You’ve likely played an organized sport at some time in your life - How many different ways were there to keep score? How many different ways were there to determine the winner? Just one – right? It was goals, or runs, or points, or something, but never goals and/or assists, or some weird combination of runs, hits, errors, average, ERA, RBI’s and on-base percentage.
Now, ask the same question about your business – how many ways do you have of keeping score, of determining if you’ve “won” (i.e. met your key strategic objective)? Do you have just one metric that answers this key question, and does everyone understand that – is everyone on that same page? Or do you have a dashboard with dozens of different metrics that all sort of dance around the issue without explicitly hitting the mark?
This was the lesson I learned from a terrific presentation by Doug McCallen, CFO for Caterpillar’s Building Construction Products division, where their single strategic metric of choice for keeping score is OPACC (Operating Profit after Capital Charge), which I will explain in more detail below.
There are a number of approaches one could take in conformance with the spirit of this argument, the most obvious being to build your enterprise dashboard around this single, key metric – the speedometer in the middle so to speak. The particular metric / methodology chosen needs to suit your corporate culture. As I mentioned in a previous post, I’m partial to ROA or ROCE (return on capital employed), although good cases could also be made for ROE or simply some measure of profitability such as EBITDA.
Caterpillar’s McCallen calculates OPACC as operating profit over and above an applied capital charge equal to 17% of net assets (pre-tax). This metric has several benefits, notably that it relies solely on readily available internal data, and that the inclusion of an asset charge takes the focus away from just variable margin (i.e. sales making the claim that any sale $1 above variable cost is a good sale). One clear effect of highlighting the asset charge is that it changes how the company looks at production location, logistics, markets and offshoring decisions. Having to account for inventory tied up in transit and in long distribution channels tends to force the economic decision of keeping production close to the customer, which leads to other customer satisfaction benefits as well.
The way to think about the metrics on the rest of the dashboard is to continue with my baseball sports analogy and treat the other metrics as supporting, actionable, operational �statistics’ that correlate with the primary strategic metric. Just as baseball reverently keeps its stats on hits, RBI’s, errors, ERA, etc …, it’s only Runs Scored that matter in the end, and as �Moneyball’ taught us, lesser known / used stats such as On-Base Percentage are more highly correlated with runs scored than RBI’s or batting average. When they are positively correlated, and you’ve chosen the best measure (versus measuring the same thing three different ways), they can serve as actionable, intermediate warning signals that all will not be well for the primary metric at the end of the period (also, see my earlier posts, “Metrics for the Subconscious Organization” and “Metrics for Critical Behaviors” for more thoughts on this matter).
This “single metric” approach, however, would seem to fly in the face of the popular Balanced Scorecard methodology, it being decidedly �unbalanced’. You could almost say that we’ve been so indoctrinated in the balanced approach that anything else seems sacrilegious. After all, doesn’t the scorecard part of the “balanced scorecard” already account for how you decide if you’ve won or not, with the dashboard playing the role of the dutiful baseball statistician? However, if you find your organization engaged in a lot of measurable activity but still not scoring the necessary runs to win the game, you might want to seriously consider this more focusedbusiness intelligence technique as part of a larger cultural chance management initiative. Or more to the point, if you find yourself still paying out large performance bonuses for frankly less than stellar overall enterprise performance, aligning behind a single score-keeping metric might be just the solution you’ve been searching for.
By Leo Sadovy, EPM Contributor, from:Â http://blogs.sas.com/content/valuealley/2013/07/23/metrics-too-many-different-ways-of-keeping-score/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ValueAlley+%28Value+Alley%29
Leo Sadovy handles marketing for Performance Management at SAS, which includes the areas of budgeting, planning and forecasting, activity-based management, strategy management, and workforce analytics, and advocates for SAS’ best-in-class analytics capability into the office of finance across all industry sectors. Before joining SAS, he spent seven years as Vice-President of Finance for Business Operations for a North American division of Fujitsu, managing a team focused on commercial operations, customer and alliance partnerships, strategic planning, process management, and continuous improvement. During his 13-year tenure at Fujitsu, Leo developed and implemented the ROI model and processes used in all internal investment decisions—and also held senior management positions in finance and marketing.Prior to Fujitsu, Sadovy was with Digital Equipment Corporation for eight years in sales and financial management. He started his management career in laser optics fabrication for Spectra-Physics and later moved into a finance position at the General Dynamics F-16 fighter plant in Fort Worth, Texas.He has an MBA in Finance and a Bachelor’s degree in Marketing. He and his wife Ellen live in North Carolina with their three college-age children, and among his unique life experiences he can count a run for U.S. Congress and two singing performances at Carnegie Hall. See Leo’s articles on EPM Channel here.
August 12, 2013 at 7:18 am
Leo,
The OPACC metric Cat employs sounds like a good one, similar to things like EVA and ROIC. And as far as financial metrics are concerned is probably the one to focus on.
However, unlike games, which are time defined highly structured events, business is much more complicated than that, and I am not convinced a single metric can really do it justice.
For example, I would wager that Cat has programs that give back to the community and/or contribute to charitable causes. This activity will lower their OPACC, yet they do it anyway.
Why? My take is that there are a host of stakeholders that need to be responded to, and in order to accomplish this a sense of balance will be required which goes beyond one or even several metrics, no matter how good they are.
Thanks.
August 16, 2013 at 11:53 am
Overall, I think I’m in agreement with you, David, which is why I also made passing reference to my previous posts on Metrics for the Organization and Metrics for Critical Behaviors. People need functional metrics appropriate and relevant to their work and contribution. I do see value in CAT’s approach in perhaps using it as both a values/cultural communication vehicle (i.e. - THIS is what we are about), and as a tie-breaker of sorts, or a necessary but not sufficient hurdle every proposal must meet. As far as high level corporate expenses, I did not ask Doug, but I suspect these may be kept above the “decision” level and included as part of the 17% capital charge - that’s what I would do with them.