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Chapter 5 Business Performance Management

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Title: Chapter 5 Business Performance Management


1
Chapter 5 Business Performance Management
2
Learning Objectives
  • Understand the all-encompassing nature of
    business performance management (BPM)
  • Understand the closed-loop processes linking
    strategy to execution
  • Describe some of the best practices in planning
    and management reporting
  • Describe the difference between performance
    management and measurement

3
Learning Objectives
  • Understand the role of methodologies in BPM
  • Describe the basic elements of the balanced
    scorecard and Six Sigma methodologies
  • Describe the differences between scorecards and
    dashboards
  • Understand some of the basics of dashboard design
  • Understand the potential uses of business
    activity monitoring (BAM)

4
Business Performance Management (BPM) Overview
  • BPM Defined
  • Business performance management (BPM)
  • A real-time system that alert managers to
    potential opportunities, , impending problems and
    threats, and then empowers them to react through
    models and collaboration

5
Business Performance Management (BPM) Overview
  • BPM and BI Compared
  • BPM is an outgrowth of BI and incorporates many
    of its technologies, applications, and techniques
  • BPM is an enterprisewide strategy that seeks to
    prevent organizations from optimizing local
    business at the expense of overall corporate
    performance
  • BPM is part of the daily work of managers

6
Business Performance Management (BPM) Overview
  • Summary of BPM processes
  • BPM encompasses a closed-loop set of processes
    that link strategy to execution in order to
    optimize business performance, which is achieved
    by
  • Setting goals and objectives
  • Establishing initiatives and plans to achieve
    those goals
  • Monitoring actual performance against the goals
    and objectives
  • Taking corrective action

7
Business Performance Management (BPM) Overview
8
Strategize Where Do We Want to Go?
  • Strategic planning
  • Tasks common to the strategic planning process
  • Conduct a current situation analysis
  • Determine the planning horizon
  • Conduct an environment scan
  • Identify critical success factors
  • Complete a gap analysis
  • Create a strategic vision
  • Develop a business strategy
  • Identify strategic objectives and goals

9
Strategize Where Do We Want to Go?
  • Strategic planning
  • Critical success factors (CSF)
  • Key factors that delineate the things that an
    organization must excel at to be successful in
    its market space
  • Strategic vision
  • A picture or mental image of what the
    organization should look like in the future

10
Strategize Where Do We Want to Go?
  • Strategic planning
  • Strategic objective
  • A broad statement or general course of action
    prescribing targeted directions for an
    organization
  • Strategic goal
  • A quantified objective with a designated time
    period

11
Strategize Where Do We Want to Go?
  • The strategy gap
  • Four sources for the gap between strategy and
    execution
  • Vision
  • People
  • Management
  • Resources

12
Plan How Do We Get There?
  • Operational planning
  • Operational plan
  • Plan that translates an organizations strategic
    objectives and goals into a set of well-defined
    tactics and initiatives, resources requirements,
    and expected results

13
Plan How Do We Get There?
  • Operational planning
  • Tactic-centric plantactics are established to
    meet the objectives and targets established in
    the strategic plan (used by best practices
    organizations
  • Budget-centric plana financial plan or budget is
    established that sums to the targeted financial
    values

14
Plan How Do We Get There?
  • Financial planning and budgeting
  • An organizations strategic objectives and key
    metrics should serve as top-down drivers for the
    allocation of an organizations tangible and
    intangible assets
  • Resource allocations should be carefully aligned
    with the organizations strategic objectives and
    tactics in order to achieve strategic success

15
Monitor How Are We Doing?
  • A comprehensive framework for monitoring
    performance should address two key issues
  • What to monitor
  • How to monitor

16
Monitor How Are We Doing?
17
Monitor How Are We Doing?
  • Pitfalls of variance analysis
  • The vast majority of the exception analysis
    focuses on negative variances when functional
    groups or departments fail to meet their targets
  • Rarely are positive variances reviewed for
    potential opportunities, and rarely does the
    analysis focus on assumptions underlying the
    variance patterns

18
Monitor How Are We Doing?
19
Act and Adjust What Do We Need to Do
Differently?
  • Hackett Groups benchmarking process divides
    planning and management reporting into four
    sub-processes
  • Strategic planning
  • Operational and financial planning
  • Reporting
  • Forecasting

20
Act and Adjust What Do We Need to Do
Differently?
  • Each sub-process is evaluated in terms of five
    dimensions of efficiency and effectiveness
  • Strategic alignment
  • Partnering
  • Process
  • Technology
  • People and organizations

