What is the state of your business? If I were to ask you how are your operations faring,
would you hesitate? What about the
trends? Has operations been reducing
no-trouble found/ cannot-duplicate rates?
Is your call center not asking the right questions when triaging
customer complaints thereby letting through costly non-warrantable
devices? Has your days of stock
inventory levels been trending positively or negatively? Are you hitting your targets?
Successful companies know how operations are running daily. Not just the leaders of the company but from
the ground-level up. Paramount to understanding
the state of your business is relevant, actionable reporting. Call them KPIs – that’s Key Performance Indicators
for those of you who don’t know.
In today’s business, analysts, managers, and executives
alike are inundated with loads of data.
However, it’s not always a sure thing that stakeholders know not only
what to look for but how. I’ve been
lucky enough to have consulted at several clients where reporting has been on
all sides of the extremes, though no one having the ideal/ best practices. Let me share a few thoughts…
- Work smarter, not harder. I've seen clients who had excellent cadences for metric reviews (simply put) but the way they created the reports was overly complex. Analysts pulled reports together during the week and once the weekly report was completed, the analysts started working on the following week's!
- Rationalize your dashboards and metrics. Too often leaders think they're doing a good job because their managers and analysts are creating a plethora of reports. They could show you reports for every piece of the business. But as leaders, there are only a handful of metrics you really should be focused on. Don't waste your time and everyone else's in your meeting sifting through which metrics are key to driving your business.
- Reports should be easily digestible. Okay, so maybe if you're staring at a report showing your customer churn is skyrocketing and so you may be reluctant to swallow that bitter pill. However, metrics should be easily recognizable/ read. In reviews with other Leadership, who really has the time to stare at a data table to understand what's happening? Like back in elementary school, communicate through pictures (i.e. graphs) to tell stories of the trends, the current state, and the future. Make reports easily understood and read.
- Keep a cadence. Reviews of metrics and dashboards should be done intermittently. How often depends on your business. Someone once told me you need to review everyday (in a short meeting) citing a day of not knowing is death. I hardly think missing a day would mean death in most industries... perhaps in healthcare (company-wise and literally for patients) which is where he worked. Reviews should be done on a regular basis so that metrics have a baseline for trends and are a part of company life.
- Make your metrics actionable. What is the purpose of creating metrics illustrating your business is not faring well if you're not going to do anything about it? Metrics, like x-rays at the doctor, tell you the situation and gives you clues as to how to repair or improve your business.
- Assign accountability and responsibility. Hold your people accountable to address concerns. To the point directly above, metrics should be actionable so that the state of the business lies with your people. If no one takes accountability and responsibility, then how can change happen?
It’s easy to say, “oh yes, we have metrics. They’re…” and then you rattle off a dozen,
but are those metrics really important to you?
Or maybe you’re really creating metrics and dashboards just to have
them. Paramount to reporting and the
whole purpose of reporting is not to have a status meeting daily, weekly, or
whenever and leave the room feeling good but nothing was really accomplished. Instead, reports should be ACTIONABLE and
ACCOUNTABLE. Metrics should be directed
and focused on specific operations so that before the meeting adjourns, every
stakeholder knows what’s spiraling out of control, what metrics are off target,
what are the corrective actions, and of course, who has ownership. It’s too commonplace to just create reports
just for the sake of having them without the necessity to truly understand the
business and act upon them.
Treat status reviews and meetings of reports as a tool to
check the health of your company.
If you monitor with the right frequency, check key components to your
company’s health, and address the bad habits (negative trends or otherwise) through accountability, it
will be far easier to keep your company fit for the foreseeable future… and perhaps
prevent a few heart attacks both for the company and you.
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