平衡计分卡框架


     衡计分卡

    Bringing the Balanced Scorecard to Life The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework

    White Paper
    By Charles Bloomfield
    Insightformation Inc



    Published May 2002
    For the latest information please see ssbi

    Abstract
    This paper describes the Microsoft® approach to developing and implementing a Balanced Scorecard for enterprise performance management It presents basic information on the Balanced Scorecard performance management methodology and identifies key business issues that must be addressed in developing and deploying a balanced scorecard The paper then presents the Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework (BSCF)—a comprehensive set of techniques tools and best practices to speed scorecard implementation using toolsets with which organizations are familiar

    An extensive body of research and literature describing the Balanced Scorecard exists That body of knowledge is constantly being expanded by The Balanced Scorecard Collaborative Balanced Scorecard Institute various consulting organizations software companies and client organizations This paper cannot comprehensively cover such a complex topic or reflect accurately many of the nuances of scorecard development and implementation Instead it presents a basic conceptual overview of the Balanced Scorecard Interested readers are encouraged to use the bibliography presented at the end of this paper as a guide to more detailed information



    Contents
    Executive Summary 1
    Introduction 2
    About the Balanced Scorecard 3
    Background and History 3
    Empowering the Knowledge Worker 4
    Elements of the Balanced Scorecard 4
    Critical Success Factors for BSC Development 8
    Common Pitfalls 9
    Automating the Balanced Scorecard 10
    The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework 12
    Facets of the Framework 12
    Conclusion 22
    Selected Bibliography 23
    Useful Web Sites 23

