5 rules for successful success metrics (and a template)
By Zach Gemignani
April 2, 2006
Find more about:
dashboard
metrics
Analytics truism: everyone wants a dashboard (a.k.a. key performance indicators (a.k.a KPIs), success metrics, scorecards). Managers want a barometer of performance, a hammer to use on their subordinates, and a straightforward quantification of their business. Below are a few of the guidelines we use when we take on this task:
1. Actionable metrics. Ask yourself: what would I do if the metric is out of line? Do I have the levers that can impact it? Measures that track final outcomes like revenue or total customers don't give you much time to react or guidance about what to do next.
2. Less than five. When I first started at AOL, a friend of mine pointed to the dozens of reports flying around the organization and remarked (I paraphrase): "This many 'important' metrics just indicates that nobody really understands this business." If you struggle to boil down, you should spend more time defining success and understanding the factors that drive performance.
3. Simplicity over comprehensiveness. We don't agree with Thomas Davenport's call for more proprietary metrics:
You know you compete on analytics when...You not only are expert at number crunching but also invent proprietary metrics for use in key business processes.
In our experience, you're better off if you choose metrics that can be understood outside your corner of the world. One common trap we've seen is a desire to create a single comprehensive metric; this metric is often an index that combines a number of factors into an overall measure of performance. The result: numbers that are meaningless without a lot of context and difficulty in interpreting deltas.
4. Presentation matters. Your dashboard should be easy to understand and provide enough data to give your audience context. I've seen many dashboards that stubbornly show only the current state of a metric and the change from the previous week. Why so stingy with historical data? At Juice, we always show trending and try to give users a means to "cut" the data - by business line, customer type, month, etc. Check out our template for creating a success metric dashboard (more info below).
5. Evolve to goals. Metrics without goals can be a waste. Unfortunately, getting people to agree to specific targets can be painful. After all, goals start us down a slippery slope toward clear accountability. Here's what I've found works: start by focusing your energy on getting people to buy-in to the success metrics. Get clarity on definitions, show trending, and incorporate them into the organization's vernacular. Be patient: one day someone will raise their hand in a meeting and ask if there are targets for the metrics. Pretend to act surprised by the cleverness of this suggestion.

The success metrics template makes it easy to quickly put together a top-line report for your organization. The 'data' worksheet gives you a place to put in your weekly (or daily, monthly, etc.) metrics. Add in dimensions where appropriate. Saving and re-opening the spreadsheet will refresh the pivot tables. Shoot me an e-mail if you have questions.
The Dashboard Spy has a great blog about business dashboards.


7 comments | Show all comments only the last 5 are shown
ACI said:
It would be helpful, when posting templates if you would explain how they work. While clearly you are doing something clever with script and pivot tables I think that how it works (and thusly what folks can configure and what they should leave alone) is unclear. As reference, please see the step-by-step instructions for creating a 'speedometer' chart provided by MS Excel MVP John Peltier at http://www.peltiertech.com/Excel/Charts/SpeedometerXP.html.
While templates are great, they are even better when you know how they work so that you can modify them to your own use more effectively.
Sarab Singh said:
i love your blog
Andreas said:
I've tried downloading the two files:
Clean Charts Installer.xls
Clean Charts.xla
The xla file does not download at all rather it appears to open in my Firefox browser.
Please advise.
Also, will Clean Charts work with Excel 2000?
thx.
A
Jeremy Crane said:
Chart cleaner files don't seem to be available for download. The link simply redirects to this blog topic. Is the Excel plugin still available?
Chris Gemignani said:
Jeremy, Andreas: I've joined the two Excel downloads into a zip file. This should solve the downloading woes some have experienced. Thanks for your patience.
You can find the zip file on this page.
http://www.juiceanalytics.com/writing/2006/04/fixing-excel-chartsor-why-cast-stones-when-you-can/#commentform
James Gallman said:
Hi Chris.
The link is not fully shown on the page. Can you please repost it?
Chris Gemignani said:
James:
The link is: http://media.juiceanalytics.com/downloads/CleanCharts.zip
Thanks
said:
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