Balanced Scorecards

Balanced Scorecards
Created by Management Study Guide | Last updated 9/2019
Duration: 1h 17m | 1 section | 13 lectures | Video: 1280×720, 44 KHz | 770 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + Sub

The ‘Balanced Scorecard’ links performance measures by looking at a business’s strat vision from four different perspectives: financial, customer, innovation and learning, and internal business processes.

The ‘Balanced Scorecard’ links performance measures by looking at a business’s strat vision

Explain What is the Balanced Scorecard

Describe the Three Generations of Balanced Scorecards

Explain the Importance of Balanced Scorecard

Describe the Various Perspectives of Balanced Scorecard

Describe the Various Parameters of Balanced Scorecard

Explain What is Performance Management

Explain the Steps in Building a Balanced Scorecard

Describe the Balanced Scorecard System Elements

Explain the Steps for Implementation of BSC

Explain What is the BSC Designer

List the Tips for Implementing Balanced Card

List the Pitfalls of Balanced Scorecard

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No prior knowledge is required

The Balanced Scorecard is a management tool that provides stakeholders with a comprehensive measure of how the organization is progressing towards the achievement of its strat goals.

The balanced scorecard translates the organization’s strategy into four perspectives, with a balance between the following:

between internal and external measures

between objective measures and subjective measures

between performance results and the drivers of future results

You should use the balanced scorecard to assess and measure the performance of your organization by customizing the balanced scorecard as per whatever makes sense for your company. A balanced scorecard helps to provide a balanced performance management system to an organization. This is because a balanced scorecard takes into account both short-term and long-term views, which is outside the Sales & Marketing mindset.

The Balanced Scorecard was first introduced in the early 1990s through the work of Robert Kaplan and David Norton of the Harvard Business School. Since then, the concept has become well known and its various forms widely adopted across the world.

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To aid clarity and utility, Kaplan and Norton proposed that the number of measures on a Balanced Scorecard should also be constrained in number, and clustered into four groups. Kaplan and Norton proposed that measure selection should focus on information relevant to the implementation of strat plans, and that simple attitudinal questions be used to help detee the appropriate allocation of measures to perspectives (Kaplan and Norton, 1992).

Who this course is for:Management PersonnelManagers and SupervisorsStakeholders, InvestorsBusiness AnalystsHuman Resource Department

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