Skip the navigation

ROI Guide: Balanced Scorecard

By Gary Anthes
February 17, 2003 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Definition: A set of principles and analytic techniques for improving an organization's performance in four general areas: financials, customers, learning and internal processes.


What it means: Long-term organizational excellence can be achieved only by taking a broad and holistic approach, not by focusing solely on financials.


Strengths: This approach is potentially all-encompassing, combining financial and nonfinancial goals and measures. It can encompass the performance of entire companies or business units, not just individual investments or projects. Balanced scorecard is future-oriented, not a rearview mirror on performance.


Weaknesses: This method is potentially so broad that it may divert resources from those few areas that really are vital to shareholder return. It doesn't readily weight the relative importance of the different metrics it uses.


Credit for the balanced scorecard idea most often goes to Robert S. Kaplan and David Norton, who wrote an article about it for the Harvard Business Review in 1992. Certainly, many of the underlying ideas go back much further, and today, many companies use one or more of its principles without having adopted the balanced scorecard methodology in any formal sense.


"There are many different balanced scorecards, and they serve many different purposes," says Arthur Schneiderman, an independent business-process management consultant in Boxford, Mass. "But most organizations will say its purpose is to link strategy to action."


Regardless of how one defines it, the balanced scorecard is based on several underlying notions. The first is that financial measures alone aren't sufficient to size up the health of a company and that a single-minded pursuit of financial objectives could lead your company to ruin in the long run.


The second is that balanced scorecard focuses on process, not metrics. As such, it's forward-looking (How can I retain my best customers?) rather than backward-looking (What were my earnings per share last quarter?).


The scorecard is an analytic framework for translating a company's visions and high-level business strategies into specific, quantifiable goals and for monitoring performance against those goals. The methodology breaks high-level strategies into objectives, measurements, targets and initiatives.


For example, Southwest Airlines Co. employs a number of scorecards, one of which relates ground-crew performance to company profitability (see chart). It arranges the four quadrants of the balanced scorecard—learning, internal, customer and financial—in a hierarchy that shows how objectives relate to one another.


Directly relating a financial measure such as "lower costs" with an operations metric like "fast ground turnaround" is a relatively new idea at the Dallas-based airline, says Mike Van de Ven, vice president of financial planning and analysis. "Historically, the budget system was the primary system to monitor costs, and if you were an accountant, you got it," he says. "But if you were an operations person, and you weren't used to cost centers and general ledgers and budget-to-actual variances, it didn't make any sense to you."


The operations people had hundreds of metrics dealing with things such as on-time performance or baggage delivery, but they weren't linked directly to the financial measures or the budget system, Van de Ven says. "So what we have been doing over the past several years is putting these things together, and that neatly rolls into this balanced scorecard concept," he says.


Another advantage of this integrated scorecard approach is that it retains the hundreds of detailed metrics for front-line supervisors but gives top management a "dashboard" displaying a few key measures. "We are trying to get more focused on key measurements that we want to stay on top of," Van de Ven says.


Although nearly everyone applauds the broad view that the balanced scorecard encourages and its proactive, forward-looking thrust, some critics say the scorecard is often misused. "Most of the time, the balanced scorecard will help you identify the wrong things to measure," Schneiderman says. That can waste a lot of corporate resources, he adds.


There's a danger that use of the balanced scorecard can divert management attention away from the most important goals, which are financial, says Ray Trotta, co-founder of iValue LLC, an IT valuation consultancy in Barrington, Ill. "We like the way the Street does things; they talk about dollars and cents," he says. "The balanced scorecard talks about customer relationships, internal processes, learning and growth. I mean, those things are good, but where's the money?"












Southwest Airlines’ Balanced Scorecard:What It Looks Like

Southwest Airlines' Balanced Scorecard: What It Looks Like



Please click on image above to view a readable version.


Read more about ROI in Computerworld's ROI Topic Center.



Additional Resources
Forrester Consulting - Optimizing Users and Applications in a Mobile World
WHITE PAPER
Solving application issues over the WAN requires careful consideration. Based on their independent research, Forrester Consulting offers recommendations on how to tackle application performance issues, insufficient bandwidth and the inability to quickly restore users in a disaster.

Read now.

Security KnowledgeVault
WHITE PAPER
Security is not an option. This KnowledgeVault Series offers professional advice how to be proactive in the fight against cybercrimes and multi-layered security threats; how to adopt a holistic approach to protecting and managing data; and how to hire a qualified security assessor. Make security your Number 1 priority.

Read now.

Cut Communications Costs Once and for All
WHITE PAPER
New IP-based communications systems are being deployed by small and midsized businesses at a rapid rate. Learn how these organizations are enabling faster responsiveness, creating better customer experiences, speeding office or mobile interactions, and dramatically reducing existing communications costs.

Read now.

ROI White Papers
Streamline Compliance and Increase ROI
Streamline, simplify, and automate compliance related activities; especially those that impact multiple business units. This white paper from NetIQ, outlines solutions that will...
Overcome Top 7 Admin Challenges of Active Directory
As Active Directory's role in the enterprise has drastically increased, so has the need to secure the data. Gain insight on creating repeatable,...
Insiders Can Ruin Your Company. Take Action.
Did you know that 80 percent of threats to an organization come from the inside? The threat from insiders is often overlooked in...
Top Solutions and Tools to Prevent Devastating Malware
Custom malware frequently goes undetected. According to Forrester Research, the best way to reduce risk of breach is to deploy file integrity monitoring...
X-Ray of the PCI Process-4 Proactive Steps
This white paper from Forrester Research Inc., helps break PCI into understandable components. Security and risk professionals will gain knowledge and insight into...
All ROI White Papers
ROI Webcasts
Optimizing Networks for the Cloud
Join guest speaker, Rohit Mehra, IDC Director of Enterprise Communications Infrastructure, to explore current trends, discuss best practices for optimizing Data Center and...
Apps QuickStart Series Part 2: Designing and Deploying SQL Server on VMware vSphere
Download this webcast to learn about the design considerations for virtualizing SQL workloads, performance and scalability information and high-availability options, as well as...
Apps QuickStart Series Part 1: Designing and Deploying Exchange 2010 on VMware vSphere
Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and...
Customer Spotlight: How IPC The Hospitalist Company Implemented Oracle on VMware
Have you been looking to hear about customer's experiences with the new VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager product? View this webcast to learn...
Virtualize Business-Critical Applications with Confidence
Virtualizing business-critical applications has become a key focus for organizations as they move along their virtualization journey. With the launch of VMware vSphere®...
All ROI Webcasts
Newsletter Sign-Up

Receive the latest news test, reviews and trends on your favorite technology topics

Choose a newsletter
  1. View all newsletters | Privacy Policy
IT Jobs