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Open AccessJournal Article

The performance measurement manifesto.

Robert G. Eccles
- 01 Jan 1991 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 1, pp 131-137
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TLDR
Industry and trade associations, consulting firms, and public accounting firms that already have well-developed methods for assessing market share and other performance metrics can add to the revolution's momentum--as well as profit from the business opportunities it presents.
Abstract
The leading indicators of business performance cannot be found in financial data alone. Quality, customer satisfaction, innovation, market share--metrics like these often reflect a company's economic condition and growth prospects better than its reported earnings do. Depending on an accounting department to reveal a company's future will leave it hopelessly mired in the past. More and more managers are changing their company's performance measurement systems to track nonfinancial measures and reinforce new competitive strategies. Five activities are essential: developing an information architecture; putting the technology in place to support this architecture; aligning bonuses and other incentives with the new system; drawing on outside resources; and designing an internal process to ensure the other four activities occur. New technologies and more sophisticated databases have made the change to nonfinancial performance measurement systems possible and economically feasible. Industry and trade associations, consulting firms, and public accounting firms that already have well-developed methods for assessing market share and other performance metrics can add to the revolution's momentum--as well as profit from the business opportunities it presents. Every company will have its own key measures and distinctive process for implementing the change. But making it happen will always require careful preparation, perseverance, and the conviction of the CEO that it must be carried through. When one leading company can demonstrate the long-term advantage of its superior performance on quality or innovation or any other nonfinancial measure, it will change the rules for all its rivals forever.

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The balance on the balanced scorecard - a critical analysis of some of its assumptions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the extent to which there is a cause-and-effect relationship among the four areas of measurement suggested (the financial, customer, internal-business-process and learning and growth perspectives).
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The performance measurement revolution: why now and what next?

TL;DR: A broad review of the current state-of-the-art in business performance measurement can be found in this article, where the authors argue that the changing nature of work, increasing competition, specific improvement initiatives, national and international quality awards, changing organisational roles, changing external demands, and the power of information technology are the main reasons why business performance has become so topical.
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Measuring your company's intellectual performance

Göram Roos, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1997 - 
TL;DR: It is individuals who own and control the knowledge of organizational members, the chief source of competitive advantage Intangible assets often tell one more about the future earnings of the comp as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

THE KNOWLEDGE TOOLBOX: A Review of the Tools Available To Measure and Manage Intangible Resources

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the most important tools available to managers for managing intangible resources, including human resource accounting, economic value added, balanced scorecard, and intellectual capital.
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An Empirical Investigation of an Incentive Plan that Includes Nonfinancial Performance Measures

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used time-series data for 72 months from 18 hotels managed by a hospitality firm, and found that non-financial measures of customer satisfaction are significantly associated with future financial performance.