1. When explaining about the balanced scorecard
(BSC) mainly it highlights two components. One is the “balanced” and the other
“scorecard”. The structure of the balanced scorecard emphasized on how to think
about the organization holistically. According to Robert S. Kaplan and David P.
Norton we have to look in to the organizations in four different ways, not like
different departments, but in a balanced perspective. Balanced Scorecard can be
applied to any kind of business, public or private sector, large or small. The
BSC focuses on clear measurable targets in four key perspectives. They are the
financial perspective, customer perspective, internal business process
perspective, and the knowledge and growth or the people perspective.
2. So we have to think about these four
perspectives as a strategy framework of the organization in which the strategic
plan is effective, integrated and holistic. These perspectives can be
visualized as a strategy map of the strategic plan. Then about the scorecard,
which is made in relations with the balanced strategic plan of the
organization. Simply the scorecard can be divided in to four categories as in
the example below.
Goal
|
Measure
|
Target
|
Initiatives
|
Eg: Improve customer satisfaction
loyalty by 30%
|
·
Customer survey score (lag indicator)
·
Delivery time (lead indicator – a driver)
|
·
30%
·
Less than 3 days
|
|
And the goal will include the balance of all four perspectives.
3. The perspectives map out to view the organization’s
vision and strategy. This in turn shows a formal or informal strategy map,
which is the organizational strategy based on the four balanced scorecard
perspectives. Within each perspective we can identify small number of strategic
objectives, setting targets to the objectives and then measuring against the
targets continuously to determine success or failure. Measurement is undertaken
through performance measures, which should be small, easily understood and
acted upon quickly. Performance measures should contain both leading and
trailing measures. According to the authors we need to concentrate more on the
trailing measures, because they are easy to measure and they are accurate. But
leading measures are harder to identify but they are the only measures that can
help people to succeed. It is better to focus on a small number of things that
will influence change. A simple case of the law of diminishing returns it easy
to succeed in few easy strategies than more strategies which are difficult.
4. The balance scorecard has become an extremely
powerful tool to ensure alignment through strategy maps, improve communication
through common language and lead to a better performing organization. So to
answer the question “can business operate with a balanced scorecard?”,
according to the Kaplan and Norton the managers of the organization are like
pilots and navigating today’s enterprises through complex competitive
environments is at least complicated by dealing with different instruments
similar to an airplane. These instruments are like the four perspectives as
described above. And thus have to be perfectly balanced to prepare the correct
scorecard for performance management.
5. Financial and Non-financial Measures together
can be a balanced scorecard. But according to many consultants the basic
rational for a BSC is when they supplement traditional financial measures with
non-financial measures. According to Robert S. Kaplan and David P. Norton in
observing and building more than 100 scorecards revealed that the financial and
non-financial measures on a BSC should be derived from the business-unit’s
unique strategy.
6. The four perspectives of the scorecard permit a
balance between short-term and long-term objectives, between desired outcomes
and the performance drivers of those outcomes, and between hard objective
measures and softer, more subjective measures. All these four perspectives in
terms of the strategic measures can be described using a diagram as shown
below.
7.
The financial perspective. The financial perspective looks
at financial objectives and measures and also says how we are looking at our
shareholders. The financial performance measures define the long-term
objectives of the business unit.
8.
The Customer perspective. It looks at the customer satisfaction,
which is how do our customers see us? And what value we provide to our
customers in order to achieve our financial goals. The customer perspective
typically includes several generic measures of the successful outcomes from a
well-formulated and implemented strategy. The generic outcome measures include
customer satisfaction, customer retention, new customer acquisition, customer
profitability, and market and account share in target segments.
9.
The internal processes perspective. This focuses on how well the business
is running, which in order to achieve our financial goals and to add value to
our customers, and then what internal process must we execute to achieve the
customer and financial perspectives. In the internal business process perspective,
executives identify the critical internal processes in which the organization
must excel. The internal perspective reveals two differences between
traditional and the BSC approaches to performance measurements. The BSC
approach identified an entirely new process at which the organization must
excel to meet customer and financial objectives.
10. The people (knowledge and growth)
perspective. This
looks at people, their skills, training, leadership, and knowledge the
organization should have in order to drive the internal processes to provide
value to the customers, and to reach to our financial goals. And also systems
and organizational procedures.
11. When summarizing the balanced scorecard it is a
simple tool for measuring performance which links multiple scorecard measures
to a single strategy. Head of organization can sit with the other department
heads and discuss about the organization’s strategy and performance in all four
perspectives.