PDF For The Introduction
PDF For The Introduction
I believe that Toyota’s 14 principles should be embedded in all private, government and
non-profit agencies as best they can. They would make a profound impact on the
organisations, benefitting the staff, management, board and customers. The 14
principles are set out in Exhibit 2.
Build a culture of stopping to fix problems, to get quality right the first time
This is an important principle for the finance team to master. Finance teams invariably
go from:
one month-end to another without improvement
one annual plan to another without improvement
one year-end to another without improvement.
Whereas if we adopted this Toyota principle we would evaluate, after process has
finished, and ask what can we do better next month, next year.
We would reduce the number of internal transactions, the number of spreadsheets and
constantly review each processes’ timeline to further eliminate waste and shortened
timelines.
Use only reliable, thoroughly tested technology that serves your people and
processes
Toyota are never the first to use a new technology. They let others break-in the new
ground. They are, without doubt, the best users of a new technology once they have
ascertained that it will serve their staff and their processes.
This has important ramifications for the finance team in the selection of a new G/L, a
planning tool, and a new accounts payable system.
Impact on Performance
Peter Drucker’s Wisdom Management
Have an outside-in focus to your Outside-in initiatives will be measured,
business. See the operation from your particularly as a future orientated
customers’ perspective, especially the measure. For example, date of next
perspectives of your important customer feedback survey.
customers. Implementation of survey
recommendations being monitored
weekly after the survey report is
issued.
Focus on your noncustomers. Which of We will need to measure the success
your noncustomers should you be doing we have in doing business with new
business with? (Desirable potential targeted customers.
customers)
Look for opportunities as if your life Measurement of innovation will be very
depended on it. Drucker emphasized the important.
importance of innovation
Management versus Leadership. Measurement of the progress with
Management is ensuring that staff are leadership training and development
doing things right and leadership is will be very important.
ensuring that staff are doing the right
thing.
Recruitment is a life and death The recruiting of the KPI team should
decision. Drucker was adamant about be done very carefully, ensuring they
the significance of recruiting the right have the right mix of knowledge,
staff. experience, and credibility within the
organization to be successful.
Many organisations focus on
“recruiting the right people all the time”
as a critical success factor, and they
will need to develop specific measures
to track recruitment processes.
Do not give new staff new In this KPI project, it is important to
assignments. Drucker is referring to new ensure that the project team is made
projects where the organization’s staff up of experienced staff who know the
have no previous exposure. He referred critical success factors and the
to these jobs as widow makers, jobs members of the senior management
where an external appointment did not team. Bringing in consultants to
have a chance to succeed as it was high manage the KPI project will, more than
risk requiring a well-liked and trusted in- likely, lead to failure.
house project leader.
The scarce resource in an Performance measures will be
organization is performing people. designed to monitor high performing
Drucker highlighted that these scarce staff.
resources need to be specifically
monitored and not taken for granted.
Their goals should be challenging enough
to stretch them and keep them interested.
Impact on Performance
Peter Drucker’s Wisdom Management
Outstanding performance is Measuring the go-forward nature of the
inconsistent with a fear for failure. organization and the measurement of
Without the will to take risks, to venture the mistakes will flag whether we are
into the unknown and let go of the familiar moving quickly enough. Mistakes being
past, an organization cannot thrive in the seen as a necessary learning
twenty-first century. experience.
Today’s advanced knowledge is It is necessary to measure the extent
tomorrow’s ignorance. Drucker saw it the organization is gathering, sharing,
as very important to harness knowledge and using knowledge.
in every aspect of the organization.
Embrace abandonment. Drucker said: Promote Peter Drucker’s concept of
“The first step in a growth policy is not to abandonment. Many existing
decide where and how to grow. It is to measures should be abandoned along
decide what to abandon. In order to grow, with processes and reports. The KPI
a business must have a systematic policy project needs space to work. Other
to get rid of the outgrown, the obsolete, systems need to be abandoned to
and the unproductive.” allow enough time for the KPIs to
He also said: “Don’t tell me what you’re function properly.
doing, tell me what you’ve stopped The amount of abandonment will need
doing.” to be measured.
Measuring the extent of innovation and
abandonment will help focus
management’s attention on these two
important areas. Abandonment is a sign
that management are recognizing that
some initiatives will never work as
intended and it is better to face this reality
sooner than later.
