Monday 19 December 2011

Santa Claus's key performance indicators

Santa Claus has the ultimate in seasonal businesses, in just one night he has to deliver the right toys to the right children to over 1.675 billion houses (based on an average of 4 occupants per house www.convert-to.com). So what performance metrics would Santa require? There are the obvious ones on Christmas Eve, such as the need visit 19,386 homes per second, with the sleigh travelling at an estimated 3,000 times the speed of sound (http://www.baltimoremd.com/humor/santaengineer.html). And the avoidance of rework, if the wrong present is delivered to a child. But what about other measures?


When I posed this question at a recent Christmas Party my fellow party-goers suggested the amount of alcohol Santa consumers over the evening could be a problem. Based on 30ml of alcoholic spirits such as whisky or gin left out at every 5th house Santa consumes roughly 10,000 litres of spirits on Christmas Eve! However the energy required to visit 19,386 homes per second probably requires that sort of energy input, indeed Santa may budget for a particular amount of drink and food being left out to keep himself and the reindeer fuelled up, with a disaster recovery plan at hand should the planned food and drink not be available.

Of course the ultimate measure of success for Santa is as many happy smiling children as possible. Santa's marketing department has the triple role of promoting the Santa brand, determining who gets what presents (what to produce) and also who is naughty and who is nice, hence the year-wide viral marketing campaign using parents to cajole there little darlings into behaving with the threat that if they do not behave they will be put on the naughty list and Santa will not visit them. Of course I trust that you have been good during the year and Santa will be visiting your house on Christmas Eve.

This blog will be having a short break over Christmas, back late January. If there is anything you would like to the blog to cover in 2012 let me know, it is sure to be a fabulous year. I wish you a happy and safe Christmas.


Exploring the value of IT to organisations
email: david.gwillim@optusnet.com.au
blog: http://www.businessitvalue.blogspot.com/

Wednesday 14 December 2011

Forget IT strategy, it is now all about digital strategy

There has been a quiet revolution going on in organisations over the past decade which has gathered pace this year. Organisational IT is changing beyond recognition. With the widespread use of outsourcing, off-shoring, cloud services (application outsourcing), remote hosting and the rapidly developing automated economy, not to mention the rise of user owned devices and the shifting of IT purchasing and management power out of IT enclaves and into general business, the world of IT strategy is not what it used to be. Indeed organisations still thinking of IT as something to be aligned (proof if ever there was any needed of the 'otherness' of IT are just kidding themselves).

It is now, all about your digital strategy, that is, how will you electronically interconnect and interact with customers, suppliers, employees, government etc. The 'how' of IT is rightly taking a back-seat to the 'what - where - when'. Atlast organisational IT is maturing, it is an area of strategy every manager must now know, and it is as impossible to separate form the activity of business as finance or marketing is.

This is causing major challenges for IT managers and those living in the IT-Business alignment past. It is also a challenge for business schools and others charged with equipping tomorrows managers with the tools they need to lead tomorrows organisations. I have spent my entire career in IT and acknowledge the legacy thinking that I possess. I hope that I can embrace and contribute to the new world of digital strategy, it will be fast and exciting, and organisational IT will never be the same again. 2012 here we come.


Exploring the value of IT to organisations
email: david.gwillim@optusnet.com.au

Sunday 4 December 2011

Fire all the managers - a measurement solution

The development of bureaucratic management over the past 200 years has built up a whole heap of metrics, budgets, planning and other evaluative mechanisms designed to enhance performance within a functional hierarchy. A key question for me, when I read about alternative business models is how are the measurement and evaluation systems adapted so that desired behaviour is achieved in the new model. After all you get what you measure, and many a business change has failed because the measurement and reward system did not change or was not appropriate. After all you get what you measure?

"First, let's fire all the managers" is the title of management guru Gary Hamel's latest article in Harvard Business Review (citation below). It documents the practices of the Morning Star Company in California that operates 3 major fruit processing plants and is the worlds largest processor of tomatoes. With 400 staff and $700M in revenue such a company would typically have a hierarchy of 50 or so managers. At Morning Star no one has a boss, employees negotiate with their peers, everyone can spend the company's money, each individual is responsible for acquiring the tools they need, there are no titles or promotions and compensation decisions are peer based. Morning Stars vision is to create a company in which all team members "will be self managing professionals, initiating communications and the coordination of their activities with fellow colleagues, customers, suppliers, and fellow industry participants, absent directives from others".

Effective measurement systems are the corner stone of alternatives to the traditional control centric bureaucratic hierarchy. So how does measurement work at Morning Star? For a start employees negotiate with each other over the services and performance levels they will provide to each other. This is similar to internal SLA's that are familiar to many IT managers, the main difference from an IT perspective is that they are reciprocal rather than the typical one-sided internal IT SLA. Morning Star calls these agreements "Colleague Letter of Understanding" and there are 3,000 of them across the company.

Secondly, separate P&L's are created for as many business segments as possible (this is critical in empowering employees so they can determine their contribution to the companies overall results and modify behaviour as necessary - in large and complex business units typical in many big companies it is impossible for individuals to quantify their contribution - and therefore cannot make empowered decisions that are consistent with overall company success) at Morning Star there are 23 separate business units with P&Ls.

Also every staff member creates a personal vision statement that shows how they contribute to the company's overall vision. This seems to me to allow much for more flexibility than the balanced scorecard when it is applied to individuals as due to its format restrictions the individual scorecard often make no sense.

It is fascinating to watch organisations such as Morning Star, Google, WL Gore and others developing alternative management models, with common themes of individual responsibility and team based measurement, I'm sure more will develop in the knowledge economy. To read this article go to hbr.org and register for free, you can download 3 articles per month at no cost. Hamel, G, 2011, "First Lets Fire All the Managers", Harvard Business Review, December 2011.


Exploring the value of IT to organisations
email: david.gwillim@optusnet.com.au