Are
We There Yet? Measuring What Matters
Takeaways
“Every
time you have a success and pass a milestone along the way of the change
process, stop and celebrate so people can see that it’s worth it.” Jack Welch
Are We There Yet? Measuring What
Matters
What it Means
Executing
against your roadmap is the best way to move from the status quo to your
desired vision. Being able to measure progress provides you with an objective
way of assessing the initiative’s speed and how you fare against the planned
milestones.
Why it Matters
·
A
strong measurement system provides visibility around your initiative’s progress
·
It
creates an objective and universal way of keeping score, understandable by
everyone in the organization
·
Provides
an opportunity to recognize when a milestone is reached and to celebrate
successes
·
A
good measurement system give you an early warning if the rate of progress is
slowing down
·
Coupled
with your Vision statement, it reinforces your message and maintains focus on
the initiative
“Talk
about the vision for change over and over and over again.” Jack Welch
Action Plan
Are We There Yet? Measuring What
Matters
Your
initiative is underway and you need to make sure it stays on track. The best
measurement systems help you keep an eye on what really counts and provide you
with an early sign when progress stalls. The activities that follow will:
·
Present
examples and ideas on how to drive metrics from your Problem or Vision
Statement
·
Provide
you with examples of typical metrics you can use for your initiative
·
Identify
the typical components of a one-page dashboard
Your Starting Point
1.
When
I review the original Problem Statement and the Vision, what are the key items
I want to change?
2.
For
each of these, what would be a good measurement system? There should be five
key characteristics of a good measurement system.
3.
Does
my organization already have measurement system in place needed to track the
items that will change? If so, how well do these align to the five key metrics
identified above?
4.
If
I don’t already have a measurement system in place, who can help me create one
that gets at the data I need?
5.
Is
there already a one-page summary (or dashboard) that the Executive team likes
to use? If so, I can use this to measure the progress of this project and still
track the items I need to track?
6.
Are
there any other internal best practices I should adopt for reporting progress?
Quick Wins
The
following activity can immediately provide you with a set of measurements for
your initiative. Remember, the goal of a measurement system is to create a
simple, straightforward way of tracking progress. You may be tracking several
items at once, buy your summary needs to be self-explanatory for most people in
your organization.
Getting
started on developing a measurement system doesn’t have to be complicated. To
take the first steps, you need to address three key items:
1.
Look
at your Problem Statement and Vision. What are the key things your initiative
is trying to change? Remember, just focus on the major ones so that you can
narrow your list to the top three to five items.
2.
For
each of these items, ask yourself what would be the best way (i.e., the metric)
to measure progress. As an example, if you are working on improving sales, it
could be total revenue or it could be number of contracts, etc. If you are trying
to improve customer satisfaction, it could be a satisfaction score on a
customer survey.
3.
Finally,
identify which of these metrics already exist in your organization. Chances
are, most of the metrics exist today and some may even be included in one of
the organization’s data systems. If the metric does not exist today, don’t
worry, I will provide more suggestions.
Note:
Once you
have brainstormed this list, you will probably already have a few foundational
metrics for your measurement system. Most likely, you will also have some gaps
you will need to close. For example, for some metrics you may not have
historical data available or a good measurement system in place. Team up with
key individuals in your organization who know how to extract that data from
your systems or create new measurement processes.
Building your Key Metrics Plan
You cannot
improve what you cannot measure—implementing an adequate measurement system is
critical for your initiative’s success. Most organizations already have
abundant measurements in place, so the key is to identify the few metrics that
matter for your initiative.
“Measure
what can be measured, and make measurable what cannot be measured.” Galileo
Galilei, 16th century Italian physicist, astronomer & mathematician
1.
Collect
the Problem Statement you had created with your team and your summary Vision
2.
Carefully
read each one and write down the key items that will need to change in your
organization
3.
For
each item, determine what would be the right metric to gauge performance.
Remember the five requisites. A good measurement:
a.
Is
fact based
b.
Is
easy to understand
c.
Measures
what matters
d.
Provides
specific examples
e.
Holds
people accountable
4.
You
should be looking at a list of 3 to 10 different metrics. Your goals will be to
reduce these down to 5 or fewer critical ones. Beware! Don’t fall victim to the
mistake that many organizations make of getting trapped in the “measurement
game.” You can track hundreds of different metrics, but the key is to maintain
focus on the vital few, helping people maintain focus and establish new behaviors.
