|
Page 1 of 3
There is no consensus as to what
performance management is. Different IT research firms define it
differently. Different consulting firms and software vendors describe
it to fit their unique competencies rather than what their customers
may require. Because my impression is that most of these organizations
view performance management far too narrowly, such as only better
budgeting and control, I think it is better to discuss what performance
management does rather than have arcane debates about defining what it is.
I argue that organizations have been doing performance management
for decades - well before it received its recent popular references in
the media. Organizations have been doing performance management
arguably even before there were computers! So why is it emerging as a
popular buzz phrase now?
The Debut of Performance Management at the Enterprise Level
If you had done a Google search a few years ago on the term
"performance management," the results would have predominantly referred
to the human resources and personnel departments' attention to
monitoring and improving individual employees. Do that Google search
today, however, and the shift is toward the performance of the
organization or enterprise in its entirety.
Some would argue that this shift where performance management
regularly appears in the media was due to the IT research firms
observing that business intelligence software vendors - the type with
functionality more toward data mining and analyzing data rather than
producing the raw transactional data - were integrating the analytical
information across multiple departments. For example, a computer
manufacturer's purchasing system detects a temporary vendor part
shortage that, in turn, is directly signaled to its customer order
entry agents to influence their customers to select alternative product
variations, perhaps with a discount or deal as inducement, until the
part shortage is resolved. The risk of a missed sales opportunity is
eliminated. This "demand shaping" is more powerful than "demand
management." This type of communication from the purchasing function
deep in the bowels of the production function to a call center agent
deep in the sales function would have rarely existed a few years ago.
Others might argue the increasing appearance of performance
management at the organizational level arose from the same IT research
firms observing those same business intelligence (BI) software vendors
providing strong combination suites of at-a-glance visual dashboards
and scoreboards. Further, these reporting tools are now linked to
strategic planning, managerial accounting and forecasting tools - and
they are extremely scalable to handle millions of records for products
and customers.
These are certainly factors, but I believe the emergence of
performance management in the media and marketplace has deeper root
causes.
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 Next > End >> |