INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
Faribors Ronaghi
Department of Knowledge Engineering, University of Vienna, Bruenner Str. 72, Vienna, Austria
Keywords: Integrated Performance Management, Meta Model
Abstract: Recently the performance of companies has gained a significant meaning due to globalization and new
conditions in th
e field of the markets and the competition area. To be successful the set objectives derived
from the strategy in different levels must be controlled and an approach must be chosen that integrates the
three parts, performance management concept, IT and organisation. The proposed article is to depict the
basic requirements for integrated performance management and shows as a result a meta model, where all
the basic objects and their relations are considered.
1 INTRODUCTION
Through globalization and thereby extended markets
the pressure of competition on enterprises
continuously rises (Ronaghi, 2003b). The offers on
services and new products extend and the Internet
gives the customers the possibility to recognize
changes in price and quality and react by changing
the supplier. New technologies and shorter
innovation cycles bring new products on the market.
The requirements of the stakeholders grow and the
time to react to changing environmental conditions
is getting shorter. New legal conditions force the
enterprises to the disclosure of their achieved
performance. These facts require a competitive
operational reaction time and a high flexibility and
ability regarding new strategic targets (Piser, 2004)
and top performance of the company (Kueng, 2003).
A success factor in this connection is the
measurement and management of the performance
in the relevant fields.
The traceable performance measurem
ent in the
company has always been a very difficult task for
the management. The main criticism of the
implemented approaches was the focus on financial
measures (Ronaghi, 2003a). New and modern
performance management concepts promote now a
multi perspective point of view and both financial
and non-financial figures. Analysis of the practical
use show, that there are still weaknesses to
overcome like:
The m
issing of the focus on strategic
aspects and success factors.
The com
plicated maintenance of the IT-
systems.
Ob
solete and irrelevant performance data.
The l
ow involvement of the employees for
the use of the system.
The m
issing link between different
performance management concepts.
The i
nappropriate chosen indicators not for
measuring the performance.
The in
sufficient report systems aligned to
the requirements of the individual persons.
The m
issing link between performance
management concepts, organisation and IT,
etc.
The mentioned facts show that there is a need for
an i
ntegrated performance management model (see
section 2), that considers the basic requirements
regarding the performance management concept, the
IT and the organisation. This paper introduces a
meta model (see section 3) derived from
requirements of different sources and weaknesses
that are arising by the use of performance
management concepts. The mentioned meta model
gives the possibility to get an overview of the
necessary objects that are used as a base for modern
integrated performance management.
2 INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE
MANAGEMENT
The aim of performance management is
systematically generating and controlling the
performance of an enterprise (Melchert, 2004) and
174
Ronaghi F. (2005).
INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT.
In Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems, pages 174-178
DOI: 10.5220/0002551301740178
Copyright
c
SciTePress
consists of the four main activities planning, doing,
checking and acting. A successful implementation of
such a method is only possible by linking strategy to
the operational execution. The integrated
performance management is here seen as a critical
and important approach which provides an interface
between management and its operations at various
levels and consists of the following three parts
namely performance management concept, IT and
organisation, that are briefly described in the
following sections.
2.1 Performance Management
Concept
The main criticism of performance management in
organisation is even today the strong adjustment on
monetary figures. But by constantly changing
market requirements and environmental conditions,
this alignment is insufficient. New concepts
introduce the balanced use of financial and non-
financial, internal and external measures and support
the shift from a single dimensional point of view to a
multi perspective one. As another very crucial
success factor it has been proven that strategic
concepts are very important to overcome the new
economic conditions. Different objectives that are
derived from the strategy are the base to define
actions or projects to achieve the set targets
(Ronaghi, 2003a). The indicators used for measuring
are distinguished between leading and lagging
indicators and are linked to the objectives.
Regarding these paradigms a lot of concepts
have been developed with different emphasis and
focus (Verweire, 2004) like the Performance
Pyramid (Lynch, 1991), EFQM-Model (EFQM,
2004), Quantum Performance Measurement
(Hronec, 1996), Intellectual Capital (Sveiby, 1998),
Balanced Scorecard (Kaplan, 1992), by far the most
wide spread and accepted, and many else. These
different dimensions of performance must be
understood and strengths and weaknesses of the
different frameworks must be evaluated (Verweire,
2004).
A suggestion for a classification of the different
concepts and methods regarding their applicability
in companies with certain requirements is shown in
figure 1. The properties are put on the left hand side
and on the right side their values. The mentioned
properties can be amplified at any time by factors
that are important for a company to implement a
method.
2.2 The IT
The IT-support during the development process of
the performance management system and the further
implementation is very important to ensure high
flexibility, equal data basis and actual data. The IT is
an “enabler” for management theories but on the
other hand the heterogeneous systems, the wide
spread data sources and legacy systems lead to some
difficulties.
The IT must have an appointed architecture, to
meet all the requirements that are set for such
systems. Especially the availability of financial, non-
financial, external and internal data and the
possibility to analyse them by providing an OLAP
functionality and to give the management the
feasibility to navigate through the data with certain
granularity is important. Very often a Data
Warehouse (DWH) is used to meet the challenges
like the extraction, transformation, loading of data
(ETL-process), security mechanisms, history of
Value
Linking to Vision and Strategy
fulfilled
Property
not fulfilled
Perspective View
Linking of Objects
Key Figure Management
partially fulfilled
Frequency of the Measurement
low
high
middle
Addressee
Top
Employees
Middle
Necessary Know-How of the
Employees
low
high
middle
Necessary stage of Maturity
Maintenance effort
Implementation effort (tech./org.)
