SMEs PERFORMANCE MEASURES
Performance Measures are indicators that enable assessment of the
activities of an enterprise or an organization. They are identified
based on the goals of the enterprise.
A performance measure is composed of a number and a unit of measure. The
number gives us a magnitude (how much) and the unit gives the number a
meaning (what). Performance measures are always tied to a goal or an
objective (the target). Performance measures can be represented by single
dimensional units like hours, meters, nanoseconds, Naira, number of
reports, number of errors, length of time to design hardware, etc. They
can show the variation in a process or deviation from design
specifications. Single-dimensional units of measure usually represent
very basic and fundamental measures of some process or product.
More often, multidimensional units of measure are used. These are
performance measures expressed as ratios or two or more fundamental
units. These may be units like miles per gallon (a performance measure
of fuel economy), number of accidents per million hours worked (a
performance measure or the companies safety program), or number of
on-time vendor deliveries per total number of vendor deliveries.
Performance measures expressed this way almost always convey more
information than the single-dimensional or single-unit performance
measures. Ideally, performance measures should be expressed in units of
measure that are the most meaningful to those who must use or make
decisions
Most performance measures can be grouped into one of the following six
general categories. However, certain organizations may develop their own
categories as appropriate depending on the organization’s mission:
Effectiveness: A process characteristic indicating the degree to which
the process output (work product) conforms to requirements. (Are we
doing the right things?)
Efficiency: A process characteristic indicating the degree to which the
process produces the required output at minimum resource cost. (Are we
doing things right?)
Quality: The degree to which a product or service meets customer requirements and expectations.
Timeliness: Measures whether a unit of work was done correctly and on
time. Criteria must be established to define what constitutes timeliness
for a given unit of work. The criterion is usually based on customer
requirements.
Productivity: The value added by the process divided by the value of the labor and capital consumed.
Safety: Measures the overall health of the organization and the working environment of its employees.
The following reflect the attributes of an ideal unit of measure:
* Reflects the customer’s needs as well as our own
* May be interpreted uniformly
* Provides an agreed upon basis for decision making
* Is compatible with existing sensors (a way to measure it exists)
* Is understandable
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