Collaborate with other organizations, We will need to measure the extent to
even your competitors. Jack Welch which collaboration is happening. The
turned General Electric (GE) into a date of the next collaboration meeting,
powerhouse by striving to focus on what the date of the next shared
GE was good at. This led Welch to follow collaboration, the date of the next
Drucker’s advice on collaboration, and he agreement to contract out a service
pointed out that “Your back room is can all be measured.
someone’s front room.” In other words, if
others can do a job better than you can,
subcontract to them rather than diverting
energy to be good at everything, a task
that is impossible to achieve.
Know what information you need to do We can measure the reports that have
your job and from whom you need it, been removed from circulation.
When and how? By answering these
basic questions, we can streamline much
of the reporting formats, dispensing with
those reports that add no value.
Understand the importance of self- The KPI team should ensure that that
renewal. Drucker emphasized the they have enough time for family,
importance for leaders to have balance, friends and self-renewal.
to have interests outside the work
environment that help them maintain a
balanced perspective.
Impact on Performance
Peter Drucker’s Wisdom Management
Have three test sites. Drucker pointed On a KPI project, we should follow the
out that to do one pilot was never sage’s advice and pilot the KPI project
enough. in three entities.
Place people according to their The selection of the KPI team should
strengths. Drucker was adamant that focus on the candidates’ strengths.
you focus on what people can do rather Organizations can highlight those staff
than focus on what they cannot do well. members that are not in the right place
(e.g., not performing) and take action
to reposition them or assist them to
find the right job elsewhere.
Generate three protégés for each Status of succession planning for all
senior position. key positions should be monitored on a
quarterly basis. Following Drucker, any
shortage from the three protégés for
each senior position should be
reported as an exception once a
month.
Jim Collins’s Lessons for Performance Management, Sourced from “Good
to Great”, “Built to Last” and “How the Mighty Fall”iii
Getting the right people on the bus. The recruiting for the KPI team should
Collins emphasized the need for be conducted carefully. Organizations
organizations to place more emphasis can measure a manager’s rate of
on recruiting. success at recruiting. Managers who
have a record of failure should be
retrained or relieved of recruiting duties.
Getting the wrong people off the Organizations can highlight those staff
bus. Collins is very consistent with members who are not in the right place
Drucker. Move staff on if they are a (e.g., not performing) and take action to
poor fit with the organization’s values. reposition them or assist them in finding
the right job elsewhere.
The “hedgehog” concept. Collins By understanding an organization’s
points out that organizations need to critical success factors and deriving
know what they can be the best in the performance measures from them, you
world at, what they are deeply will create an alignment that is
passionate about, and what drives consistent with Collins’s thinking.
their economic engine. These three,
when they are present give the
organisation an impregnable position.
Collins likened it to a hedgehog that is
able to roll into a ball when facing
attack.
The flywheel effect. Collins found By reinforcing alignment to the
that Good to Great organisations had organization’s critical success factors,
exponential growth when the we will be consistent with Collins’s
organization worked as one to thinking.
innovate, implement and celebrate.
Big Hairy Audacious Goals The KPI team needs to set some
(BHAGs). Jim Collins and Jack Welch BHAGs for the project that will stretch
are at one here. They say incremental the KPI team’s thinking.
improvement will never stretch your
thinking. We should be asking “What
would you need to do to achieve this
BHAG”. It is not implying that falling
short of the BHAG is a failure or that
bonuses will not be paid.
The silent creep of impending The highlighting of the critical success
doom. Collins warns us about the first factors coupled with the KPIs will ensure
stage of decline “Hubris born of the senior management team focus on
success,” excessive pride leading the what matters to their flywheel.
management team down the slippery
slope. An organization always needs
to focus on its economic engine,
make sure its flywheel is turning and
maintain a profound understanding of
the fundamental reasons for success.
Try a lot of stuff and keep what The CEO and senior management team
works. Collins points out that need to encourage innovation. The
visionary companies often made their number of innovations by team should
best moves not by detailed strategic be measured. The benchmark is Toyota,
Jim Collins’s Wisdom Impact on Performance Management
Impact on Performance
Jack Welch’s Wisdom Management
Embrace candor. Welch has reinvigorated The KPI team needs to ensure that it
this word and placed it in front of is open and honest about performance
management. He said, “It is a leader’s measurement in the organization.
obligation to tell their staff how they are
doing and how they can improve
performance in a candid way.” As Welch
points out, candor allows more people to
participate in the conversation, generates
speed, cuts costs, and encourages
underperformers to reflect on their
achievements and move forward or move
on.
