Management Guide: Benchmarking
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"Competitor and customer benchmarks may be the most underused motivators in the management's administrative tool kit" —Hamel and Prahalad, Competing for the Future Contents |
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Overview
Have you
ever asked yourself these questions: "How
are we doing?" "Are
we tracking the right measures?" "How
do we compare with others?" "Are
we making progress fast enough?" "Are
we using the best practices?" Benchmarks
and benchmarking can provide you with facts to answer these questions. They
can provide you with data to show you what can be achieved. Perhaps more
important, benchmarking can tell you how you can achieve the same type of
results! In short, benchmarking gives you the external references and the
best practices on which to base your evaluations and to design your work
processes. This
document provides an overview of how to implement benchmarking in your
organisation specifically, what you need to do and how to go about it. We
with an introduction and some definitions and then a high level view of a
benchmarking process, from both a results and a process focus. |
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Benchmarking:
What is it?
"... benchmarking ...[is]
...'the process of identifying, understanding, and adapting outstanding
practices and processes from organizations anywhere in the world to help your
organization improve its performance.'" —American Productivity &
Quality Center "... benchmarking ...[is]...
an on-going outreach activity; the goal of the outreach is identification of
best operating practices that, when implemented, produce superior
performance." —Bogan and English, Benchmarking
for Best Practices Benchmark refers to a measure of best practice performance. Benchmarking
refers to the search for the best practices that yields the benchmark
performance, with emphasis on how you can apply the process to achieve
superior results. All process improvement efforts
require a sound methodology and implementation, and benchmarking is no
different. You need to: 1. Set objectives and define the scope of your efforts 2. Gain support from your organization 3. Select a benchmarking approach 4. Identify benchmarking partners 5. Gather information (research, surveys, benchmarking
visits) 6. Distil the learning 7. Select ideas to implement 8. Pilot 9. Implement |
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The
Code of Conduct
Benchmarking
can be fraught with potential problems, ranging from simple misunderstandings
to serious legal problems. To minimise the likelihood of these types of
difficulties, we strongly recommend that teams follow the simple
Code-of-Conduct scripted by the International Benchmarking Clearinghouse. Legality
Don’t
enter into discussions or act in any way that could be construed as illegal,
either for you or your partner. Potential illegal activities include, for
example, such simple actions as discussing costs or prices, if that
discussion could lead to allegations of price fixing or market rigging. The
process of how you arrive at prices may be acceptable, while discussion of
actual costs and prices may not. Exchange
Don’t ask
questions of your benchmarking partner that you are not willing to answer
yourself to the same level of detail.
It helps to fully disclose your level of expectations with regard to the
exchange early on in your discussion. Confidentiality
Treat the
information you receive from your partners with the same degree of care that
you would for information that is proprietary to your organization. Many
organizations may not even want you to disclose that you have had such
discussions with them. In this regard, you may want to consider entering a
non-disclosure agreement with your benchmarking partner; consult your legal
staff. Use of Information
Don’t use
the benchmarking information you receive from a partner for any purpose other
than that to which you have agreed. Contact
Don’t go
beyond the mutually agreed-on procedures that govern whom you will interact
with in your partner’s organisation. Comply with their wishes and culture. Preparation
Be
prepared for your meetings and exchanges. Doing so increases your efficiency
and effectiveness, and that of your partners as well. It promotes an air of
professionalism. Completion
Don’t
make commitments you can’t or don’t keep. Complete your work to everyone’s
satisfaction, including that of your partner. Understanding
Benchmarking’s
Golden Rule: treat your partner and their information the way you’d
like them to treat you and yours. |
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Types of Benchmarking There are essentially three types of benchmarking:
They differ depending on the type of information you are trying to gather. Strategic Benchmarking looks at the strategies companies use to compete. Benchmarking to improve improvements in business process performance generally focuses on uncovering how well other companies perform in comparison with you and others, and how they achieve this performance. This is the focus of Data-based and Process-based Benchmarking. |
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Sources
of Information
Isn't
really useful and important information proprietary (private)? Not always. First, there's tons of information out
there in the public domain, some because, by law, it has to be disclosed and
others, by choice, because of a company's desire for publicity. Second, people are proud of the good
things they are doing and are usually quite willing to talk about them in
some context, whether it's a technical paper, a panel discussion, or in sales
information to vendors and customers. And third,
you're not the only person who has a problem that needs to be solved.
