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Balanced Scorecards and Strategy Maps

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Balanced Scorecards and Strategy Maps. Presented by: Deb Feldpausch ... Central Location: Lansing, Michigan. Founded in 1948, began operations in March 1949 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Balanced Scorecards and Strategy Maps


1
Balanced Scorecards and Strategy Maps
Presented by
Deb Feldpausch Director of P/C PHSMichigan Farm
Bureau
2
An Overview of theBalanced Scorecards and
Strategy Maps
3
Agenda
  • Overview of Balanced Scorecard
  • Farm Bureau, Michigan Case Example of Applying
    Balanced Scorecard
  • Q A

4
What is a balanced scorecard?
  • The balanced scorecard is a strategic planning
    system that is used extensively in organizations
    worldwide to align business activities to the
    vision and strategy of the organization, improve
    internal and external communications, and monitor
    organization performance against strategic goals.
    It was originated by Drs. Robert Kaplan (Harvard
    Business School) and David Norton as a
    performance measurement framework that added
    strategic non-financial performance measures to
    traditional financial metrics to give managers
    and executives a more 'balanced' view of
    organizational performance. 

5
Key Concept
  • The balanced scorecard is not a replacement for
    an organizations day-to-day measurement system.
    The scorecard measures are chosen to direct the
    attention of managers and employees to those
    factors expected to lead to competitive
    breakthroughs for an organization. - Kaplan
    and Norton

6
Why create a Strategy Map/Balanced Scorecard?
  • Increase focus on strategy and results
  • Improve organizational performance by measuring
    what matters
  • Align the focus across divisions/departments
  • Align organizational strategy with the work
    people do on a day-to-day basis
  • Improve communication on the organizations
    Vision and Strategy
  • Prioritize projects/initiatives

7
Mission Why we exist
Values What is important to us
Vision What we want to be
5-Year Strategy Game plan
Strategy Map Translate and communicate
The Metrics Continuum
Balanced Scorecard Measure and focus
Division Strategy and Plans
Targets and Initiatives
Personal Objectives
Alignment Working together across silos
Based on Kaplan and Norton
Outcomes
8
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9
Strategy Maps
  • Strategy maps are communication tools used to
    tell a story of how value is created for the
    organization. 

10
Why a Strategy Map?Translate and Communicate
  • Places the strategies into four perspectivesa
    common language
  • Shows a Cross-functional view of the business
  • Allows silos to identify their role and impact
  • Shows expected importance of different strategies
  • Is one page
  • Is a graphica picture is worth a thousand words
  • Is supported by the plan and analysis
  • Can include the big initiatives underway to
    demonstrate their role and impact
  • Translates and communicates the strategy into
    what I need to do

11
Our Strategy Map
12
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13
Our Balanced Scorecard
14
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15
Four Perspectives
  • The balanced scorecard suggests that we view the
    organization from four perspectives, and to
    develop metrics, collect data and analyze it
    relative to each of these perspectives

16
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17
The Learning Growth Perspective
  • This perspective includes employee training and
    corporate cultural attitudes related to both
    individual and corporate self-improvement. In a
    knowledge-worker organization, people -- the only
    repository of knowledge -- are the main resource.
    In the current climate of rapid technological
    change, it is becoming necessary for knowledge
    workers to be in a continuous learning mode.
    Metrics can be put into place to guide managers
    in focusing training funds where they can help
    the most. In any case, learning and growth
    constitute the essential foundation for success
    of any knowledge-worker organization.

18
The Learning Growth Perspective
  • Kaplan and Norton emphasize that 'learning' is
    more than 'training' it also includes things
    like mentors and tutors within the organization,
    as well as that ease of communication among
    workers that allows them to readily get help on a
    problem when it is needed. It also includes
    technological tools.

19
The Business Process Perspective
  • This perspective refers to internal business
    processes. Metrics based on this perspective
    allow the managers to know how well their
    business is running, and whether its products and
    services conform to customer requirements (the
    mission). These metrics have to be carefully
    designed by those who know these processes most
    intimately with our unique missions these are
    not something that can be developed by outside
    consultants.

20
The Customer Perspective
  • Recent management philosophy has shown an
    increasing realization of the importance of
    customer focus and customer satisfaction in any
    business. These are leading indicators if
    customers are not satisfied, they will eventually
    find other suppliers that will meet their needs.
    Poor performance from this perspective is thus a
    leading indicator of future decline, even though
    the current financial picture may look good.
  • In developing metrics for satisfaction, customers
    should be analyzed in terms of kinds of customers
    and the kinds of processes for which we are
    providing a product or service to those customer
    groups.