    Executive Summary
    Traditional performance measures are insufficient to gauge performance and guide organizations in today’s rapidly changing complex economic landscape Organizations need to link performance measurement to strategy and must measure performance in ways that both promote positive future results and reflect past performance
    The Balanced Scorecard has developed over the last eleven years as a powerful way to implement strategy and continuously monitor strategic performance Creating a strategy focused organization (the phrase coined by the founders of the Balanced Scorecard methodology) is a significant challenging culture change for many organizations Success in achieving this change requires
    · Consistent executive support and involvement
    · Education communication and visibility of the strategy and measurements of its effectiveness throughout the organization
    · Constant feedback loops so that strategy is an everyday consideration
    · Tools to enable nontechnical users to understand the key drivers of the measures
    · Translation of the strategy to operational terms so that alignment to strategy and implementation of it occur at all levels of an organization
    Organizations that have successfully implemented the Balanced Scorecard have achieved remarkable transformations in their financial performance in many cases vaulting to the top ranks in their industry groups
    Many aspects of Balanced Scorecard development and deployment depend on effective use of technology to be successful Numerous software packages have been developed to help automate the Balanced Scorecard but it is very difficult to deliver the needed capabilities in a single software package Therefore the Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework has been developed to allow organizations to
    · Develop and deploy a scorecard economically using an existing infrastructure
    · Manage and display the data and knowledge pertinent to Balanced Scorecards
    · Facilitate analysis of measures so that prompt corrective action can take place
    The framework provides a comprehensive flexible costeffective way to deploy the Balanced Scorecard and deliver superior returns on people processes customers and technologies
    Introduction
    How do we communicate strategy through a complex multifaceted decentralized global organization How do we align our organization and minimize superfluous activities so that we’re all working efficiently to the same ends How do we measure the effectiveness of our strategy and its implementation How do we promote a culture of agility to respond to the rapidly changing business climate we face
    As business leaders wrestle with these questions each day they confront the reality that If you can’t measure it you can’t manage it〞 In other words effective performance management requires accurate performance measurement
    Leaders also understand that performance measurement itself is not enough The value of measurement is that it identifies where action should be taken So effective performance measurement systems must be able to
    · Accurately reflect a business situation
    · Guide employees to take the right actions in situations where action is required
    · Gauge the effectiveness of those actions
    A performance measurement system then is a closed loop system that embodies situational analysis of information corrective actions and result evaluation
    The Balanced Scorecard is a proven performance measurement system It is a comprehensive strategic performance management system and methodology It is a framework for defining refining and communicating strategy for translating strategy to operational terms and for measuring the effectiveness of strategy implementation
    This paper briefly describes the history evolution and key elements of the Balanced Scorecard It then identifies the critical success factors for a Balanced Scorecard implementation Finally it presents the Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework (BSCF) as a way to leverage a corporation’s existing investments and capabilities to develop and deploy a scorecard in a timely costeffective scalable manageable and reliable way
    About the Balanced Scorecard
    Background and History
    The Balanced Scorecard came into being in the late 1980s and early 1990s as a method to help companies manage their increasingly complex and multifaceted business environments
    Corporations then were faced with a number of challenges Market share in many industries was vanishing at an alarming rate due to globalization liberalization of trade technology innovation and domestic quality issues The economy was in transition from productdriven to servicedriven The composition of the workforce was changing and companies’ workforce needs were changing
    In spite of all these changes most businesses still relied on traditional measures of performance based on a centuriesold accounting model which failed to accurately reflect the true health (and future prospects) of an organization The need for better information to respond to rapidly changing market conditions was obvious
    In response to these stresses and the shortcomings of traditional financial performance measures Professor Robert Kaplan and David Norton began to shape the concept of the Balanced Scorecard during a research project with 12 companies in the late 1980s They understood the limitations of relying too much on purely financial measures They realized that many of the ways to improve shortterm financial performance—such as reducing headcount and cutting expenses for training R&D marketing and customer service—might be detrimental to the future financial health of the company Conversely companies might appear to be doing poorly from a financial perspective because they were investing in the core capabilities that could drive superior future performance Furthermore they perceived the limitation of reliance on lagging indicators that convey past performance results but do not generally provide a reliable indication of future performance
