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Training for Balanced Scorecard Success

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Authored by Paul Niven    Content Type: Articles

Summary

In this article, author, management consultant and Balanced Scorecard expert Paul Niven focuses on one aspect in any Balanced Scorecard program that is crucial but neglected – training

Training leads to a better educated and motivated workforce and can also produce dramatic improvements in bottom line results. This holds for the Balanced Scorecard as well. In this article, the author asserts that an organization’s Balanced Scorecard will benefit greatly from a well-planned, carefully constructed, and skillfully delivered training program. He also shares the essentials necessary to develop a training curriculum for Scorecard success.

The ideal starting point for this is to define the objectives for using the Scorecard and other key ingredients necessary to ensure a successful outcome. The author explains how to study key initial elements like the target audience, audience profiles and assessment of skills –skills the audience already has, new skills needed, and skills that need improvement.

After discussing the target audience and needs assessment, the article also provides tips on factoring in learning styles and preferences. Then, the author discusses the development of a primer on enterprise performance management and the Balanced Scorecard. Moving on, the author discusses where organizations can source appropriate literature to distribute and the benefits of engaging an external facilitator or consultant.

The article identifies the following elements for developing a Balanced Scorecard curriculum, which can be used in a workshop - background on the concept; the fundamentals, covering the four strategic perspectives, Strategy Maps, lead and lag key performance indicators (KPIs); success stories of other organizations, use of the Scorecard as a performance management system; a hands-on exercise for participants; and finally, details of implementation. The author also encourages organizations to evolve the training curriculum with the evolution of the Balanced Scorecard.

 

Training for Balanced Scorecard Success

Article Highlights:

  • Training leads to improved bottom-line results.
  • Balanced Scorecard success is dependent upon training in the methodology.
  • Sessions must be designed with the learning styles of your audience in mind.
  • A well-developed Scorecard training curriculum will enhance buy-in, support, and use of the tool.

Ensuring Scorecard Success with Training & Education

Well known Management guru Tom Peters is known for his “pull no punches” style and simple, practical advice. Here is his not so subtle message for organizations that don’t invest in regular employee training: Companies that don’t encourage employee education of all kinds are dumb!” I told you he didn’t pull any punches. While “dumb” is a subjective evaluation, many researchers have objectively confirmed that training not only leads to a better educated and motivated workforce, but can also produce dramatic improvements in bottom line results. Your Balanced Scorecard will benefit greatly from a well-planned, carefully constructed, and skillfully delivered training program. In this article I’ll share with you the essentials necessary to develop a training curriculum for Scorecard success.

My advice to clients embarking on a Balanced Scorecard implementation is always to “put the big rocks in first.” This means they must consider their objectives for using the Scorecard and other key ingredients necessary to ensure a successful outcome. The same advice applies to training for the Balanced Scorecard. Before you offer your “BSC 101” sessions, you must consider some foundational issues that will be critical to your ultimate success.

First, who is your target audience? Chances are you’ll ultimately offer several training
sessions to a number of diverse audiences. Profiling these groups in advance will help you mold a program that’s appropriate for each group. Once you’ve determined your audience you’ll need to conduct a simple needs assessment to determine where gaps exist between current and desired levels of skill. Here is a short list of questions to consider regarding the needs of your BSC audience:

1. What skills do participants possess regarding performance management and more specifically, developing performance measures in a BSC framework?

2. What new skills are necessary for participants to be able to develop performance
measures that are aligned with our strategy?

3. Will any existing skills of participants need to be modified or enhanced for them to develop aligned performance measures?

Possessing a clear view of your audience and their needs you’re now ready to develop a
Scorecard curriculum. Before we do that, however, remember that you’re working with adult learners. People learn in many different ways, some like to review printed material on a page while others respond best to visual cues. For some learners interacting through touch and feel is the way to enhance their experience. You should ensure that the training materials and sessions you develop will appeal to a wide variety of adult learning styles and preferences.

