Balanced Scorecards: The Customer Service Perspective
Balanced Scorecards
The Customer Service Perspective
Hyde Park Electronics, Futura Industries and Southern Gardens Citrus (SGC) all were able to transform their businesses using Balanced Scorecard (BSC) methodologies that aligned each of their respective businesses to customers so that value was consistently created and delivered, growing each business in the process. Each was able to quickly progress beyond using BSC frameworks as a means to track financial performance to monitoring in real-time how effective their unique value propositions are (Niven, 2013). Moving beyond the financially metrics to customer-centered ones also provided insights into how each company needed to better manage its employees as well. As each of the company's business models are significantly different, each of their perspectives on how to align their business models to their specific customer's needs also varies significantly and their approaches to the BSC framework reflect this (Gumbus, Robert, 2006).
Beginning with Hyde Park Electronics, the company initially began its BSC initiatives by concentrating only on the most critical financial metrics of performance including Days Sales Outstanding (DSO), operating income, net income, current ratio and advanced ratio analysis (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). The company quickly progressed from a financially-centric use of BSCs to also include efficiency of on-time delivery, including measuring how well they were meeting customers' expectations. In addition to measuring these customer-specific metrics, Hyde Park Electronics was interested in tracking Web portal and overall multichannel effectiveness as well, viewing them as indicators of how well their internal processes where orchestrated and contributing to satisfied customers (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). Hyde Park Electronics looked to attain a link between their financial performance and consistent customer performance as this insight would give them a significant competitive advantage in the markets they serve. The electronics industry is one known for very rapid product lifecycles and a continual focus on innovation; only by having insights into how customer-driven strategies can deliver sold financial performance can a business grow in this competitive industry.
Futura Industries also has a very customer-centric culture and use the BSC framework to measure both employee satisfaction and customer satisfaction while also measuring the financial implications of each. Futura's focus is on the implications of employee satisfaction, a passion for quality and the effects of each on customer loyalty ands profitability (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). This mindset on the part of Futura also gives them a unique, quantified 360-degree view of their customers and their relative levels of satisfaction (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). Futura is also in an industry known for commodity-like pricing and products and as a result concentrates on customers' expectation over competing on plummeting pricing or bundling that drives down gross margins. The most profitable competitors in commodity-driven industries rely first on the customer experience they deliver to differentiate themselves (Chavan, 2009). This is exactly what Futura Industries does so effectively today and is the philosophy that is guiding their BSC framework initiatives and programs. Futura Industries uses measurements of on-time delivery, customer first-pass yields of 98.9% or more and 20% of all sales from new customers (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). Futura's senior management uses the BSCs to track the one year turnover of employees by department, total company turnover and do intensive levels of analysis on employee satisfaction (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). The stability of their workforce, they have found, is an excellent leading indicator of customer satisfaction, which Futura management reports is one of the most effective determinants of profitability and productivity over the long-term.
Southern Gardens Citrus (SGC), like Futura, competes in a commoditized business that often leads to price and availability as the two most dominant differentiators. Competing on these two factors is what leads commoditized industries to consolidate prematurely as SGC management indicates is one of the drivers for their adoption of the BSC framework (Gumbus, Robert, 2006). SGC also realized that they needed to align their entire organization back to...
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