I'm a Swedish-based Lean consultant, and the owner of the free World-Class-Manufacturing.com web site.

In short, I teach key descision makers how to get a cost-effective and robust production.

Contact Oskar Olofsson





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Balanced Scorecards



What is a Balanced Scorecard?

A Balanced Scorecard (BSC) is a strategic management tool that measures how well the business activities are aligned with the organization’s strategic vision.  It balances financial results with non-financial performance metrics.  The novelty of the Balanced Scorecard is the addition of non-financial metrics.

Without a balanced scorecard, a business tends to be judged only by short-term financial results.  These may hide serious problems.  An example would be: reduce short-term costs by deferring all maintenance expenditures.  If the balanced scorecard were to include a question probing “percentage of maintenance completed on schedule”, this would be discovered.

It is also a management system – not just a measurement tool – in that it helps to clarify vision and to translate strategy into activity.

Overview

The following steps describe, at a high level, how to build a balanced scorecard:

To implement a Balanced Scorecard system:

It is rare to have more than 20 metrics in a BSC; only about a quarter should be financial.

The BSC should answer 4 questions:

Barriers to Successful Strategy

There seem to be four barriers to successfully reaching strategic objectives:

Hurdling over the Barriers

The BSC helps to overcome all four barriers:

Making a Strong Start

The BSC starts with strategy, not with detailed performance objectives.

It is tempting to say, “We know that our strategy is to be profitable and to grow the business.  So let’s set our BSC goals around profit and revenue; increasing our customer base; oh, yes, let’s throw in growing the average order quantity.  That should do it”.

No, it does not.  The above paragraph does not even begin to cover the “customer” situation.  Should the company set targets on customer retention?  Should it use customer satisfaction scores as an early indicator of retention problems?  Would it be wise to track customer referrals versus gaining new customers from cold calls?

This also did not address resources.  How will the company increase customer satisfaction?  By reducing defects?  By reducing late deliveries?  By reducing standard order-to-ship times?  How will the company make these improvements?  Is there a budget for kaizen (continuous improvement) or for other, more specific improvement programs?

Final Motivation

An organization that only uses financial results for guidance is like driving a car by looking at the rear-view mirror – you know where you have been, but you are not planning for the next curve.  The Balanced Scorecard system forces the organization to look forward, and later checks how well the curve has been followed.








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