Planning horizon
short
longmiddle
Diffusion of the Concept
low
high
middle
fulfilled
fulfilled
fulfilled
not fulfilledpartially fulfilled
not fulfilledpartially fulfilled
not fulfilledpartially fulfilled
low
high
middle
low
high
middle
low
high
middle
Figure 1: Classification Schema for the PM-Concepts
INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
175
changes in the data, user administration etc. of
performance management systems. But the use of a
DWH should only be taken into consideration if
there is already one in use or if there are plans to
implement a DWH for further purposes regarding
the applications in the enterprise. But the DWH is
not enough to meet all requirements for the
integrated performance management like:
Documentation of the developing
process
Definition and description of the
performance indicators
Comments on the “Strategy Map”
(Kaplan, 1996), etc.
An additional layer must be established one level
over the DWH given the possibilities to fulfil the
described points above. It serves like a pool were all
the information is gathered. Therefore this layer is
called “Performance Pool”. In the top level the front
end tools are settled. Figure 2 shows the different
layers deduced as an architecture for an integrated
performance management.
2.3 The Organisation
The organisational surrounding shows different
interests of the internal and external stakeholders.
These interests influence the strategy of an
organisation and the problem is that they are in some
aspects contrary. It’s the task of the management to
find a good balance and comprise between these
interest groups to assure the success and profit of the
company.
Because of the recent fraud and the crisis in the
financial market new laws force companies to
disclose information about their performance data.
So push techniques regarding the communication
must be used to provide the addressee with the
desired information. Furthermore the information-
consumer must have the possibility to decide and to
chose which amount of information concerning
different hierarchical levels in the company is the
optimal one.
Integrated performance management assumes an
opened communication culture in the organisation. If
this culture does not exist steps must be taken to
create such environment. This procedure takes a
pretty long time and its difficulties should not be
underestimated.
Although partly conflictive discussed the option
to link objectives to an incentive system is more and
more required. Certain roles are defined in the
organisation to better assign and define the tasks.
3 INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE
MANAGEMENT META MODEL
The target of this section is to summarize the
mentioned facts of the previous sections as basic
requirements for a modern integrated performance
management to derive a meta model. The sources for
Frontend
Performance
Pool
Data Warehouse
DB
DB
DB
DB
DB
Performance
Indicators
α
α
α
α
α
α
α
α
Beschriftung
X
-Werte Y-Werte
Datenpunkt1 2 5
Datenpunkt2 9 7
Datenpunkt3 5 3
Datenpunkt4 4 8
Manual Input
α
α
α
α
External and internal Data
Figure 2: IT-architecture for integrated performance management
ICEIS 2005 - INFORMATION SYSTEMS ANALYSIS AND SPECIFICATION
176
the requirements (here labelled R) as introduced are
surveys, laws, vendor catalogues, literature,
stakeholder interests and practical experiences (see
figure 3):
R1: The objectives are derived from the strategy
R2: Success factors effect the strategy
R3: Actions and projects to support the
realisation of the set objectives
R4: Financial and non-financial indicators are
used
R5: There is a differentiation between leading
and lagging indicators.
R6: There are internal and external indicators
R7: Indicators are linked to objectives
R8: As-is and target values are linked to time
periods
R9: Different perspectives (e. g. financial,
customer, process, innovation) are used
R10: The data has a certain granularity and can
be analysed by OLAP-functions
R11: Internal and external data is used
R12: Performance Indicators can be composed
and analysed
R13: The IT-System supports the pull and push
technique
R14: An Extraction, Transformation, Loading
(ETL) process delivers automatically the
data
R15: The interests of the stakeholders are
considered
R16: Stakeholders have a certain role
R17: There is a link to an incentive system
R18: The measurement is possible through
different hierarchical levels
Figure 3 shows the integrated performance
management meta model that maps all the basic
requirements and shows the relation between the
objects.
4 CONCLUSION AND FURTHER
WORK
This article depicts the basic requirements for
integrated performance management regarding three
areas namely the performance management concept,
IT and the organisation. This requirements to
modern integrated performance management and
their relation build the base for a meta model. Future
research has to examine the applicability of the meta
model introduced by implementing it with the help
of a meta modelling tool like ADONIS® (BOC,
2004).
Strategy
Objective
is derived from
Incentive System
is linked to
PM-Concept
is linked with
Stakeholder
P-Indicator
Granularity
has relation
with
Hierarchical Level
set for
Enterprise
Business Segment
Department
Employee
Business Process
contains
uses
internal
financial
external
leading
non-financial
lagging
linked
with
has
is
communicated
considers
quantifies
As-Is Target
has
Role
has
IT-System
uses
Composition
has
Push-technique
Pull-technique
supports
Data Source
uses
ETL-Process
follows
Framework
uses
Elementary
P-Indicator
Composed
P-Indicator
Realization
responsible for
Project
Action
Perspective
organizes
organizes
Sucess Factor
organizes
influences
Figure 3: Integrated performance management meta model.
INTEGRATED PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
177
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