    Kaplan and Norton also perceived that employees throughout a company often did not understand how their role related to strategy and financial measures leading employees to feel powerless to impact the things that were being measured
    So Kaplan and Norton introduced the Balanced Scorecard as a way for companies to measure and report performance in a way that balanced
    · Multiple perspectives
    · Both leading and lagging indicators
    · Inwardfacing measures like productivity and also outwardfacing measures like customer loyalty
    The results of their initial research work with 12 companies were published in 1992 in the Harvard Business Review Fueled by the positive response to their initial article and successful consulting work Kaplan and Norton continued to develop the concept of the Balanced Scorecard and published the book The Balanced Scorecard in 1996 By that time the focus of the Balanced Scorecard had evolved from an emphasis on measures and reporting to a methodology for promoting strategic management of the organization
    As more and more organizations began to embrace and experiment with the Balanced Scorecard concept a growing number of tools and techniques emerged building on many of the initial concepts In 2000 Norton and Kaplan released their second book The Strategy Focused Organization which describes that evolution to a broader concept of enterprise strategic management
    The Balanced Scorecard is a dynamic methodology and the understanding of its potential deepens as Kaplan and Norton proceed with innovative work such as developing scorecards for support functions like Human Resources and Information Technology (IT)
    Empowering the Knowledge Worker
    Today companies face the same pressures as 10 years ago but in a radically different economic landscape A new pressure then barely on the horizon has revolutionized the way many businesses must operate—the Internet The Internet’s impact is ubiquitous Among other impacts it has lowered entry barriers to many markets empowered the customer with information and choice brought new distribution channels and spawned entire industry sectors around activities such as customer relationship management supply chain integration security and the marketing of information
    The economy has transitioned to what some call the Age of Information—an economy in which Gross Domestic Product is increasingly dominated by services In this service economy the knowledge worker has replaced the production assembly line worker as a key factor of production Knowledge workers use and process data or information and in collaboration with other workers create knowledge and take action thereby increasing value
    This value creation process is predominantly intangible in nature In 1998 over 75 of the market value of the S&P 500 was captured in intangible assets Intangible assets like any other asset are factors of production that should be used to generate value These intangible factors of production are used in ways that may be many times removed from revenue generation or cost reduction they are frequently indirect contributors to production of a product or service For example IT investments involve extensive use of knowledge workers and capital and are a powerful service facilitator with significant impacts on costs and internal and external customer relationships but rarely are there direct correlations between IT projects and increased revenue or reduced cost
    So organizational financial performance is increasingly contingent on generating returns on intangible factors of production Therefore organizations must apply the knowledge worker’s expertise in ways that serve a defined corporate strategy to achieve a return on that worker It follows that organizations must both empower the knowledge worker and measure their performance in relation to strategy
    However organizations are finding it extremely difficult to implement strategy and measure effectiveness of that strategy According to Fortune Magazine only 10 of the strategies that are effectively created get effectively implemented A related finding by Norton and Kaplan is that without the Balanced Scorecard 85 of executive teams spend less than 1 hour per month discussing strategy So even when companies invest a lot of time in refining their values mission statements and strategic initiatives those ideas rarely trickle down to truly transform an organization and the average employee does not have a clear understanding how his or her actions influence ultimate performance measures such as stock price or earnings per share
    The Balanced Scorecard is a proven way to align an organization with strategy harness knowledge workers’ efforts to strategic ends and ultimately deliver improved financial returns on employees technology investments business processes and customer relationships
    Elements of the Balanced Scorecard
    The Balanced Scorecard is an approach to describing and communicating strategies It is also a way of selecting performance measures that will drive a unique organizational strategy Dr Norton describes the Balanced Scorecard as follows
    A balanced scorecard is a system of linked objectives measures targets and initiatives which collectively describe the strategy of an organization and how the strategy can be achieved It can take something as complicated and frequently nebulous as strategy and translate it into something that is specific and can be understood〞
    Perspectives
    Kaplan and Norton’s Balanced Scorecard describes strategy and performance management from multiple perspectives The classic Balanced Scorecard has four perspectives