Imagine you are a part of a company
whose Vision is to become more customer oriented and improve the overall
perception of service, and that you are facing the following Problem Statement:
“Our organization has an issue with
customer satisfaction and this is hurting our sales. We need to be more focused
on our customer if we want our company to survive. From some initial analysis,
we identified that there are two key reasons for customer dissatisfaction: 1)
We sometimes ship the wrong color product and 2) Our organization is not very
good art handling customer returns, resulting in delays for replacement
shipments to the customer and sometimes missing refunds.”
Below are the main components of
the statement and some key metrics we could track:
·
“Issue
with customer satisfaction” = Customer Satisfaction survey
·
“hurting
our sales” = Sales revenue
·
“customer
dissatisfaction” = Customer Satisfaction survey or number of complaints
·
“we
ship the wrong color” = Number of wrong orders
·
“delays
in replacement shipments” = Cycle time to send a replacement; cost of extra
shipments
·
“missing
refunds” = Number of returned products that were not refunded; $ refunded and
therefore not recognized sales
From this
high-level Problem Statement, we could develop several different metrics. The
question is: which metrics truly matter and how do we keep this list as short
as possible? To guide your answer to that question consider the following
suggestions.
Determine whether your measurement
system is directly correlated to your desired behavior change.
In our
example, we know we need to focus on “customer satisfaction” to benefit the
company and that this lack of focus is hurting our sales. Would sales revenue
be a good metric for our initiative? Probably not. Sales can be driven by many
other factors, which are completely independent from our initiative: there may
be seasonality in the sales pattern, a competitor’s special promotion may hurt
our sales, our customers may be stocking up and increasing our sales
temporarily. Be mindful that your metric must measure, as loosely as possible,
the behavior you want to drive. It would be unfair to reprimand or celebrate
with your organization for a change in the metric, when your initiative did not
drive that variance. In our example, a better way is to measure the identified
key drivers of customer dissatisfaction.
Create measurement systems if they
are not available.
Your
organization may not have a measurement system in place to collect the data you
need for your metric. In our example, we would need to find out how the
organization measures customer satisfaction today and whether that measurement
is adequate to be a metric for the initiative. Ask yourself the following
questions:
·
Is the measurement system clear?
Does
is have clear guidelines and is the data representative over the long time
period?
·
Does it provide enough data?
If
your project is scheduled to last 9 months, you cannot live with a once-a-year
customer satisfaction survey. And, even if the request for feedback went out
after each customer purchase, do you have enough data points to discern a
change in customer perception? Do you have 3 sales per month or 3,000? How many
data points would you want to see in order to comfortably say the customer
experience has improved?
·
What can you do if the current
system is insufficient?
If
the measurement system does not exist or it’s weak (e.g., information is
circumstantial and not objective), how can the organization create a
measurement system to set a baseline and track progress?
Leading vs. Lagging Indicators
It is
generally better to focus on metrics that will predict your future performance
(aka leading) versus those that
provide you a snapshot of past performance (aka
lagging). This is an important distinction for a few reasons:
·
Lagging indicators always present
you with historical data
Since
the goal is to change behavior, the best data provides you near real-time
representation of performance. Imagine the team working at a fast-food
restaurant and ensuring they minimize the wait time for customers. Their visual
cue is the number of customers waiting to be served. The longer the line of
people, the clearer they need to expedite service to shorten wait time. Now,
imagine they received at the end of the week a report with the amount of time
people waited in line. This would be helpful, but would not be an immediate
performance gauge that would help them serve customers at the present time.
·
Lagging indicators may be prone to
indirect drivers
Many
organizations use financial metrics from the accounting department to measure
progress. The good news is that you generally have consistency in the results.
The bas is that the results generally are only available at months’ end and
that there may be some accounting considerations that may skew the results
artificially. For example, if you measured your progress in Sales revenue and
the company sold products globally in different currencies, your sales amount
may be artificially skewed by changes in the foreign exchange rates. This could
be a driver completely independent of your project.
·
Lagging indicators can help you
isolate key metrics that drive specific behaviors
In
our previous example, “number of wrong colors shipped,” “cycle time to ship
replacement product,” and “cycle time to issue refund” may be good leading
indicators that drive customer satisfaction (lagging indicator).