21
Act and Adjust What Do We Need to Do
Differently?
  • The Hackett Groups benchmarking results indicate
    that world class companies
  • Are significantly more efficient than their peers
    at managing costs
  • Focus on operational excellence and experience
    significantly reduced rates of voluntary employee
    turnover
  • Have hybrid sourcing strategies that combine
    shared services and outsourcing

22
Act and Adjust What Do We Need to Do
Differently?
  • The Hackett Groups benchmarking results indicate
    that world class companies
  • Provide management with the tools and training to
    leverage corporate information and to guide
    strategic planning, budgeting, and forecasting
  • Closely align strategic and tactical plans,
    enabling functional areas to contribute more
    effectively to overall business goals

23
Act and Adjust What Do We Need to Do
Differently?
  • Paucity of analysis
  • The overall impact of the planning and reporting
    practices of the average company is that
    management has little time to review results from
    a strategic perspective, decide what should be
    done differently, and act on the revised plans

24
Performance Measurement
  • Performance measurement system
  • A system that assists managers in tracking the
    implementations of business strategy by comparing
    actual results against strategic goals and
    objectives

25
Drawbacks of solely using Financial Data
  • Financial measures are usually reported by
    organizational structures and not by the
    processes that produced them
  • Financial measures are lagging indicators,
    telling us what happened, not why it happened or
    what is likely to happen in the future
  • Financial measures are often the product of
    allocations that are not related to the
    underlying processes that generated them
  • Financial measures are focused on the short term
    and provide little information about the longer
    term

26
Effective Performance Measurement
  • Basic ingredients include
  • Measures should focus on key CSFs
  • Measures should be a mix of past, present, and
    future
  • Measures should balance the needs of all
    stakeholders (shareholders, employees, partners,
    suppliers, etc).
  • Measures should start at the top and flow down.
  • Targets must be based on facts and reality
    arbitrary measures do not work in the long run.

27
BPM Methodologies
  • An effective performance measurement system
    should help
  • Align top-level strategic objectives and
    bottom-level initiatives (goal congruence)
  • Identify opportunities and problems in a timely
    fashion
  • Determine priorities and allocate resources based
    on those priorities.
  • Be flexible to adjust measurements as the
    underlying processes and strategies change

28
BPM Methodologies
  • An effective performance measurement system
    should
  • Delineate responsibilities, understand actual
    performance relative to responsibilities, and
    reward and recognize accomplishments.
  • Identify opportunities to take action to improve
    processes and procedures based on data.
  • Plan and forecast in a reliable and timely
    fashion

29
BPM Methodologies
  • Balanced scorecard (BSC)
  • A performance measurement and management
    methodology that helps translate an
    organizations financial, customer, internal
    process, and learning and growth objectives and
    targets into a set of actionable initiatives

30
BPM Methodologies
  • The meaning of balance
  • BSC is designed to overcome the limitations of
    systems that are financially focused
  • Nonfinancial objectives fall into one of three
    perspectives
  • Customer
  • Internal business process
  • Learning and growth

31
BPM Methodologies
32
BPM Methodologies
  • In BSC, the term balance arises because the
    combined set of measures are supposed to
    encompass indicators that are
  • Financial and nonfinancial
  • Leading and lagging
  • Internal and external
  • Quantitative and qualitative
  • Short term and long term

33
BPM Methodologies
  • Aligning strategies and actions
  • BSC enables an organization to align its actions
    with its overall strategies through a series of
    interrelated steps
  • Identify strategic objectives for each of the
    perspectives
  • Associate measures with each of the strategic
    objectives a mix of quantitative and qualitative
    should be used.
  • Assign targets to the measures.
  • List strategic initiatives to accomplish each of
    the objectives (i.e., responsibilities).
  • Link the various strategic objectives through a
    cause-and-effect diagram called a strategy map

34
BPM Methodologies
  • Strategy map
  • A visual display that delineates the
    relationships among the key organizational
    objectives for all four BSC perspectives

35
BPM Methodologies
36
BPM Methodologies
  • BSC certification
  • BSC Collaborative offers software vendors the
    opportunity to have their applications certified
    against a well-defined set of criteria
  • The application must offer an end user the
    ability to view
  • Strategic objectives from the four perspectives
  • The measures, targets, and initiatives associated
    with each objective
  • The cause-and-effect relationships among the
    objectives