Jack Welch’s 20/70/10 “differentiation” It is important for organizations to
rule. Tied to candor is Welch’s 20/70/10 measure the handling of poor
“differentiation” rule. The top 20 percent of performers. Staff in the wrong
performers should be promoted into jobs
Impact on Performance
Jack Welch’s Wisdom Management
that are a good fit for their strengths, assist positions may be a significant issue for
the next 70 percent to better meet their the organization.
potential, and make it clear to the bottom Organizations can measure
10 percent that their future lies elsewhere. managers’ success rate at recruiting.
Good communication will see these staff
members moving on to better pastures for
themselves; failing that, these staff
members need to be assisted in moving on.
Have a cluster of mentors. As Welch Ensure that all KPI team members
says, “There is no right mentor for you; have appropriate mentor support.
there are many right mentors.” He sees Measures need to be developed to
mentoring more holistically. A mentor can monitor take-up of mentors by
come from a staff member many levels management and staff. First, target
below who passes their knowledge on to senior managers who do not have a
you. In Winning, Welch was forever grateful mentor.
for the young human resources (HR)
advisor who patiently helped him master e-
mail.
Read, read, read. Great leaders have a The KPI team will need to read the
thirst for knowledge and are constantly books indicated in the Epilogue.
looking at ways to move their learning on; Organizations can measure the extent
they are continuously reinventing to which the senior executives are
themselves. Welch was an avid reader of maintaining their learning, especially
the financial and management press and the CEO.
journals. He makes it very clear that it is a
leader’s role to be up to date.
Raise the profile of human resources in The KPI team should work closely with
your organization. Great leaders like Jack the HR team. The HR team will be
Welch have always recognized that the able to help sell the required change
human resources team are vital to the and get more senior managers on
organization. At General Electric, the head board. In some organizations, the
of HR was a member of the senior balanced scorecard has been
management team and the HR team was implemented by the HR team.
involved in all recruiting, promoting, Performance measurement initiatives
training, and disciplining processes. will work much better with skilled HR
input. Leaving human resources to a
young graduate to write meaningless
policy inserts for a never-read manual
is a surefire way to run down an
organization.
Make innovation work. Welch was a Innovation needs to be measured both
champion of innovation. He wanted in the past (“How many innovations
innovation to be part of the culture. did each team do last month?”) and in
Workshops were held called “work-out the future (“How many innovations will
process” where groups discussed better be up and running in the next two
practices and at least 75 percent of all weeks, four weeks?”).
recommendations from the brainstorming
sessions had to be given. A yes or no by
the manager at the close of the workshop
and the remaining recommendations had a
maximum 30-day gestation period before a
decision had to be made. This technique
forced the decision makers to apply
innovation practices, which allowed for
Impact on Performance
Jack Welch’s Wisdom Management
some failure but ensured much success at
the same time.
Recognition and celebration. Welch says The KPI project team will need to be
great leaders celebrate more. As he points active with recognition and celebration
out “Work is too much a part of life not to to assist with buy-in and maintain
recognize moments of achievement.” You interest and momentum.
can sense from listening to his webcasts Recognition and celebration needs to
that his celebrations would have been fun be measured both in the past (“The
to attend. number of recognitions and
Welch was all about making business fun. celebrations that occurred last month”)
Realize that it is not life or death, but a and in the future (“recognitions and
game you want to win. celebrations planned for next week,
next fortnight”).
Organizations also need to measure
the number of positive press releases
printed in the papers for, as sure as
night follows day, the press will have a
field day on the negative events that
are press worthy and happen because
of the very nature of the work a
government or nonprofit agency
performs.
Embrace the crisis. All exceptional It would be worth measuring the
leaders are great in a crisis and Jack Welch integrity gap within the organization,
was no exception. He had a large realism that is, the time between when an
streak in his body. He would take the event is known about and when it is
necessary action, face the necessary conveyed to the senior management
music, and move on. Welch handled each team.
crisis on these five stages:
The crisis will be worse than it first appears.
The bad news will come out sometime, so
may as well face the music now.
The situation will be portrayed in the worst
possible light by the press.
There will be carnage.
The organization will survive.
Setting goals that stretch. Welch liked to In performance measurement, it is a
see goals that were a mix of possible and sure way to limit performance by
the impossible. He went on to say, linking KPIs to bonuses. The key
“Effective leaders are not afraid to envision driver here will be politics and
big results.” By raising the bar so high that questionable measurement practices.
staff and management were forced to
totally rethink the route plan, new ways had
to be found to succeed and so often this
was achieved.
