Let's look at the top 10 reasons why your organization needs to measure its results:
- Measurement clarifies expectations. Measures are a the most transparent and clear means to communicate expectations to employees.
- Measurement directs behavior. Most employees consciously or unconsciously operate on the following assumption: “tell me how you'll measure me, and I'll tell you how I'll behave.”
- Measurement increases objectivity. Measurement is essential to “managing by fact” – otherwise you are left to lead with charm and personality.
- Measurement makes performance visible. If it’s not being measured, it simply can’t be managed.
- Measurement focuses attention. When people are faced with so many competing priorities for their time and activities, what is measured tends to get their attention – particularly when it is linked to a recognition/reward system.
- Measurement promotes consistency. Unmeasured systems tend to be highly variable systems, with all the negatives for quality that implies.
- Measurement facilitates feedback. Feedback in the form of timely, relevant measures is the basic navigational device of any individual or organization.
- Measurement improves decision-making. One of the major causes of failure in decision-making is poor or non-existent use of data. One accurate measure can be worth a thousand opinions.
- Management promotes understanding. Quality guru W. Edwards Deming thought that systematic process measurement led to the “profound knowledge” that was essential to top quality outcomes.
- Measurement improves execution. As former Allied Signal CEO and co-author of Execution Larry Bossidy has remarked “when I see companies that don’t execute, the chances are high that they don’t measure.”
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When you expand this list to 20 ... here is a another.
Measuring results helps you celebrate the success of your top performers.
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