    Perspective
    Key Question
    Financial
    To succeed financially how should we appear to our stakeholders
    Customer
    To achieve our vision how should we appear to our customers
    Process
    To satisfy our customers and shareholders at what business processes must we excel
    Learning and Growth
    To achieve our vision how will we sustain our ability to change and improve

    Each perspective can be explained by a key question with which it is associated The answers to each key question become the objectives associated with that perspective and performance is then judged by the progress to achieving these objectives There is an explicit causal relationship between the perspectives good performance in the Learning and Growth objectives generally drives improvements in the Internal Business Process objectives which should improve the organization in the eyes of the customer which ultimately leads to improved financial results
    Though there are four basic perspectives proposed it is important to understand that these perspectives reflect a unique organizational strategy So the perspectives and key questions should be amended and supplemented as necessary to capture that strategy For example a nonprofit or government organization would not have the same perspectives as a forprofit corporation
    Objectives and Measures
    Objectives are desired outcomes The progress toward attaining an objective is gauged by one or more measures As with perspectives there are causal relationships between objectives In fact the causal relationship is defined by dependencies among objectives So it is critical to set measurable strategically relevant consistent timedelineated objectives
    Measures are the indicators of how a business is performing relative to its strategic objectives Measures or metrics are quantifiable performance statements As such they must be
    · Relevant to the objective and strategy
    · Placed in context of a target to be reached in an identified time frame
    · Capable of being trended
    · Owned by a designated person or group who has the ability to impact those measures
    An organization is likely to have a variety of types of measures Some will be calculated from underlying data Others will be aggregated index measures that assign different weights to multiple contributing measures Some are frequently measured and others may only be measured on a quarterly or annual basis
    It is important to balance lagging indicators—which includes most financial measures—with leading indicators—areas where good performance will lead to improved results in the future
    It is also important to balance internal measures such as cost reduction injury incident rates and training programs with external measures like market share supplier performance and customer satisfaction
    Initiatives
    An initiative is a change process or activity designed to achieve one or more objectives The initiative is what will move a measure toward its target value Initiatives may be large or small in scope They generally are owned by a person or group and are managed like projects
    Strategy Maps Strategic Themes and Matrices
    Since even a relatively simple scorecard can contain an overwhelming amount of information several tools have been developed to help communicate large complex quantities of information in simple easily understood ways
    Strategy Maps
    Mapping a strategy is an important way to evaluate and make visually explicit an organization’s perspectives objectives and measures and the causal linkages between them Organizing objectives in each defined perspective and mapping the strategic relationships among them serves as a way to evaluate objectives to make sure they are consistent and comprehensive in delivering the strategy
    The strategy map is a visual way to communicate to different parts of the organization how they fit into the overall strategy It facilitates cascading a balanced scorecard through an organization because it can be created at different levels of an organization and each level’s map can be viewed for alignment with the overall strategy map

    Figure 1 Example Strategy Map

    Strategic Themes
    The strategy map in Figure 1 shows a strategic theme The strategic theme is a grouping of similar objectives and their measures across perspectives It helps make a complex strategy more understandable by organizing and categorizing objectives and measures It also reduces the amount of information and number of causal linkages that need to be drawn on a strategy map A complex organization might have several strategic themes with objectives and measures designed to gauge the effectiveness of the organization in pursuing those themes
    Strategy Matrix
    The strategy matrix is another useful visualization and summarization tool It displays objectives measures targets and initiatives in one table The strategy matrix can point to areas where scorecard elements might be out of balance For example there may be a cluster of initiatives around one objective while other objectives have no supporting initiatives This can be useful when prioritizing spending for projects Typically the strategy matrix will reflect a strategic theme so one matrix is prepared for each theme

     
    Strategic Theme Smart Profitable Expansion
     
    Objective
    Measure
    Target
    Initiative
    Financial
    Increase of revenue from new stores
    Revenue from stores opened in last 3 years
    > 30 year 1
    > 50 year 3
    Marketing to new target markets
    Avg # of days to breakeven
    < 180 days year 1
    < 130 days year 3
    Operations review
    Site selection
    Increase sales efficiency
    Revenue per FTE

