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Following is a brief note on Balanced
Scorecard:
What Is a Balanced Scorecard?
By Dr. Craig B. Watters
CEO
Management Simulations, Inc.®,
Since its introduction in 1992, the
Balanced Scorecard approach to enterprise
management has enjoyed a rapid rate of
adoption in a variety of industries. More
than just a grouping of financial
measures, it is a strategic assessment
tool that can accurately portray a
business unit's strategic progress. The
Balanced Scorecard asks managers to
consider their business from four
perspectives:
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The
Customer |
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Internal
Business |
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Innovation & Learning |
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Financial |
Note that only one perspective
focuses on the financial metrics. The
implication: Focusing only on financial
assessments of performance is not enough
to improve an organization. Comp-XM®
includes many measurable and actionable
variables — exactly the type of metrics
used in the Balanced Scorecard.
Customer Perspective
Robert Kaplan, one of the originators of
the Balanced Scorecard, says customers
concerns can generally be broken down into
four areas:
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Quality |
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Time |
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Performance |
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Service |
Within each of these areas there are a
number of sub-elements. Take time for
example: A customer might be concerned
with the amount of time a manufacturer
takes to introduce new designs (design
cycle), or in how quickly the manufacturer
can deliver a product (production cycle).
One of the goals in this perspective is
to be perceived as the most innovative
supplier to the industry. Clearly then,
new product introduction cycle time is a
vital statistic, as is the portion of
revenues generated by products or services
that are less than two years old.
Innovators would *not* want the additional
perception of a low cost leader because
low cost is inconsistent with innovator’s
goals.
In the Comp-XM® context, measures
for the Customer Perspective include:
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Customer
Buying Criteria (what percentage of
the customer's expectations do your
products meet, sales weighted) |
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Customer
Awareness (how much of the market
knows about your products, sales
weighted) |
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Customer
Accessibility (how easy is it for the
customer to purchase your products,
sales weighted) |
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Customer
Survey Score (this is a combination
which reflects the net effect of the
above three items, Buying Criteria,
Awareness and Accessibility) |
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Viable
Product Count (what variety of product
do you offer your customers) |
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SG&A
expense ratio (are your expenses usual
and customary) |
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Market
Share (what are your sales as a
percentage of industry sales) |
Unit Share for the segments in which
you are focused is also a key metric.
Internal Business
Perspective
The Internal Business perspective asks:
"What do we need to correct within our own
business to ensure we deliver the value
propositions the market needs and
expects?" Say a manufacturer wants to be
the low price leader in the market place.
It needs to drive down all internal costs
of production and marketing. To meet this
goal, a manufacturer would need lower
labor and material costs than its
competitors. Even marketing costs would
have to be reduced. Questions about the
Internal Business Perspective need to be
uncompromising. Perhaps the question
should be "What must we be excellent at?"
Or, in the words of Jim Collins, "What
must we be best in the world at?"
In the Comp-XM® context, measures
for the Business Perspective include:
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Operating
Profits (excludes one-time items like
gain/loss on plant downsizing,
inventory liquidations, and early bond
retirement) |
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Contribution Margin (how much do sales
revenues contribute to overhead, are
you making a profit on your products?) |
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Plant
Utilization (do you have enough or too
much plant to support your production
scheduleDays of Working Capital (are
your current assets appropriate for
your current liabilities?) ?) |
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Stock-out
Costs (are you losing sales because
you have not scheduled enough
production?) |
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Inventory
Carrying Costs (did you build more
than you can sell?) |
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Learning
and Growth Perspective |
Nothing in business is static; the
Innovation and Learning perspective asks
"how do we develop and grow in order to
continue to create value?" In 1903 the
economist Joseph Schumpeter coined the
term "the creative destruction of
capital." He was referring to the need for
corporations to regularly tear down much
of what they have built, reconfigure and
move forward with new, different and more
highly developed value propositions. This
process is more necessary to success than
ever. Businesses that fail to "creatively
destroy" will inevitably give way to
business that can.
To achieve the cultural change that
allows "creative destruction,"
manufacturers turn to initiatives that
improve innovation/learning cultures,
redesign/manufacturing processes, and
sales/administration efficiencies.
In the Comp-XM® context, measures
for the Leaning and Growth perspective
include:
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Employee
Turnover (are your employees underpaid
or overworked?) |
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Employee
Productivity (are you investing in
employee recruiting and training,
Quality and 6 Sigma initiatives to
improve productivity?) |
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Sales/Employee (how much sales does
each employee generate?) |
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Assets/Employee (how many assets does
each employee control?) |
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Profits/Employee (how profitable is
each employee?) |
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TQM
Material Reduction (how much
investment are you making in
“Continuous Process Improvement
Systems,” “Vendor/Just in Time” and “6
Sigma” initiatives?) |
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TQM R&D
Reduction (how much investment are you
making in “Concurrent Engineering” and
“Quality Function Deployment Effort”
initiatives?) |
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TQM Admin
Cost Reduction (how much investment
are you making in “Vendor/Just in
Time” and “Benchmarking” initiatives?) |
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TQM Demand
Increase (how much investment are you
making in “Channel Support Systems”
initiatives?) |
Financial Perspective
In this perspective, we ask:
"how is our strategy and tactical
execution translating into profitability
and economic viability?" Some feel there
is actually no need to review financial
measures as they are merely an outcome.
Instead, they argue that if the other
measures of the Balanced Scorecard are all
carefully watched, financial success will
naturally follow. This may be true in some
cases, but it is not always true. For
example, low cost companies might watch
their cash position all but evaporate if
there were not enough buyers for their
products — no matter how efficiently they
are produced.
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Therefore,
the Financial Measures Perspective
asks two distinct questions: |
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Are we
making a profit in the activities in
which we are engaged and therefore
growing the company/increasing
shareholder value? |
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"Do we
have the appropriate levels of cash to
operate both in the short term and the
long term?" |
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