The Three most important things to measure in any business.


“The three most important things to measure in any business are customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction and cash-flow” Jack Welch former ceo of GE.
I don’t agree with all that Jack says or did in his tenure at GE however on this point I am in total agreement.
Customers who are not happy will buy elsewhere. Employees who don’t enjoy working for your business will move on and work for your competitors and the replacement employee will be costly to replace. Lastly if a business does not completely understand its cashflow and is totally in control of it then the business growth can suffer.
Measuring customer satisfaction is more than just a quick survey from a call centre. We need to understand whether the customer is truly satifised with the complete experience in dealing with the business. We need to ask the right questions in the right manner. Customer surveys can work if carefully desgined. However there may be other ways to measure customer satisfaction eg in a professional service firm it would be appropriate to measure the number of referrals. A customer will only refer if they are happy. Singapore Airlines measure the number of complaints to the number of compliments ratio to address this issue. Whatever the measure everybody needs to understand it and then it must be tracked consistently.
Employee satisfaction can also be measured by a carefully executed survey. Unfortunately many of these surveys are not properly designed or carefully executed. Also there are other measurements that can be useful eg staff turnover rate (this needs to be tailored for each level of the organisation). Again whatever the final tool, everybody must understand the metric and then it must be consistently measured and reviewed.
Lastly a business must understand the cash-flow cycle. There are a number of operational and capital impacts on cashflow. To manage a business it is necessary that this is understood. Accounts receivable, accounts payable, new equipment, new loans, repaying loans and other finance obligations, owners drawings and contributions are only part of the equation. The complete cashflow of the business must be managed at a minimum each week if not daily.
Also some of the component parts need constant measurement eg debtors and creditors days. Recently in a business they had not previously being measuring debtors days. When I started it was 43 days. Purely because they started measuring it and the accounts staff and the owner were suddenly aware they took action and now the debtors days stand at 29. This has lead to a significant improvement in cash-flow.
What systems to you have to measure customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction and cash-flow?
Related posts:
If you would like more articles like this then please subscribe:
Or, subscribe via email:
Comments
One Response to “The Three most important things to measure in any business.”
Leave a Reply



Nice site. There