Exchanging information in a benchmarking partnership allows each of you to
gain what you need for the price of sharing what you already have. Who can you
get data from? Look at getting information from other divisions, competitors,
other companies with divisions that perform the same functions that you are,
and vendors, an often over-looked source, as well as from more traditional
information sources of "secondary data" such as libraries and data
bases. For
example, you could go from the secondary-data analysis directly to several
telephone interviews. You could stop there, or proceed to a teleconference
and then a site visit, go directly to a site visit, if that's deemed
appropriate. Note the
relationship and the flexibility that results with a multi-faceted approach
(benchmarking is not just visiting others; it's not industrial tourism). It's
gathering information about best practices by any and all appropriate means
and applying it to help achieve superior performance. |
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A
Benchmarking Process
Now that
we have the basic objectives and the definitions, we need a process to
achieve the objectives; such a process provides the means for
achieving the ends outlined by our objectives. Defining and Planning the Project
You need
to define the project in precise terms and develop a complete, yet simple,
project plan. Start with a preliminary plan and build it over time to the
appropriate level of preciseness. Such a plan should include a way to measure
your success. A project like benchmarking is like (and should probably be
managed like) any other project you undertake. Be sure to include in your
project plan items such as project objectives, scope, approach, timeline, and
budget. Understanding Where You Are
In order
to utilize information about how others are doing, you need to first
understand how you are doing or, at least, how you would like to be doing.
This requires that you have performance measures or Metrics (see How to
Measure Success -- Uncovering the Secrets of Effective Metrics) so that you
can judge how you are doing. Given
these measures, you can use them to help organize your project and to select
your benchmarking partners. You can use these measures to guide your search
for secondary data, to help generate your preliminary questionnaire, and to
conduct a preliminary survey to narrow the field in your search for potential
partners. Understanding Where You Can Be
Based
your preliminary studies, you need to select potential partners, ascertain
their willingness to participate, and develop your final questionnaire. The
questions should help you focus on the specifics of what you want to learn. To get
the most out of an exercise like this you have to have the "right"
people participate, both from your team, as well as those of your partners.
The right people means the best combination of technical and people skills so
that you can both elicit and understand the information you are gathering. Once you
have your team, you can proceed to schedule and conduct the information
exchanges with the several partners you've identified. Two
points to remember:
It is
through these processes that you gather the data to determine where you
can be. And the
next question is, "How soon can I expect to see some results?" The
following table gives some ideas of time frame, based on our experience.
Identifying Lessons Learned
Now that
you know how others are doing, you can use the data to understand how you can
improve. The most straightforward way is to assess where there are gaps
between your performance and that of your benchmarking partners. Further, you
can use these assessments to identify best practices, in
particular ones you'd like your organisation to adopt. Applying the Lessons Learned
You are
ready to begin implementing what you've learned. This is the "next
step." This is
where the rubber hits the road. You've learned what others are doing and how
they are doing it. You need to ensure that all relevant staff in you
reorganization is aware of and can make use of what you've learned. Your
report and your presentations may in fact be one of the most important
activities in your project. Summary
We've
defined benchmarking and provided an overview of a process that you can
follow. The process allows you to understand where you are and where you can
be, and then provides a view of how you can identify the lessons learned in
your study. These are the best practices. They are what you can
form the basis for improving your process for moving it to where it
needs to be. |
Updated on August 22, 2002
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Copyright 2002 Allan Low. All rights reserved. Reproduction of this Web Site,
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