21
The Financial Perspective
  • Kaplan and Norton do not disregard the
    traditional need for financial data. Timely and
    accurate funding data will always be a priority,
    and managers will do whatever necessary to
    provide it. In fact, often there is more than
    enough handling and processing of financial data.
    The current emphasis on financials leads to the
    "unbalanced" situation with regard to other
    perspectives.

22
Who Needs a Balanced Scorecard?
  • Harris poll revealed
  • Only 37 of U.S. full-time employees have a clear
    understanding of what their organization is
    trying to achieve and why.
  • Only 9 believe their work teams have clear
    measurement goals.
  • Kaplan and Norton documented the single, greatest
    driver of performance success using balanced
    scorecards is successfully cascading the
    scorecard.

23
Who Needs a Balanced Scorecard? (cont.)
  • How does it do that?
  • Brings understanding of the strategy.
  • Brings understanding of goals.
  • Brings dialogue on results.
  • Helps to harness the most powerful competitive
    advantage a company can have.
  • How can we, at our level, help the organization
    reach the organizational strategy goals?

24
Concepts in Selecting Measures
  • Lagging The end result, our traditional way of
    looking at results combined ratio
  • Leading (also called drivers) Key to affecting
    behavior and to drive the results

New Agents Appointed
Target Mailings
Calls Converted to Quotes
NB Production
Leading Drives Results
Lagging Result
25
Underlying Concepts
  • Strategy at its core is a statement of the value
    proposition, how we are different, why the
    customer will buy from us.
  • Getting the right people on the bus, going in the
    right direction, is still important. That is done
    by the alignment of our process, our people, and
    technology and cultural to the strategy.

26
Underlying Concepts
  • We operate with assumptions that need to be
    continually tested. Measures help us test
  • Are we doing the right things?
  • Are we doing them correctly?
  • Are they getting us the results?

27
Underlying Concepts
  • When people participate in the development
    process, ownership and increased sense of
    accomplishment and satisfaction occursand we get
    better results.
  • Keep the message simple, keep the message clear,
    keep the message consistent.
  • This is about cause and effect, about assumptions
    and hypothesis these need to be continually
    tested.

28
Farm Bureau Insurance Overview
  • Central Location Lansing, Michigan
  • Founded in 1948, began operations in March 1949
  • Licensed in Michigan Only
  • 530,000 Property Casualty and Life policies in
    force
  • Serving insured through 400 Career Agents
  • Provide Property Casualty and Life / Annuity
    products

29
Starting Point
  • Training (3 staff)
  • Attended 2 Seminars
  • Using Strategy Maps and the Balanced Scorecard
  • Business Process Management and the Balanced
    Scorecard
  • Read books on the Balanced Scorecard
  • Kaplan / Norton
  • Ralph Smith
  • Agreement on Purpose of the Balanced Scorecard

30
Stage I -
  • Developed Corporate Strategy Map
  • Developed Corporate Scorecard
  • Promoted Strategy Map Balanced Scorecard
  • All Employee Kick-Off Meeting
  • Booklet on Strategy BSC to all employees
  • Company Portal Page
  • Began meeting monthly with executive team still
    do today.

31
Stage II - Implement and Cascade
  • Created Divisional Strategy Maps
  • Developed in a 3-hour workshop
  • Linked to Corporate Map
  • Create a dictionary of all Measures
  • How does measure link to Strategy Map
  • Brief Description of Measure
  • Rationale behind measure
  • Formula
  • Owner of Data
  • Example of how it will appear on Scorecard

32
Stage II - Implement and Cascade (Cont.)
  • Departmental Scorecards
  • Utilizes divisional strategy map
  • Developed in a 3-Hour workshop
  • Participation of all employees

33
The result
  • Keeps the Strategy alive
  • Discussions on how to obtain results
  • Discussions on working across divisions and
    departments to achieve results
  • Bigger focus on the Learning Growth (People
    Path)

34
Lessons Learned
  • Fewer measures are better
  • The monthly meetings should be on strategy not
    review
  • Directors/Managers using and understanding the
    tool before taking it to their departments
  • Link Corporate Projects to Strategy Map

35
Lessons Learned
  • Tool can be used before measures are available
  • Support by CEO and Executive team is huge
  • Dont make it to complicated/difficult to create
    or interpret
  • Major divisional reorganizations can cause
    updates to strategies and recascading of
    measurements.

36
Lessons Learned (Cont.)
  • Identify a data owner in each team
  • Large departments (20 or more) should be broken
    out for the workshops
  • Clearly explain the purpose and objective of
    using the Strategy Map and BSC tools
  • Keep communicating and engaging employees

37
Q A
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