    > X year 1
    > Y year 3
    Selfservice checkout pilot
    Customer
    Acquire new locations
    Avg # daily customers
    > X in first 6 mos
    > Y in first year
    > Z by year 3
    Local marketingPR campaigns
    # of repeat customers
    > X in first 6 mos
    > Y in first year
    > Z by year 3
    Customer loyalty program
    Avg customer purchase
    > X year 1
    > Y year 3
    Coupon program
    Instore promotions & classes
    Process
    Factbased site selection
    Days lag between market selection and site acquisition
    < 90 days year 1
    < 70 days year 3
    GIS mapping
    National brokerage contract
    Streamline development process
    Project duration site acquisition to opening
    < 365 days year 1
    < 300 days year 3
    Standardize designbuild processes
    stores open on schedule
    > 93 year 1
    > 95 year 2
    Webbased project management
    Learning & Growth
    Use business intelligence systems
    eligible employees trained
    >90 year 1
    >99 year 2

    Inhouse system training
    Integrated knowledge management
    # paper forms used
    < 200 year 1
    < 100 year 2
    < 5 year 3
    Corporate digital nervous system
    Figure 2 Example Strategy Matrix (for the Strategy Map shown in Figure 1)


    Critical Success Factors for BSC Development
    Extensive research and evaluation of hundreds of Balanced Scorecard implementations has been done by the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative (the consulting organization established by the founders of the Balanced Scorecard methodology) and various other practitioners A consistent theme emerges from this body of knowledge the Balanced Scorecard is a cultural change initiative Successful organizations use the Balanced Scorecard to create a culture of continual focus on strategy formulation measurement and revision They create what Kaplan and Norton call a strategy focused organization
    The key elements in creating this strategy focused organization are as follows
    1 Mobilize change through executive leadership Building a strategy focused organization usually involves significant culture change Organizational change is an evolutionary process Consistent executive leadership involvement active sponsorship and support are critical to maintaining momentum through the challenges that organizations inevitably encounter
    The executive team must be in agreement on strategies and must drive the scorecard process for it to be successful Often executives are too busy to be intimately involved in the process so a crossfunctional team is formed This can be successful if
    · The executive team has first participated in facilitated sessions at which the fundamental mission vision and strategic themes are established
    · The team has the ear of the leadership and can readily escalate issues to executives for resolution
    · Executives continue to communicate their support for and involvement in the Balanced Scorecard initiative
    2 Make strategy a continual process A strategic focus is not maintained if strategy formulation becomes a onetime activity Feedback loops are needed to constantly focus attention on and reevaluate the strategy and the measures To support strategy evaluation tools for reporting and analysis should be deployed to enable analysis of the factors influencing the measures The budget process also is often linked to strategy and in some cases the Balanced Scorecard replaces traditional budget formulation as a way to allocate funds
    3 Make strategy everyone’s job This is done through strategic education and awareness and by cascading the scorecard down through the organization so that business units departments—or even individuals—create their own scorecards The linkages to strategy are explicitly defined at all levels This helps departments and individuals understand and find new ways to support the strategy of the organization It also helps ensure that employees at all levels are being measured and compensated in ways that support that strategy
    4 Align the organization to the strategy This involves evaluating current organizational structures lines of reporting and policies and procedures to ensure that they are consistent with the strategy It can include realignment of business units or redefining the roles of different support units to make sure that each part of the organization is lined up to best support the strategy
    5 Translate the strategy into operational terms Tools like the strategy maps cascaded scorecards and strategy grids are used to integrate strategy with the operational tasks that employees perform daily This ensures that tasks are done in ways that support the strategies
    Common Pitfalls
    When Kaplan and Norton’s second book The Strategy Focused Organization was published the Harvard Business Review hailed the Balanced Scorecard as one of the most significant contributions to management practice in the last 75 years However despite its wellpublicized successes the majority of organizations that adopt a scorecard fail to reap the rewards they expect In researching these disappointments some common themes stand out
    1 Measures that do not focus on strategy A common problem is that an organization will adopt some new nonfinancial measures but fail to align the measures adequately with strategy According to Dr Norton
    The biggest mistake that organizations make is thinking that the scorecard is just about measures Quite often they will develop a list of financial and nonfinancial measures and believe they have a scorecard This I believe is dangerous〞
    For example in one case a bank’s IT department had identified measures and benchmarks for being a world class IT department According to those measures they had done very well However the measures used by the IT department were not tied in with the overall business strategy and therefore discouraged the IT department from meeting the strategic business needs
    2 Failure to communicate and educate A scorecard is only effective if it is clearly understood throughout an organization Frequently scorecards will be developed at the executive level but not communicated or cascaded down through an organization Without effective communication throughout the organization a balanced scorecard will not spur lasting change and performance improvement
    3 Measures tied to compensation too soon It is generally a good idea to tie compensation to the Balanced Scorecard However several factors suggest it can be a mistake to do that too early in the lifecycle of the scorecard
    · Rarely is an initial scorecard left unrevised So if an organization ties compensation to measures that are not in fact driving desired behavior a powerful motivator has been instituted that will drive an unwise action
    · Data may be incomplete or inaccurate so measures may not be correct If employees’ paychecks are adversely impacted serious morale problems and invalidation of the scorecard inevitably result
    · It may take time to determine realistic targets and penalizing people for failing to achieve an unreachable target will surely have a negative impact on morale and eventually profits
    4 No accountability Accountability and high visibility are needed to help drive change This means that each measure objective data source and initiative must have an owner Without this level of detailed implementation a perfectly constructed scorecard will not achieve success because nobody will be held accountable for performance
    5 Employees not empowered While accountability may provide strong motivation for improving performance employees must also have the authority responsibility and tools necessary to impact relevant measures Otherwise they will resist involvement and ownership Resources must be made available and initiatives funded to achieve success Employees are likely to need new information tools to help them understand the drivers of measures for which they are responsible so they can take action These tools can include systems for analysis and early warning indicators exception reports and collaboration
    6 Too many initiatives Large decentralized organizations usually find that crossover and duplication among initiatives can be identified Crossmatching scorecard objectives with current and planned initiatives can be an important way to focus and align a company This method will identify cases where objectives are supported inappropriately Rather than relying on budgeting for strategic funding this process eliminates waste speeds scorecard implementation and helps an organization prioritize their initiatives to better support their strategy
    Automating the Balanced Scorecard
    A successful BSC program relies extensively on data education and communication to promote monitor and reinforce behavior modifications—all processes that can be facilitated easily by information technology
    Automation is Essential
    Automation is essential in order to manage the vast amount of information related to a company’s mission and vision strategic goals objectives perspectives measures causal relationships and initiatives The alternative is a manual process which significantly increases the effort and cost of scorecard development and sets back progress in the early stages of the BSC development when momentum is critical
    Automation can foster quicker culture change both during development and in the ongoing use of the BSC If the software used is intuitive and can be deployed through an organization readily it can bring visibility to the BSC process ease a cultural transition and enable participation by a wider audience
    Approaches to Automation
    A number of software development companies have sought to develop an automated solution and capitalize on the success of the Balanced Scorecard Various approaches to BSC automation exist depending on the orientation of the software company
    Proprietary business intelligence (BI) products One class of scorecard automation software has formed around proprietary BI software products BI software is designed to support an organization’s reporting and analysis needs Naturally a BI software vendor will see the BSC as an extension of BI and so will develop it as an addon to their product line While these packages can meet some of the analytical needs that support a balanced scorecard they tend to have several limitations
    · They can lead an organization to focus on measures derived from available data rather than strategic objectives
    · They do not generally provide needed capabilities with regard to strategy communication and managing nonnumeric information like reasons for selecting a specific measure
    · They often have perseat license costs that may be appropriate for a smaller number of advanced analytical users but can be costprohibitive for the widespread deployment that is needed to drive effective strategy execution

