Title: The Balanced Scorecard Model: Theory
1The Balanced Scorecard Model Theory Practice
Presented byC. Christopher LeeAssociate
Professor of Management
2The Balanced Scorecard Model (BSM) Purpose is to
translate strategy into measures that uniquely
communicate an organizations vision. Four
perspectives
- Financial value to shareholders
- Customer customer satisfaction and market
growth - Innovation and Learning people and
infrastructure - Internal processes that drive the business
3BSM Performance Categories and Linkages
4Lee (2012) Critical Issues on BSM
- Process Improvement
- Whole Organization
- Target a Process Set a Goal
51. Process Improvement
- Total Quality Improvement (TQM) BSM (1990s) is
an extension of TQM (1980s) - TQM Process TQM focuses on Process Product
Control (old) vs. Process Improvement (new, TQM
approach) - BSM Process A main focus of BSM also is
process improvement, just like TQM. - BSM vs. TQM TQM focuses on an incremental
(small) change (improvement) in a small process
in one area of business (production, sales, etc.)
at a time, while BSM attempts to include
processes of all related areas to the business
(financials, internal operations, customers) at
the same time.
6Why Process Is So Important - TQM
- Product Control (old) Before TQM, we implemented
quality control by checking the defect rate of
finished goods. This is product control. This
approach does NOT improve the quality. When you
check the quality of finished goods, damages were
already done. - Process Improvement (new TQM) TQM asks you to
check the quality in each process if the process
shows low quality, you must stop the whole
operation, and everyone must solve the particular
process immediately. By improving each process,
the whole operation (total quality) is improved,
and the quality of the fished good is improved.
7Why Process Is So Important (continued)
- Challenges of Process Improvement Improving an
process takes a lot of resources (time cost). - Long Term Project Therefore, BSM must be a
long-term project, like TQM. - Conclusion BSM should not show only the current
picture of the firm (As-is), but include the goal
(As-should be) and the progress report (process
improvement data).
8Why Financials Are So Important
- Performance Evaluation When stockholders
evaluate the performance of a manager
(CEO/President) at the quarterly meeting, they
used the stock price mostly. This would motivate
a manager to focus on increasing the stock price.
- Stock Price In theory, the stock price is
supposed to serve the best indicator of the
firms financial/business conditions - Stock price firm value / of common stocks
- Firm value profit (EBIT) / cost of capital
- Profit revenue cost
- Revenue goes up and/or cost goes down, then
profit goes up, then the stock price goes up
eventually. - Ideally, we would work hard to improve the
business process, which will produce better
quality products, resulting in more sales more
profits. In the end, the stock price will be up.
But this approach takes long time.
9Weakness of Using ONLY Financials
- However, there are bad managers who care about
their job security more than the firm itself. To
boost the stock price, they would manipulate the
financials. - The quick way to increase the stock price is to
boost profit. There are two ways. To increase
revenue or decrease cost. - A commercial on 1000 rebate for a new car sales
is a quick revenue increase scheme. This scheme
costs a lot. Thus, the bad manager is more
likely to find a way to decease cost quickly. - A quick cost reduction alternative is to reduce
the labor cost. This is why we see a big firm
announce a lay-off just prior to the quarterly
meeting. - Most of time, such lay-off announcement leads to
favorable response from Wall Street. The stock
price is up, stockholders are happy, and the
managers job is safe now. - But such spike in the stock price does not
accurately reflect the real picture of the firm -
long-term prospects, sustainability.
10 2. Whole Organization
- As seen in the previous slides titled Why
Financials Were Important, a bad manager can get
away with the quick fix (lay-off) spike of
stock price, though he did perform poorly as a
manager. - We need a better way to measure the performance.
We need a measurement that include a whole
picture including the financials. - BSM is an answer to this need. It covers a whole
organization value chain, including the
financials. - BSM covers not just (1) Financial, but also (2)
Customer, (3) Innovation Learning, and (4)
Internal. - In short, BSM complements the disadvantage of
using the financials alone, and offers a
comprehensive model in comparison with TQM.
113. Targeting a Process Setting a Goal
- BSM must require a comprehensive view of business
processes in the entire organization. - BSM needs to target which processes to improve.
- BSM sets a goal for the targeted processes.
- Schneiderman calls this management practice as
strategic planning in his paper titled How to
Build a Balanced Scorecard.
12Why BSM Fails
- Process Improvement A wrong BSM does not focus
on process and process improvement. - Whole Organization A wrong BSM does not capture
a whole picture of the organization and value
chain. - Target a process Set a Goal A wrong BSM does
not target processes to improve, and fails to set
the improvement goal for each process (Lack of
strategic planning). - RQ Explain three major reasons why BSM fails.
13Concluding Remarks
- Abuse of BSM - Many organizations use BSM
incorrectly. They use it to summarize their
current picture. It does not improve anything.
It is a big waste of money and time. - BSM Present Future BSM is not the perfect
tool, but it is well received by the business
community as well as other organizations
(government agencies, schools, etc.). Wherever
you work in the future, you will be involved with
BSM one way or another. - Get on the Board - Be an active participant of
the BSM project. After all, it is about
improving business process. At the corporate
meeting, make good suggestions on BSM. Many
executives still misunderstand what BSM is for.