Executing a business strategy requires more than financial performance.
This is because the lag time entailed in changing a financial
result makes it useful more as a long-term success measure, than
as a guide for day-to-day action. For this reason, leaders and
strategic planners need to identify and measure additional, more
actionable factors leading to positive financial outcomes. These
additional factors typically include not only 'tangibles', such
as operational and business process performance, but also 'intangibles',
such as employee, customer, and market success factors that affect
tangible results. Taken together, the tangible and intangible
success factors identified for a strategy create a consensus cause-and-effect
picture of how the organization intends to execute strategy and
achieve results. Moreover, when leaders limit the number of strategic
success measures to less than 20 or so, this cause-and-effect
picture provides a valuable tool for communicating the strategy
within the organization, planning and tracking strategy execution,
and testing beliefs about the causes of success. Wolf Management
Consultants will assist the leadership team in identifying, implementing,
and communicating their strategic measures and effectively applying
them in performance planning, tracking, and assessment of progress.
The overall Strategic Scorecarding Process for accomplishing
this is summarized in the diagram below:
The Strategic Scorecarding Process
The goal of the Plan phase is to agree upon the strategy and
create a strategy map depicting success factors critical to strategy
execution. This phase is complete when the strategy map has reviewed
with stakeholders and operational definitions have been developed
for each success factor.
In the Do phase, the executive team implements its performance
plans and designs any new measures needed to track strategy execution.
Baselines and targets are also established for any new measures.
The Check phase entails collecting data to update measures, assessing
performance relative to targets, and identifying gaps.
In the Act phase, executive management takes steps to close gaps,
and more importantly, lock in any gains that have been realized
during the performance cycle just completed.

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