Tags
Administration
Benefits
Communication
Communication Programs
Compensation
Conflict & Dispute Resolution
Developing & Coaching Others
Employee Satisfaction/Engagement
Executive Coaching
HR Metrics & Measurement
HR Outsourcing
HRIS/ERP
Human Resources Management
Internal Corporate Communications
Labor Relations
Labor Trends
Leadership
Leadership Training & Development
Leading Others
Legal
Management
Motivating
Motivation
Organizational Development
Pay Strategies
Performance Management
Present Trends
Recognition
Retention
Staffing
Staffing and Recruitment
Structure & Organization
Talent
The HR Practitioner
Training
Training and Development
Trends
U.S. Based Legal Issues
Vision, Values & Mission
Work-Life Programs & Employee Assistance Programs - EAP
Workforce Acquisition
Workforce Management
Workforce Planning
Workplace Regulations
corporate learning
employee engagement
interpersonal communications
leadership competencies
leadership development
legislation
News
Onboarding Best Practices
Good Guy = Bad Manager :: Bad Guy = Good Manager. Is it a Myth?
Five Interview Tips for Winning Your First $100K+ Job
Base Pay Increases Remain Steady in 2007, Mercer Survey Finds
Online Overload: The Perfect Candidates Are Out There - If You Can Find Them
Cartus Global Survey Shows Trend to Shorter-Term International Relocation Assignments
New Survey Indicates Majority Plan to Postpone Retirement
What do You Mean My Company’s A Stepping Stone?
Rewards, Vacation and Perks Are Passé; Canadians Care Most About Cash
Do’s and Don’ts of Offshoring
Error: No such template "/hrDesign/network_profileHeader"!
Blogs / Send feedback
Help us to understand what's happening?
Reason
It's a fake news story
It's misleading, offensive or inappropriate
It should not be published here
It is spam
Your comment
More information
Security Code
Measurement Traps
Created by
Jim Clemmer
Content
Measuring employee or organizational performance can cut both ways. It can play a valuable role in improving organizations - or it can stand in the way of necessary change.
Used effectively, measurement can provide vital feedback that shows whether approaches being used are moving the organization toward its goals. It can assess whether staff training, teamwork, empowerment, process improvement, re-engineering or other trendy ideas are producing real results.
But it can also cut into organization morale, slash team effectiveness and wound quality improvement efforts. Here are four of the most common measurement traps I see in organizations:
Managing results. The bottom line is history. It shows today's consequences of yesterday's management decisions, but is an unreliable predictor of how today's decisions will affect tomorrow's results.
Results can't be managed any more than you can turn back time. Like a score, they form a historical record of how you did. In competitive sports, you improve your score by improving your play in key strategic areas.
Improvement starts by identifying and measuring the critical few service or product production processes and support systems that have the biggest impact on your results. But if you're driving through the rear-view mirror of bottom-line results, you won't see the swamp until you are sinking in it.
Inside-out measurement. Too many measures are designed to meet internal needs. They may satisfy management's command-and-control paranoia by tracking every activity and minute of the day. Or they're designed to serve accounting, information technology, human resources or other support departments.
What's missing in this measurement mania is the customer. High-service providers measure from the outside in. They begin by measuring what's important to customers. Next on the priority order are the needs of those serving the customers. Then attention shifts to the people producing products or serving the servers. The measurement needs of managers and support departments should bring up the rear of this customer-server-producer train.
The measurement stick. Just as important as what's measured, is how the information is used. In many organizations, team members and managers resist measuring accuracy rates, cycle times, rework or customer satisfaction because they've been beaten with this information.
A mountain of evidence shows that 85 to 90 percent of errors originate in the organization's structure, system or process. Yet all too many executives look for who, rather than what, went wrong.
To counter growing complaints from distributors, one manufacturer began measuring its rate of incomplete orders. Managers discovered mounting back-order levels, wrong parts shipped and clerical errors. More than 60 percent of the "pick orders" didn't match the distributors' invoices.
The solution was to replace the shipping department manager. The new manager promptly disciplined, fired and "motivated" clerks and shippers to shape up. After a temporary improvement, the rate of incomplete orders settled in slightly below their previous level.
The company finally focused its measurement, problem-solving and improvement activities across a wider spectrum. It looked at the entire sales, order-entry, picking-and-packing, inventory-control, accounting and invoicing process. Only then, did incomplete orders plunge by nearly 300 percent.
Confusing knowing and doing. Weighing yourself 10 times a day won't take off the pounds. No matter how sophisticated, your measures are only indicators.
Improvement happens by pulling people together throughout your organization to analyze and improve key processes and support systems. What the indicators say, are much less important than what's being done with the information.
Measurements that don't lead to meaningful action aren't just useless - they're wasteful.
Measurement is an essential tool for improving organizations. Choosing the right tool is important, but how skillfully the tool is used determines its effectiveness.
Jim Clemmer's practical leadership & personal growth books, workshops, and team retreats have helped hundreds of thousands of people worldwide improve personal, team, and organizational performance. Jim's web site, JimClemmer.com, has over 300 articles and dozens of video clips covering a broad range of topics on change, organization improvement, self-leadership, and leading others. Sign-up to receive Jim's popular monthly newsletter, and follow his leadership blog. Jim's international best-sellers include The VIP Strategy, Firing on All Cylinders, Pathways to Performance, Growing the Distance, The Leader's Digest and Moose on the Table. His latest book is Growing @ the Speed of Change.
Copyright © 1999-2025 by
HR.com - Maximizing Human Potential
. All rights reserved.