Measure the cause, not the symptom
One of the
typical pitfalls of a measurement system is measuring the symptom (i.e., the
visible output) rather than trying to measure the actual cause—which is
typically what an initiative is attempting to change. Data is your powerful
ally in supporting your metrics but can also be deceiving. A famous and comical
example of how data can be misleading was a tongue-in-cheek analysis by a mathematician,
Dr. Fischer in Denmark. After World War II, there was a significant increase in
childbirths, given the more stable conditions as well as a renewed emphasis in
construction. The childbirths drove more babies and increased constructions
attracted more storks to nest in the city. Using local data and statistics, Dr.
Fischer arrived at the conclusion that “storks bring babies.” When selecting
your key metrics, always ask yourself if there could be other drivers affecting
your measurement system.
Returning
to your example Problem Statement, we would recommend focusing the initiative’s
metrics using:
·
Number
of wrong colors shipped
·
Cycle
time to send a replacement
·
Number
of returned products that were not refunded
These are
key drivers that, if addressed, should ultimately benefit longer term sales and
customer satisfaction. As a secondary measure, you would also include these
latter metrics, but they would not be your immediate measure to determine if
your initiative is on track.
As part of
this initiative, your next step would be to set your baseline (i.e., your
starting point/status quo) and then your goal (what your Vision defines as
“success”). Also remember to include individual milestones between these two
data points; you will use them as part of your roadmap and to celebrate
successes as you reach each of them.
Game Pages
Your Starting Point
Template to Derive Key Metrics
Key
Metrics and Definition of Measurement
Qualities of a good
measurement system
1. Fact-based
Good measurements aren’t based on biased criteria and
the data needs to be reliable. You need to include all data points, both the
positive and the negative, whether it’s financial information, staffing changes
or on-time deliveries. Also, the way the measurement is taken should be
consistent throughout the project and after the change is in place. Ensure that
you always capture the starting point and set a clear target to define success.
2. Easy
to understand
Everyone involved in the change process should be able
to track whether the initiative is making a difference. As an example, many
companies use numbers-based customer satisfaction survey or percentage on time
deliveries to measure their baseline and set specific targets.
3. It
Matters
Measure what matters to your customers and your
organization. How does the change impact your customer, your productivity, our
organization’s compliance to a policy, or whatever it is that matters most with
the change that you’ve made? Show why your measurement matters and how
improving that metric ultimately improves the organization’s performance.
4. Provides
specific examples
Highlight your early victories and show how things are
better as the changes are implemented. Use a baseline from where you started to
show if you’re making measurable progress. If it makes sense and the data is
publicly available, also include a comparison to your competitors. This drives
a competitive spirit and keeps the organization on the positive track.
5. Holds
people accountable
Make sure that each of your metrics have owners,
especially for internal metrics that are key to success. Visible metrics are a great
way to drive accountability and performance. When a leader’s name is associated
with a metric, they’ll typically work harder to stay ahead of the pack, or at
least to avoid being on the bottom of the chart. Many major organizations use
progress reports that include traffic light symbols (Red, Yellow, Green) to
quickly provide a visual indicator for the state of each of the businesses.
Remember to make it fair: if you are evaluating someone’s performance, make
sure the metric is objective and consistent.
My change initiative
metrics
Use
the following table as a checklist for the metrics you will be using to
evaluate the progress of your change initiative.
What am I measuring?
Characteristic
|
Metric
|
Metric
|
Metric
|
Metric
|
Fact-Based Yes/No?
|
|
|
|
|
Easy to Understand
Yes/No?
|
|
|
|
|
It Matters Yes/No?
|
|
|
|
|
Provides Specific
Examples Yes/No?
|
|
|
|
|
Holds People
Accountable Yes/No?
|
|
|
|
|
Appendix
Each
organization generally has a dashboard template. If you need to create your own
dashboard, at a minimum, you should include:
Initiative’s
name
Project
sponsor
Project
owner
Dashboard
date
Executive
summary (Remember to mention key milestones achieved and other progress made.
List any key issues or roadblocks that are being tackled).
List
of key metrics (this could be a chart)
·
Current
performance
·
Target
performance
·
Last
data point (to show progress)
Next
steps / next milestones
Current
issues and remediation steps (optional)
Key
risks that are being managed (optional)
Dashboard
date