    ERPcentric applications Another class of BSC software is designed by Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software companies to interface with their transactional systems and to try to combat the common perception that their reporting capabilities are unduly limited These ERPcentric applications tend to emphasize use of the ERP system’s data and may not be as well suited for integrating external data Due to a heavy database orientation they generally do not provide ways to manage the unstructured content that is key to educating and communicating with a large employee population They also usually have peruser costs that can discourage broad use
    BSCspecific applications The BSCspecific applications generally offer a good presentation layer but may be limited in their ability to integrate multiple data sources and to enable automation of data collection and transformation Without integrated analytic capabilities users may not be able to drill down to more actionable information under the highlevel metrics These applications are often standalone applications that don’t easily integrate with existing systems or infrastructure
    These three classes of scorecard automation approach all have significant weaknesses in their ability to support the important processes of education communication collaboration and knowledge sharing that ultimately determine the success or failure of a Balanced Scorecard initiative
    The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework has been developed to overcome these shortcomings
    The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework
    Microsoft
    Balanced Scorecard Framework
    The goal of the Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework (BSCF) is to empower an organization to use the Balanced Scorecard to achieve returns on people processes customers and information technology The BSCF is designed to facilitate scorecard development and deployment at all phases and levels of an organization—to achieve the benefits of early automation without the attendant risks
    The framework is not a packaged application Instead it integrates a variety of Microsoft packaged applications and industry standards to automate a Balanced Scorecard It consists of a set of tools and methods to help both business users and developers get to success faster and more reliably so software is no longer a hurdle to overcome in scorecard development but an asset to speed development
    Recognizing the wideranging challenges impact and needs of an organization implementing the BSC the BSCF is founded on several underlying concepts
    1 The business and technology requirements for successful scorecard automation are too complex to be bundled into a single package To be successful the Balanced Scorecard must be woven into the fabric of an organization Scorecard automation tools also must be spread throughout the organization Further systems to facilitate Balanced Scorecard implementation will necessarily rely on links to existing systems
    2 It is necessary to leverage existing capabilities and technologies Introducing new software typically entails significant training costs over and above the cost of the software itself The BSCF exploits existing Microsoft software—already part of most organizations’ software arsenal—to speed adoption and reduce culture shock
    3 An open framework is essential Organizations should be able to leverage existing systems and can add capabilities when and where needed There are some specific capabilities for the Balanced Scorecard or generic performance management that are not provided as outofthebox functionality in Microsoft products Therefore these capabilities have been developed using the standard Microsoft development tools with which most IT departments already have experience
    Facets of the Framework
    The three underlying principles dictate a holistic multifaceted approach to a Balanced Scorecard initiative—an approach that facilitates education communication collaboration analysis and integration with daily work activities The BSCF leverages the expertise of Balanced Scorecard practitioners and moves beyond the restrictive capabilities of much early scorecard automation software to address the issues organizations commonly confront Six facets describe the BSCF

    · Personalized Portal
    · Best Practices
    · Strategy and Metric Management
    · Business Intelligence
    · Actionable and Operational Tools
    · Knowledge Management
    Facet 1 Personalized Portal

    Personalized Portal
    Experts cite communication and education as two of the most critical success factors in a Balanced Scorecard initiative Research has shown that most organizations need improved vehicles for education and communication in order to succeed in change processes In addition as organizational development specialists know changing culture is easier if accomplished in ways that are integrated with and facilitate daily work tasks
    Therefore the Balanced Scorecard Framework provides a personalized portal for employees The portal is in essence a doorway into the employee’s work life Built using standard Web technologies the portal may be easily personalized to accommodate organizational and individual preferences It can provide links to tools used daily such as email calendars and Webenabled interfaces to transactional systems The portal also presents Balanced Scorecard information in manageable pieces to facilitate learning This learning process is sequenced so that employees learn according to a plan established by the scorecard implementation team

    Figure 3 Personalized Portal Integrating Balanced Scorecard

    The portal is introduced early in a scorecard implementation when it initially serves as a way to communicate and educate As scorecard development proceeds the portal provides a dual perspective of overall corporate performance and individual performance
    If an organization already has a portal the Balanced Scorecard can be implemented within that portal to leverage the organization’s existing investments
    The portal becomes habitforming as the interface between the employee the performance management system and daily work tasks It provides a link to all other facets of the BSCF


    Facet 2 Best Practices

    Best Practices
    The Balanced Scorecard promotes a fundamentally different way of developing objectives and measures Developing balanced leading and strategyfocused measures is a complex task Organizations—even those that already have a culture of performance—find they often need guidance to transition their culture toward a strategy focused organization It makes sense to take advantage of the best practices in Balanced Scorecard development—to learn from others’ experience Therefore the framework includes educational components to facilitate a scorecard development and implementation process


    Figure 4 Best Practices

    These components include
    · Microsoft PowerPoint presentations for educating employees which can be viewed using Web technologies
    · Links to useful information such as relevant Web sites to help teach the balanced Scorecard team and to educate the organization’s general population
    · Process guidelines answers to Frequently Asked Questions and mistakes to avoid
    · A series of templates for capturing complete data on measures objectives perspectives initiatives and so on so that a scorecard implementation team can consistently gather and share the information that must eventually be managed in a Balanced Scorecard database
    Best practices documents are created in standard Microsoft Office products—such as Microsoft Word Microsoft Excel and Microsoft PowerPoint®—which generally means no software acquisition or employee training is required These documents are readily convertible to Web formats for display
    Facet 3 Strategy and Metric Management