37
BPM Methodologies
  • Six Sigma
  • A performance management methodology aimed at
    reducing the number of defects in a business
    process to as close to zero defects per million
    opportunities (DPMO) as possible

38
BPM Methodologies
  • Six Sigma
  • The DMAIC performance model
  • A closed-loop business improvement model that
    encompasses the steps of defining, measuring,
    analyzing, improving, and controlling a process

39
BPM Methodologies
  • Six Sigma
  • Limitations of Six Sigma
  • The lack of integration among the various Six
    Sigma projects across the enterprise
  • The failure to institute the roles required to
    support the methodology

40
BPM Architecture and Applications
41
BPM Architecture and Applications
  • BPM architecture
  • System architecture
  • The logical and physical design of a system
  • A BPM system needs three components in order to
    contribute to the successful implementation of
    strategy
  • Database tier
  • Application tier
  • Client or user interface

42
BPM Architecture and Applications
  • BPM architecture
  • Database tier designs include
  • Transactional data stores
  • Application data marts
  • Centralized data warehouse

43
BPM Architecture and Applications
  • BPM architecture
  • BPM applications
  • Budgeting, planning, and forecasting
  • Profitability modeling and optimization
  • Scorecard applications
  • Financial consolidation
  • Statutory and financial reporting

44
BPM Architecture and Applications
  • BPM architecture
  • BPM user interface
  • The user interface is the bridge between the BPM
    applications and the end user
  • The Web browser is currently the primary tool for
    accessing information in a BPM system
  • Spreadsheets are a popular alternative when a
    rich user interface is needed to support the
    analytical and computation needs of the user
  • BPM interfaces should provide is guidance to the
    end user

45
BPM Architecture and Applications
46
Performance Dashboards
  • Dashboards and scorecards both provide visual
    displays of important information that is
    consolidated and arranged on a single screen so
    that information can be digested at a single
    glance and easily explored

47
Performance Dashboards
48
Performance Dashboards
  • Dashboards versus scorecards
  • Performance dashboards
  • Visual display used to monitor operational
    performance
  • Performance scorecards
  • Visual display used to chart progress against
    strategic and tactical goals and targets

49
Performance Dashboards
  • Dashboards versus scorecards
  • Performance dashboard is a multilayered
    application built on a business intelligence and
    data integration infrastructure that enables
    organizations to measure, monitor, and manage
    business performance more effectively (Eckerson)

50
Performance Dashboards
  • Dashboards versus scorecards
  • Three types of performance dashboards
  • Operational dashboards
  • Tactical dashboards
  • Strategic dashboards

51
Performance Dashboards
  • Dashboard design
  • The fundamental challenge of dashboard design is
    to display all the required information on a
    single screen, clearly and without distraction,
    in a manner that can be assimilated quickly"
    (Few, 2005)

52
Performance Dashboards
  • What to look for in a dashboard
  • Use of visual components (e.g., charts,
    performance bars, sparklines, gauges, meters,
    stoplights) to highlight, at a glance, the data
    and exceptions that require action.
  • Transparent to the user, meaning that they
    require minimal training and are extremely easy
    to use
  • Combine data from a variety of systems into a
    single, summarized, unified view of the business

53
Performance Dashboards
  • What to look for in a dashboard
  • Enable drill-down or drill-through to underlying
    data sources or reports
  • Present a dynamic, real-world view with timely
    data refreshes, enabling the end user to stay
    up-to-date with any recent changes in the
    business.
  • Require little, if any, customized coding to
    implement, deploy, and maintain

54
Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)
  • Business activity monitoring (BAM)
  • A real-time system that alert managers to
    potential opportunities, impending problems, and
    threats, and then empowers them to react through
    models and collaboration

55
Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)
  • BAM depends on a wide range of technologies
    working in concert including
  • ETL technology
  • Process modeling technology
  • Rules engines
  • Messaging servers
  • E-mail in-boxes, portals, dashboards, and Web
    services

56
Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)
  • Benefits of BAM
  • Real-time data access in a usable format
  • Access to tools to collaborate and model the
    problem, leading to a quick solution

57
Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)
  • BAM Issues
  • Executives fail to consider the readiness of
    technology or of the business processes they want
    to monitor
  • Change management issues are paramount
  • Effective BAM requires working closely with the
    business units to identify the key indicators
    (CSF) and analytical techniques that provide
    reliable early warnings of impending issues
  • Executives must let the responsible managers on
    the frontlines deal with their problems and
    issues in a timely manner before reacting
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