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Scorecard Management
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Management
Concept Version 9
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Scorecard Measurement

Balanced scorecard measurements require extensive data collection and are essential in validating scorecard outputs.

Learning Objective

  • Indicate the value of measuring progress on objectives in effectively employing a score card in the workplace


Key Points

    • The balanced scorecard ultimately helps managers choose measures and targets. If these aspects of the scorecard are not well-selected then the results will be neither useful nor reliable.
    • Scorecard design is also critical. If managers decide that a balanced scorecard should include performance measurements from the perspective of the "Customer", then an objective of success must be defined for the actual performance data to be effective.
    • Gap analysis is a tool that helps companies compare actual performance with potential performance. At its core are two questions: "Where are we?" and "Where do we want to be?".
    • Coupled with well-designed and well-thought out dimensions for the scorecard itself, gap analysis is very useful in assessing organizational health.

Terms

  • Gap Analysis

    A tool that helps organizations compare actual performance with potential performance. It answers the question: "Where are we now and where do we want to be?"

  • ex-ante

    Latin for "beforehand" or "in advance of."

  • ex-post

    Latin for "after the fact."


Full Text

Scorecard Design and Feedback

The balanced scorecard is ultimately about choosing measures and targets. Its various design methods are meant to help identify these measures and targets, usually by a process of abstraction that narrows the search space for a measure. For instance, a company can find a measure to inform about a particular objective within the Customer perspective rather than find a measure for customers in general. This gives the scorecard more practical value.

Useful measurement feedback from a balanced scorecard is also essential. This means that careful consideration is required when interpreting applicable measurements. For example, if managers decide that a balanced scorecard should include performance measurements from the perspective of the "Customer", then they must define particular objectives of success, such as customer retention longevity, repeat sales, or customer willingness to recommend a product or service. These concrete objectives allow the actual performance data to resonate and generate meaningful results.

Units on a Tape Measure

A balanced scorecard should include specific details, like the units on a tape measure, so that the scorecard can yield useful results.

Gap Analysis

Gap analysis is a tool that helps companies compare actual performance with potential performance. At its core are two questions: "Where are we?" and "Where do we want to be?". If a company or organization does not make the best use of existing resources, or foregoes investment in capital or technology, it may produce or perform below its potential. Gap analysis can be conducted from the following perspectives:

  1. Organizational
  2. Business direction
  3. Business processes
  4. Information technology

Gap analysis lends itself to the measurement aspect of the balanced scorecard, ensuring that maximum value may be derived from the exercise. It enables management to look carefully at each objective through the lens of the four perspectives listed above and identify efficacy or room for improvement. Coupled with well-designed and well-thought out dimensions for the scorecard itself, gap analysis is very useful in assessing organizational health.

It is important to note that there are no hard-and-fast rules about defining measures and targets within a balanced scorecard. For example, financial measures can be defined as discrete values in the context of accounting ratios and continuous values in the context of dollar figures. What is important is that the data collected should be appropriately analyzed within the context of the targets and performance goals of the organization.

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