Infographic - Operational Management Survivor Guide
作者:Philip Uglow

1. 8 Train
1.1. Second, train people on how the metrics are derived and how a change in the metric affects the business. For example a 1% reduction in defects results in a 5% cost savings.
2. 9 Dollars not Percentages
2.1. Third, turn percentages into dollars. A $20 million reduction in costs, is a more powerful motivator than hearing that you have reduced costs by 5%.
3. 10 Regular
3.1. Fourth, metrics should be produced at a regular frequency, at least monthly, and be timely.
4. 11 Pick 2 or 3
4.1. Fifth, don’t look at all the metrics you are able to produce. Get your team involved and pick out 2 or 3 “key” metrics. These are metrics that your team feel are most important in running the business. Again, these are called KPI or Key Performance Indicators. You don’t need to look at 100’s of metrics, only two or three key performance indicators.
5. 12 Let Employees Choose
5.1. Sixth, don’t fall into the trap of you, as a senior leader, picking the metrics. If you do that they become your metrics not your employees metrics. Your employees will not have the same level of involvement. Instead as mentioned above, get your team to learn and pick what the key performance indicators are.
6. 13 Set Targets
6.1. Seventh, once you have picked your two KPI’s the next thing you need to do is get your team to decide on targets. Again, have the front line folks pick this number. Forget about you setting stretch targets or any other supposedly intelligent management technique you might think of. If you pick the target it is yours, not your employees. Let your employees own the target. If it is the first year of using kpi’s and you don’t have historical data then you may want to forgo picking targets altogether. Just implement the plan and worry about targets later. At the end of the year you can look at your performance and then you have some basis for next year's target.
6.2. When it comes to setting new targets at the end of the year, again, let your team do this. The only boundary you should set is that targets have to be at least better than the previous year. You will be surprised. Often your front line folks will pick metrics that are harder than you would have chosen.
7. 14 Trends
7.1. Eighth, you want to look at trends in performance, not a point in time. Anyone can have a good or bad month due to factors they can’t control. Luck. So you want to look at trends and manage to that. Ask questions that get people looking at trends. Are they trending towards or away from target? Why? What can you do next month to turn that around? (Record these ideas in action item lists and follow up).
8. 15 Baseline
8.1. Nine. The final thing to put on a performance trend graph is a horizontal base line. This represents the average performance for that metric from last year. Your goal should, at minimum, be better than that baseline. If you are negatively trending away from the baseline then again you can ask the question “Why?”.
9. 16 Knowledge not Punishment
9.1. Finally, tenth, Remember to never use key performance indicators to punish people. Use them as additional knowledge of the score and let your entire team determine actions to improve the numbers
10. Title Slide - Its Important
10.1. 64% of CEOs see innovation AND operational effectiveness as being the key to achieving results.
11. 1 What is it?
11.1. Operational management, is when companies focus on operational KPI’s (key performance indicators), metrics and targets to monitor and manage business performance. When you get it right there are a number of advantages
11.1.1. Companies grow 3 times faster than competitors when they focus on operational management.