Be number one or two in the game. We need to measure our success at
Welch was aware that many of GE’s service delivery and the amount of
investments did not make sense. The abandonment we are doing in those
answer would have been no to the Drucker services that can be better done by
question, “If you were not in the business other organizations.
would you enter it now?” Consequently,
Welch was known as ruthless for his
directive of “Fix it, sell it, or close it” when a
Impact on Performance
Jack Welch’s Wisdom Management
business did not meet the strict criterion of
being either number one or two in that
particular sector.
Opt-in commitment. Hamel believes The KPI team should have an open
organizations should have an opt-in and selection process so that a wide net
self-chosen commitment. is cast for the best team members.
Passion for performance
management will be a very important
attribute to look for.
New management order. Hamel wants to The KPI team members should run
see a new management order and the the KPI project on this model.
signs are there in how the Internet works.
He points out that the reason the Internet
is so successful is:
Everyone has a voice.
The tools of creativity are widely
distributed.
It is easy and cheap to experiment with.
Capability counts more than credentials
and titles.
Commitment is voluntary.
Authority is fluid and contingent on value
added.
The only hierarchies are “natural”
hierarchies.
Just about everyone is decentralized.
Ideas compete on an equal footing.
It’s easy for buyers and sellers to find each
other.
Resources are free to follow opportunities.
Decisions are peer based.
Jeremy Hope’s Lessons for Performance Management. Sourced from
Reinventing the CFO and Beyond Budgetingvii.
Jeremy Hope’s Wisdom Impact on Performance Management
Bottom-up focus. Most systems The KPI project needs to focus on a
incorrectly aim to improve top down bottom-up process.
control –rather than bottom-up.
Always use tried and tested The KPI team should utilize only tried
technologies. Be skeptical about and tested balanced scorecard software.
investing in new, untried systems
Six or seven measures. Cut back on Follow the 10/80/10 principle and ensure
measurement to the point where only six that teams do not have more than six to
or seven measures are used at every seven measures.
level.
Relative performance. Recognize and If there is an incentives scheme, ensure
reward shared success on relative that it is consistent with the foundation
performance with hindsight, not on stones of Performance Related Pay, see
meeting fixed targets. Best to have team wwwdavidparmenter.com.
rather than individual incentives. Be wary
of aggressive targets and incentives.
They lead to high-risk strategies and the
wrong behavior.
Avoid setting annual measures. Avoid Important to understand the issue about
turning measures into targets and why a fixed performance contract is
performance contracts otherwise they will always broken. It is either too hard or too
lead to the wrong behavior. When using soft.
the balanced scorecard be careful that
measures do not become an annual
contract.
Measures should be of help to We need to avoid all measures that do
managers. Select operating measures not help improve or support a system.
on the basis of whether they help
managers to improve the system.
Measures that don’t pass this test should
be questioned and probably abandoned.
Avoid complexity. Whatever you do The winning KPIs methodology follows
don’t make management life more this advice.
complex! Avoid complex systems. Aim to
simplify everything at every level.
i
Jeffrey Liker, The Toyota Way: 14 Management Principles from the World’s greatest
Manufacturer, (McGraw-Hill, 2003).
ii
Elizabeth Haas Edersheim, The Definitive Drucker: Challenges for Tomorrow’s
Executives—Final Advice from the Father of Modern Management (McGraw-Hill, 2006).
iii
Jim Collins and Jerry Porras, Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies
(HarperBusiness, 1994). Jim Collins, Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the
Leap and Others, (HarperBusiness, 2001). How the Mighty Fall: And Why Some
Companies Never Give In (New York: HarperCollins, 2009).
iv
Jack Welch and Suzy Welch, Winning ( HarperBusiness, 2005).
v
Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman, In Search of Excellence: Lessons from
America’s Best Run Companies (New York: Harper & Row, 1982).
vi
Gary Hamel, The Future of Management (Harvard Business School, Press, 2007).
vii
Jeremy Hope, Reinventing the CFO (Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2006).
Jeremy Hope and Robin Fraser, Beyond Budgeting: How Managers Can Break Free
from the Annual Performance Trap (Harvard Business School Press, 2003).
viii
Tom Peters Thriving on Chaos – Handbook for a Management Revolution, (Harper
Perennial 1988).