    Strategy
    & Metric Management
    An organization implementing a Balanced Scorecard will generate many different scorecards at the corporate divisional departmental and perhaps even individual level Managing the details about strategies objectives measures and targets is complex Each measure may have different owners data definitions reasons why it was chosen and so on In addition scorecard development is a living iterative process measures and objectives are constantly in flux as an organization evolves
    Once measures are identified the data must be acquired Where possible data should automatically be pulled from underlying systems or from a data warehouse This minimizes human error in data handling and eases the burden of maintaining the scorecard measures at various levels of an organization However in some cases data will not exist in those sources and will need to be entered manually
    Organizations need an efficient systematic way to collect sort summarize and disseminate all the data that feeds into the scorecards The BSCF provides this needed functionality with an application that consists of a Microsoft SQL Server™ database and an intuitive Webbased interface for business and technical users This component application Scorecard Builder™ conforms to the specifications established by Kaplan and Norton’s consulting organization the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative so data can be readily exchanged with other Balanced Scorecard automation packages
    The impact of a scorecard depends to a great degree on the effective display of performance information Information must be presented in an easily understandable way using appropriate data presentation techniques The BSCF includes several Webenabled presentation tools to communicate Balanced Scorecard information
    First among these presentation tools is the scorecard summary called Scoreboard™ which shows at a glance the critical information relative to each perspective objective and measure The Scoreboard can be filtered by theme or set to display all corporate measures Information presented includes current and previous values targets and trends of measures comments and links to analysis so that a viewer may answer questions readily Color and graphics are used to convey whether a measure is on target or needs attention
    Second the strategy map is included to show a graphical explanation of the perspectives objectives measures and the causal relationships The strategy maps can be viewed in conjunction with the scorecard itself and are interactive allowing users to switch between themes and click on any element (including the cause and effect links) to view additional information
    Third a subdashboard for each perspective contains information relevant to that perspective Here the strategy matrix for each perspective is presented The subdashboards also contain detailed information and additional measures that are not included on the summary scorecard
    Regardless of whether a viewer is looking at information on a strategy map scorecard summary or strategy matrix hyperlinks permit access to the detailed information on any scorecard element

    Figure 5 Scoreboard

    Facet 4 Business Intelligence

    Business
    Intelligence
    Scorecards—balanced or otherwise—are about improving performance However though scorecards point to critical problem areas that need analysis they do not perform that analysis or indicate what action must be taken In many cases the scorecard will include measures that are highly aggregated and derived from multiple data points For example if ontime delivery is below the targeted levels corrective action is predicated on analysis to determine which products facilities suppliers or circumstances are primarily responsible for the delays In other cases an average measure across multiple facilities may include both excellent performers and poor performers so drilldown is needed to make improvements
    Of course not all measures are conducive to this type of drilltodetail〞 analysis However for those that are a range of business intelligence tools exists to provide this analytic capability The Balanced Scorecard links to sources of detailed information with different types of analyses for different users Some situations require specific targeted analyses Others require a more general framework for ad hoc〞 analysis The Scoreboard includes graphical indicators (magnifying glass for ad hoc and target for targeted) to cue the users to which types of analyses are available for a given measure




    Figure 6 Ad Hoc Analysis

    Analytic capabilities are critical to improving performance by providing information that people can use to make decisions that is actionable insights〞 The end goal of analysis is performance improvement through action so there is a natural link between analysis and tools that prompt and facilitate action
    Facet 5 Actionable and Operational Tools
    Actionable
    & Operational Tools
    Actionable and operational tools are the tools used to facilitate action because success depends on equipping people with the means to improve their performance For instance in the case of ontime delivery part of the solution may be to deploy an early warning system that can help to address potential delivery problems before the shipment is late
    The BSCF exploits a powerful synergy between measurement tools which motivate people and operational tools which empower people to make improvements Examples can include exception reports automated alerts and linking to transactional systems in order to reduce the time between problem recognition and resolution
    Actionable and operational tools may also include functionality from Enterprise Resource Management Customer Relationship Management or other operational systems that can be included in the portal to facilitate transitions between analytic and operations tasks
    Actionable tools can also be designed to tell people what to do which is important in a decentralized company with people at numerous levels all taking action based on scorecard information In the targeted analysis below note
    · Information is provided in context so people understand their relationship to the whole organization
    · Both graphic and numeric styles of communication are integrated to accommodate different learning styles
    · Contextsensitive help guides users to exactly what they must do for success resulting in a set of actionable instructions arising from analysis



