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| Home > Data Management News > Executive dashboards and scorecards: How to get started | |
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The dashboard attraction is fairly obvious. What manager wouldn't want a graphical user-interface that shows, at a glance, metrics and key performance indicators (KPIs) about how business is performing? Consider the alternatives -- using complex reporting applications, requesting information from employees or worse, waiting for paper reports. Executives often return from industry events, telling their IT staff, "Just give me a dashboard!," according to Gartner analysts. But it's not quite that easy, according to Wayne Eckerson, director of research for The Data Warehousing Institute, based in Renton, Wa. and author of Performance Dashboards: Measuring, Monitoring, and Managing Your Business. First, delivering effective dashboards and scorecards relies on a sound data infrastructure. "A lot folks see the sizzle of a dashboard, and want it, but when you tell them how much its going to cost to [create] a highly-reliable, highly-available system that delivers data from variety of different sources that's been integrated cleaned, reconciled, loaded and delivered on a timely basis -- they tend to shy away," Eckerson said in a recent SearchDataManagement.com podcast. And that may be before they hear the cost and implementation timeline. "[People] think they can get a dashboard on the cheap for about $10,000 -- when in reality, if you're starting from scratch, it's probably going to cost you half a million dollars," Eckerson said. Then there's a recommended two-year timeline to optimize the content and context of dashboards and scorecards, according to Colin Snow, vice president and research director with San Mateo, Calif.-based Ventana Research Inc. and author of a 2006 dashboard study and survey of almost 600 executives. But the ultimate reward for implementing dashboards is worth it, Snow said, helping companies align operational performance to corporate goals and strategies. While about 50% the companies surveyed by Ventana thought they were effective in achieving performance alignment before dashboards and scorecards, that number jumps to 75% after an implementation. There are some best practices when it comes to preparing for and evaluating dashboards. Understand the difference between dashboards and scorecards The two terms are often used together, Snow said, but are distinctly different -- and often confused.
"Don't confuse monitoring with managing," Snow said. For example, "a sales dashboard would tell you revenue attainment toward goal, but a balanced scorecard would tell you if that business is actually profitable." To figure out what's best for a project, start with the end in mind Snow advised. "Find out from your executive teams what they really want to do," Snow said. "Is it that you want information in a scorecard and you're tracking corporate strategy -- or is just something I need to do to monitor an operation, process or portion of the business?" Complete a performance management process and system assessment Next, organizations should self-evaluate -- and complete a "thorough, unbiased assessment" of financial and operational processes and technology, Snow said. This can uncover problems, help set priorities and benchmark current situations, which will be helpful later on in evaluating the dashboard project's effectiveness. In the process, organizations can also collect the data needed to build a business case for the project. Identify user requirements and project scope This requires defining the "performance network," or who in an organization will need access to a dashboard or scorecard, Snow said. It also entails scoping the project -- figuring out exactly what will, and will not, be delivered in each phase. This is apparently easier said than done. "Projects get derailed very quickly if the scope is not defined well upfront," Snow said. "The project goes into scope creep and starts ramping up in features."
Build a business case for executive dashboards and scorecards This requires more than just a ROI analysis, Snow said. Dashboards and scorecards require executive support, "selling" the project throughout the organization, and effective change management processes. "People hit walls at the change management piece, because there's a cultural shift and change that happens when information in more visible," Snow explained. Problems can arise when dashboards publish data that used to be more private, held in someone's own spreadsheet or a single department. This visibility is often a good thing, but organizations should be primed for this change upfront. This means discussing the potential information that may be published on a dashboard or scorecard, Snow said, and defining what actions will be taken based on that information. Evaluate dashboard and scorecard technology It's common for organizations to skip many of the previous steps and evaluate technology first, Snow cautioned. But all of the steps leading up to the technology evaluation contribute to creating clearly defined requirements -- and this leads to making the right software purchase for an organization's needs. Once technology has been selected, Snow recommends proof-of-concept projects to iron out potential data problems, further refine design plans and start to build more support and buy-in before the dashboard or scorecard goes live. Plan a parallel data quality or master data management project Data quality is a serious issue in dashboard and scorecard projects, according to Snow's research. If dashboards display incorrect or inconsistent data, it hurts user adoption and can force companies to "back in" to an unplanned data quality or master data management (MDM) project. While MDM can be a major undertaking, Snow explained it's extremely important to have enterprise-wide agreement about things like an organization's definition of a "customer" or "product." And it's better to tackle these sorts of data quality and master data issues upfront, rather than after a dashboard or scorecard has been deployed. |
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