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Measurement and managementHow
many people have said: "Our organisations are being run by accountants"? Don't
get me wrong, as an owner of a small business I care about cash flow, margins and
sustainability. But financial measures are no more than 'keeping score'. They are
dangerous when used to manage:
A customer service organisation's policy was
to reduce the cost of call-handling in its European service operations. It was easy to
compare the costs of call handling in different locations and the decision was made to
move all call handling to the cheapest location. The decision ignored what was happening
between the organisation and its customers. Regional differences in customers, their
demands and language only surfaced when the calls were re-routed. Service got worse,
fire-fighting ensued, costs rose.
Managing costs can lead to poor decisions
because costs don't account for what's going on; they only tell you what happened and then
only from a particular and unhelpful point of view.
What do most managers do if their call-handling
is getting lousy service ratings? Set new targets. "Answer the 'phones in x
seconds", "Take more calls per man per day". Would these admonitions lead
to improvement? It is unlikely. The people who do the work, who know more about what is
going on still have the same work to do. To survive in such an environment, people learn
to 'cheat', to do anything they have to do to make their numbers and avoid being paid
attention to.
By translating measures into targets managers
frequently make things worse. Furthermore, when managers manage with budgets they do not
learn and thus performance does not improve. It is not that cost accounting data are wrong
or incorrect, it is that they are used for purposes they can never satisfy; they are
insufficient for the performance of the management's task. And it is management who must
shoulder the blame, their people being governed by the measures management pay attention
to:
People do what you count, not necessarily
what counts
A high-tech organisation had a repair shop.
The performance of the people who worked there was measured by the volume of completed
work. What did they do? They repaired the easy things first - anything to achieve good
measures.
The repaired equipment was shipped to branches,
where management performance was measured by profit. As equipment on the shelves
represented a cost to them, they would scrap all the repaired items they could see no need
for. The cost of unnecessary repairs was extraordinary.
But the measurement system stopped anybody
looking at it this way. What was the purpose of this repair shop? Make their numbers. What
should have been the purpose? Repair what customers need. If they had only repaired what
would be used, and did so 'just in time', costs would have fallen and service would have
improved.
Why do we use accounting data? Because we
believe that managers need to be able to plan, provide financial reports to give feedback
versus the plan and thus be in control. You may be getting the impression that such
numbers don't lead to much control at all. This is true.
Management by the numbers leads to
sub-optimisation
Managers should be cautioned against 'managing
by the numbers'. It leads to three forms of sub-optimisation: higher costs, worse service
and lower morale. It is true that without financial resources an organisation cannot work
but the debate managers need to have is whether or not management by the numbers creates
value in terms of decision-making.
Managing by the numbers leads to management
of costs without understanding the causes of costs. While financial
measures are necessary - you have to know the score - the better measures for managing are
those that tell you about the costs of end-to-end processes and the causes of costs. To
make a start, we encourage managers to establish measures that relate to purpose.

What should have been the purpose of the repair
shop? Provide spares 'just in time' to field engineers. Measuring this would have ensured
that only those items needed for customers were repaired and, consequently, there would
have been less waste. To optimise the repair shop managers needed to be able to predict
the demand for spares (by type of spare) and then work to cut time between demand and
supply.
What should have been the purpose of call
handling? To respond to customers' demands. Any call-handling organisation should be
thought about in terms of helping the customer 'pull value' from the organisation. If and
when that is achieved, service improves and costs fall. To make a start, managers need
reliable measures of the types of customer calls coming in. Next they need to work on what
the 'value' is for the customer for each type of call and then they can get into
understanding how their organisation currently responds to each type. When managers learn
to strip away unnecessary work, only doing the 'value' work, service improves and costs
fall.
Cost-based measures are incompatible with
quality, 'just-in-time' and world class operations. Measurement must support
ever-increasing excellence. Excellence begins with being able to distinguish between
traditional thinking and world class thinking:
| Traditional thinking |
|
World class thinking |
| Top-down |
Perspective |
Outside-in |
| Targets and standards; related to budget |
Measures |
Value, process and flow; related to purpose |
| Separated from work |
Decision-making |
Integrated with work |
Decision-making and control
In most organisations budgetary measures are an
instrument of management to control and evaluate people who work for them. Measures are
turned into targets or standards that people are told to meet, regardless of whether the
organisation is capable of meeting them. When the measure is beyond the organisation's
capability, people will do anything they can to avoid grief. This is not bad behaviour, it
is survival. If the measure is well within or below the organisation's capability, people
are encouraged to relax - it is sometimes dangerous to be seen to be over target.
The paradox is that managers gain greater
control of their organisations when they give up managing with financial measures and
instead ensure that people who do the work have measures related to purpose in their
hands. The measures must make sense to the people who do the work, such that they are
valued and can be acted upon. Measurement is an essential pre-requisite of improvement and
innovation. Without measures, people act in a vacuum; with measures, they can be freed to
experiment and learn. As quality improves, productivity improves.
In world class organisations, managers spend
less time reporting and more time leading action. Measures driven by the requirement for
periodic reports become less relevant to promoting long-term organisational health.
Management effectiveness depends on integration
of purpose, methods and measures, the foundations for learning and improvement. It starts
with being prepared to change the way you think.
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