    Figure 7 Targeted Analysis Blended with Actionable and Operational Tools
    Facet 6 Knowledge Management
    Knowledge management capabilities facilitate many aspects of the Balanced Scorecard process
    Knowledge Management
    from initial design work through all phases of the scorecard lifecycle The term knowledge management embraces several capabilities that are provided in the BSCF as standard features of Microsoft SharePoint™ Portal Server
    First knowledge management implies keeping track of the multitude of documents generated in an organization SharePoint Portal Server provides a repository like an electronic library so documents can be accessed readily by all authorized people Useful document management features include
    · Security so only authorized people can view a document
    · Search capability so people can find documents based on criteria like author date published topic or key words
    · Version control to make sure change history is captured and that all people access the latest version of a document
    · Indexing or the ability to make an electronic catalog of existing documents for inclusion in the library
    · Subscription so people can be automatically notified if documents change
    Of course this functionality is not just used for Balanced Scorecard information but also for a range of corporate documents including process control documents product development information price lists human resources policies and procedures and so on In some cases these robust documenthandling features are required to support initiatives like ISO 90002000 certification
    Second knowledge management includes collaboration Because knowledge workers do not operate in isolation collaboration is vital Collaboration means being able to share route and discuss documents within and among levels of an organization Collaboration applies equally to scorecard development at the executive level to cascading the scorecard through levels of a company and to ongoing scorecard evaluation Tools of collaboration include online netmeetings threaded electronic discussions and automated workflows to route documents for approval These collaboration tools help provide a return on knowledge workers by speeding productivity and help weave the balanced scorecard into busy workdays
    Of course as with document management collaboration tools are extremely useful to all aspects of knowledge work



    Figure 8 Search Capabilities of SharePoint Portal Support the Balanced Scorecard


    Conclusion
    A Balanced Scorecard initiative represents a watershed event in an organization’s evolution It is a challenging interdisciplinary process of cultural change To be successful an organization needs a defined multifaceted approach that embraces education communication scorecard development and ongoing implementation The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework meets these criteria

    Personalized Portal


    Best Practices


    Knowledge Management

    Business
    Intelligence
    Actionable
    & Operational Tools

    Microsoft
    Balanced Scorecard Framework
    Strategy
    & Metric Management
    Figure 9 The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework

    The Microsoft approach to Balanced Scorecard automation brings together
    · Portal technology to facilitate education change and communication
    · Information on best practices from Balanced Scorecard experts
    · Strategy and metric management in conformance with the specifications put forth by the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative the consulting organization founded by the creators of the Balanced Scorecard
    · Analytic capabilities to bridge the gap between problem identification as shown by outoftolerance measures and analysis to determine underlying opportunities for performance enhancement
    · Actionable and operational tools to enhance and work in conjunction with business intelligence tools
    · Knowledge management to permit sharing and control of documents online collaboration work flow and document searching
    Organizations seeking to implement a Balanced Scorecard are striving to become a strategy focused organization Strategy focused organizations exploit the Balanced Scorecard and technology to become more agile These organizations attain incremental returns on their customers processes employees and technologies The Microsoft Balanced Scorecard Framework delivers these returns in a costeffective reliable scalable manner

    Selected Bibliography
    The Balanced Scorecard Measures That Drive Performance Kaplan Robert S and Norton David P Article Harvard Business Review January 1992
    Putting The Balanced Scorecard To Work Kaplan Robert S and Norton David P
    Article Harvard Business Review September 1993
    Using the Balanced Scorecard as a Strategic Management System Kaplan Robert S and Norton David P Article Harvard Business Review JanuaryFebruary 1996
    The Balanced Scorecard Translating Strategy into Action Kaplan Robert S and Norton David P Harvard Business School Press 1996
    The Strategy Focused Organization Kaplan Robert S and Norton David P Harvard Business School Press 2001
    Having Trouble With Your Strategy Then Map It Kaplan Robert S and Norton David
    P Article Harvard Business Review SeptemberOctober 2000
    Useful Web Sites

    Web Site
    Description

    Balanced Scorecard Collaborative home page
    cedscorecardorg
    Balanced Scorecard Institute home page
    mbusinessbi
    Microsoft Business Intelligence site





    The information contained in this document represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation on the issues discussed as of the date of publication Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information presented after the date of publication
    This white paper is for informational purposes only MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED IN THIS
    DOCUMENT
    Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user Without limiting the rights under copyright no part of this document may be reproduced stored in or introduced into a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic mechanical photocopying recording or otherwise) or for any purpose without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation
    Microsoft may have patents patent applications trademarks copyrights or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents trademarks copyrights or other intellectual property
    © 2001 Microsoft Corporation All rights reserved
    The example companies organizations products domain names email addresses logos people places and events depicted herein are fictitious No association with any real company organization product domain name email address logo person place or event is intended or should be inferred
    Microsoft PowerPoint and SharePoint are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States andor other countries
    The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners
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