique contribution to the corporate direction.


Additive Thinking Is Not Cause-Effect Thinking.

 
When the focus is on maintaining the four perspectives in everyone's scorecard to link up to the corporate scorecard, the attention has moved away from where it needs to be: focusing on the performance results and process improvements that have the highest leverage to achieve the corporate strategy.


What happens instead is a collection of additive scorecards, where you can add up or combine the metrics from scorecards across the departmental tier, and end up with the values for the corporate scorecard. Likewise, you could add up the add up or combine the metrics from scorecards across teams within a department, and end up with the values for the departmental scorecard. This isn't cause-effect thinking. It's additive thinking.


Cascade True Cause-Effect, Not The Scorecard.

 
To apply true cause-effect thinking, we have to let go of structure. We have to openly explore and analyse how the performance of a part truly does impact on the performance of the whole. The four perspectives of the Balanced Scorecard don't encourage that open exploration and analysis, and that's why we have the Mini-me problem.

I haven't found a sensible and easy way to help departments and teams cascade the Balanced Scorecard in a way that's sensible for them and truly aligned to the corporate direction. Instead, we use a more open approach called Results Mapping, which encourages them to start with a conversation about the corporate direction (or scorecard) and explore the question "How and where do our results and our processes most impact on the corporate direction?"
Two More Challenges...
In parts two and three of this series, I'll discuss two more things I don't like about the Balanced Scorecard, and suggest some tips for compensating for these challenges also.

TAKING ACTION:
Where are you trying to cascade the Balanced Scorecard? Is it making sense to the teams it is cascading to? Is there anything in their scorecard that isn't really that important, or anything missing that actually is important? What questions are you asking to guide the way that strategy is cascaded in your organisation or company?

Monday, November 16, 2009

#34 The 8 Steps to Build Buy-in to KPIs

You're not truly implementing performance measurement - nor getting the gains it will deliver - if you don't have your staff, your colleagues and your managers engaged. Nor do you have to wait until they are engaged before you get started!

Adapting John Kotter's process for leading change, which he details in his book "Leading Change", here are 8 steps you can follow, as the performance leader that you are, to engage people in measuring performance:

STEP 1: Find an Urgent Performance Problem

Usually people won't give their time to measuring performance because it's never seen as urgent enough, even if they do think it's important. So create a burning platform: find, point out and fan the flames of a performance problem that needs fixing, like NOW!

STEP 2: Create a Powerful Measures Team

Don't try and lead it alone. You need a support team of influencers in your company organisation to give the performance measurement initiative credibility and fuel.

STEP 3: Describe Your Vision of Performance Measurement Success

People don't care about measures, they care about results. So what are the results you want to get by measuring? How will yours and their world be different if you succeed?

STEP 4: Sell the Vision of Success

You cannot succeed as a performance measurement practitioner unless you have marketing skills. It's one of the most challenging topics to excite people about, and marketing is the means to reframe it to something more enticing than just numbers and graphs.

STEP 5: Expect Resistance, and Be Persistent

You won't get everyone engaged, and there will be people and circumstances that try to slow your progress. Tenacity and persistence (with a smile) is what you'll need along the way. Don't give up!

STEP 6: Start Small & Punchy

Don't aim for a complete corporate performance measurement system if the vast majority of people don't feel engaged in measuring. You'll move faster if you start smaller, on individual performance problems or goals. Momentum will build exponentially as you make progress.

STEP 7: Sell the Performance Wins

Marketing again: and this time it's to make sure you keep showing people the benefits of performance measurement. Talk about the real (measurable!) improvements that have been made by measuring and focusing on what matters. Create hunger for more.

STEP 8: Make Measuring Performance Business-As-Usual

Measurement is actually everybody's job, so make it easier for that to happen. When engagement levels pick up, start making training and templates and other time-saving resources available to support people to measure and improve performance for themselves.

TAKING ACTION:
Look our for a new course coming up soon, where we'll go deep into these steps so you can develop and implement your very practical and very realistic performance measurement engagement plan. Post a COMMENT on this article, to share your experiences with building buy-in.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

#33 Three Types of Performance Measure Relationships

If you think about when organisations work well, it's because all the parts are coordinated together and managed as an integrated whole. And that's a very good reason why we ought to treat our performance measures the same.

By understanding how measures are related to one another, you increase their power to help you understand and diagnose performance, and thus how you can report those measures together to make performance understanding and diagnosis easier.

RELATIONSHIP TYPE 1: Cause-Effect

As the most commonly talked about relationship between measures or KPIs, the cause-effect relationship isn't too hard to understand. It simply means that when one measure improves or deteriorates in performance, it causes another measure to improve or deteriorate in performance as a consequence.

For example, reducing rework can cause costs to reduce; improving recruitment of talent can cause workforce capability to improve; if employee engagement slides then it can cause customer satisfaction to slide too.

RELATIONSHIP TYPE 2: Companion

Measures have a companion relationship when they each tell a part of a complete story of performance. If you relied on just one of the measures, you wouldn't have a full enough picture to take the best action.

For example, number of new prosects and prospect conversion rate are companions to track a marketing process; customer lifetime value and number of active customers are companions to understand drivers of profit.

RELATIONSHIP TYPE 3: Conflict

Because you can't have your cake and eat it too, you often can't maximise the performance of any one measure. Other measures of performance can pay the price, and that's where you get conflict relationships between measures.

For example, improving workplace safety can conflict with on-time delivery to customers; reducing call handling time (in a call centre) can conflict with first call resolution; improving product quality can conflict with cost reduction.

TAKING ACTION:
Look at one of your organisation's performance reports, and the suite of measures or KPIs it includes. How are these measures related to one another? Does this appreciation of the relationships suggest any opportunities to improve the way your report the measures, so they are more useful?