Begin your actual education efforts by preparing and distributing a comprehensive primer on the subjects of performance management and Balanced Scorecard. These topics are quite mature and a rich and abundant supply of literature is available. There are literally hundreds of articles and white papers to choose from so narrow your search by including any documents which specifically reference your industry or implementation focus (corporate wide versus business unit for example). A number of good quality books have been published on these subjects as well and you should consider purchasing at least one for yourself, your executive group, and your Scorecard implementation team.

For most organizations, the majority of training will take place during focused Balanced Scorecard workshops. Unless you have an in-house Scorecard expert parading about your hallways, I would strongly suggest using an outside facilitator or consultant. A good consultant will be able to spark group thinking and apply proven concepts to ensure you achieve your objectives. They also deliver that most critical of currencies - credibility - to your Scorecard implementation at this most important of junctures. Here are a number of items you should include on your workshop agenda:

- Background on the BSC concept, its history and evolution.
- BSC fundamentals: the 4 perspectives, Strategy Maps, lead and lag indicators,
etc.
- Success stories of other organizations, particularly those within your industry.
- Using the BSC as a management system: cascading the BSC for goal alignment,
linking the BSC to budgeting and compensation, and developing new reporting methods focusing on balanced performance data.
- A hands-on exercise: Nothing accelerates learning like a case study that forces participants to begin grappling with the concept and applying its core principles. Be sure and design a case study that will be relevant to your entire audience.
- Implementation details: your team, deliverables, and key milestones.

Just as your Balanced Scorecard grows and evolves, so too should your training curriculum. The steps described above will help you get off to a solid start, but continuous training is a core ingredient of your Scorecard implementation that must never be neglected. Ensure you’ve added new “modules” that correspond to the maturing nature of your  implementation. Courses on cascading the Scorecard, budget and compensation linkages, and of course technology (should you choose a software reporting solution) will all pay dividends in greater understanding and use of the system.

One final caveat. In their haste to build Scorecards many organizations will sacrifice the upfront effort of providing meaningful and detailed Scorecard training to those expected to use the system. Awareness sessions will be held during which the Scorecard is trumpeted as a measurement system featuring financial and non-financial measures but little is offered regarding the many subtleties and complexities of the model. It’s often the deceptive simplicity of the Scorecard that makes people very susceptible to the false notion that in-depth training is not required. Feeling the Scorecard can be simply mastered, the organization will sponsor high-level training and then trust their employees’ business instincts to kick in and fuel the development of powerful new performance measures. The cost of this decision will manifest itself in poorly designed Scorecards, lack of use, and weak alignment within the organization. Take the necessary time at the beginning of the project to develop a comprehensive Scorecard curriculum. You’ll be glad you did.

QUOTES

“Just as your Balanced Scorecard grows and evolves, so too should your training curriculum.”

REFERENCE TO OTHER ARTICLES

If you liked this article, you might enjoy...

The Importance of Terminology to your Balanced Scorecard
Balanced Scorecard Step by Step: Maximizing Performance and Maintaining Results
Balanced Scorecard Diagnostics: Maintaining Maximum Performance

For those of you in the public and nonprofit sectors, please consider:
Why Nonprofits Need a Balanced Scorecard
Using the Balanced Scorecard in the Public Sector
Balanced Scorecard Step by Step for Government and Nonprofit Agencies

About the author

Paul R. Niven is an author, management consultant, and noted speaker on the subject of the Balanced Scorecard. As both a practitioner and Consultant he has developed successful Balanced Scorecard systems for clients large and small in a wide variety of organizations, including Fortune 1000 companies, public sector agencies, and nonprofit organizations. The second edition of his very popular book “Balanced Scorecard Step by Step: Maximizing Performance and Maintaining Results” was released in September, 2006. The first edition has been translated into over a dozen languages. His two previous books are: “Balanced Scorecard Step by Step for Government and Nonprofit Agencies” released by John Wiley & Sons in June, 2003, and “Balanced Scorecard Diagnostics” which was released in April, 2005. He may be reached at 760.789.2449 or through his website at www.senalosa.com.

Copyright 2006 © Paul R. Niven, The Senalosa Group

 
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