Title: PERFORMANCE MEASURES
 1PERFORMANCE MEASURES - Chapter 11 
 2"We want to change the competitive landscape by 
being not just better than our competitors, but 
by taking quality to a whole new level.  Jack 
Welch
Performance measures should aim at the long-term 
and should be forward-thinking initiative 
designed to fundamentally change the way 
corporations do business. It is not a 
post-mortem of what happened but a step towards 
how we do better in the future. 
 3Why measure performance?
- Objectives for for-profit organizations 
- Measure changes to stakeholders wealth put in 
 simple terms, the value of a firm.
- Reward an employee for contributing to increase 
 in firm value
 Issue How would a firm measure an individuals 
 contribution to value creation and what 
purpose does it serve?  
 4The value concept(Results control)
- The performance measurement concept indicates 
 that employees can increase the value of the firm
 by
- Increasing the size of a firms future cash 
 flows,
- By accelerating the receipt of those cash flows, 
 or
- By making them more certain or less risky.
If you are a CEO or CFO, how would you increase 
the cash flows? 
 5Measure the right things
- An ideal performance management system is one 
 that energizes the people in an organization to
 focus effort on
-  Improving things that really matter  
- One that gives people the information and freedom 
 that they need to realize
- Their potential within their own roles and that 
 aligns their contribution with the success of the
 enterprise.
6Then, why do performance measures fail?
- Root cause complexity - details, details, 
 details
- Staff who collect data get frustrated. 
- Follow What has to be done" (WHTBD).
7Measure What Matters
- Easy to say but difficult to do. 
- Find out what is valued both by customers and 
 stakeholders
- Examples process new product 
- development, measure time to market. 
-  process customer service, measure customer 
 retention.
-  process treasury management, measure cost of 
 service vs. value created.
8Keep it simple
- Performance Measures must be 
-  simple to operate simple to understand 
-  simple to action 
-  Ex If a sales person spends too much time on 
 call reporting, they have less time for making
 calls.
9-  Let us now examine how real world firms measure 
 performance and we will, later, find out whether
 these measures conform to the concepts we just
 discussed.
10Most organization measure performance using 
accounting measures  Net profits, gross margin, 
ROA, ROE, etc. 
 11Why do organizations choose accounting data as 
measures of performance?
- Accounting profits and returns can be measured on 
 a timely basis relatively precisely and
 objectively.
- Because they are timely, precise, and objective, 
 employees would react positively.
- The short term measures keep employees on check.
12Why accounting measures of performanceare not 
adequate?
- Accounting measures are lagged indicators. 
- Dependent on the choice of measurement method.
13Accounting can create management myopia
- Accounting is short term earnings or returns. 
- Why focusing on the short term is inappropriate? 
- Why would this short-term focus affect long-term 
 relationships?
14The Changing Business Environment
-  Are historical accounting measures adequate for 
 todays business environment that transcend
 global boundaries?
15Performance Measurements for the new era
- In the global, technology-driven, decentralized 
 environment, measuring
- Financial performance, while important, is not 
 adequate.
- Even if less than precise, other measures of 
 performance are required.
- These measures should be capable of measuring 
 multiple attributes of an organization.
16We need a balanced set of Performance Measures 
 We need both lead and lag indicators 
 17Lead indicators as value drivers
- Many non-financial indicators can serve as lead 
 indicators in certain settings.
- Common examples are 
- Market share, backlog (book-to-bill ratio), new 
 product introductions, new product development
 lead times, product quality, customer
 satisfaction, employee morale, personnel
 development, inventory turnover, bad debt ratio,
 or safety
18Lag Indicators
- In contrast to lead indicators, lag indicators 
 are measures that point to earlier plans and
 their execution.
- Financial performances are lag indicators. 
- Many times, financial performances are too late 
 to affect future products and services.
- Therefore, we need multiple measures that include 
 both financial and non-financial measures.
19Comprehensive Performance Measures must address
- Financial performance 
- Customer satisfaction 
- Internal business process developments and 
- Allow an organization to learn and grow.
20Financial Performance can be measured by
- ROA ROE, EPS etc. These measure are essential to 
 summarize the economic consequences of strategy.
21Customer-related measures
- Managers must identify the customer and market 
 segments in which the business desires to
 compete.
- Develop measures to track the business units 
 ability to create satisfied and loyal customers.
22Customer-based measures
- Product and Service Attributes
Image and Reputation 
 23Internal Business Process Measures
- Identify the critical internal processes for 
 which the organization must excel in implementing
 its strategy.
-  IBP dimension enable the business unit to 
- deliver the value propositions that will attract 
 and retain customers in targeted market segments,
 and
- satisfy shareholder expectations regarding 
 financial returns.
24Internal Business Process Measures
Cost Measures 
 25Learning and Growth measures
-  Learning and growth identifies the 
 infrastructure an organization must build to
 create long-term growth and improvement.
-  Growth comes from people, systems and 
 organizational procedures.
26A performance concept that combines everything 
that we discusses so far is
Six Sigma 
 27The Six Sigma
- Is a business process that enables companies to 
 increase profits dramatically by streamlining
 operations, improving quality, and eliminating
 defects or mistakes in everything a company does.
 
- The objective is change the process so that 
 defects are never produced in the first place.
28The objectives of Six Sigma
- To satisfy the customer by changing internal 
 performance and processes.
- To enable better performance by better design 
- To improve the quality of supplies and other 
 operational processes.
- Manage the costs 
29Six Sigma points out
- You don't know what you don't know You can't do 
 what you don't know
- You don't know until you measure 
- You don't measure what you don't value 
- You don't value what you don't measure 
30Difference between TQM and Six Sigma
- TQM focuses on improvement in individual 
 operations with unrelated processes takes many
 years before all operations within a given
 process are improved.
- Six Sigma focuses on making improvements in all 
 operations within a process, producing results
 more rapidly and effectively.