“benchmarking an organisation”

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“Benchmarking an Organisation” Presentation by Jon Wigley IPPA Conference Harrogate, September 14 th 2013

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“Benchmarking an Organisation”. Presentation by Jon Wigley IPPA Conference Harrogate, September 14 th 2013. Agenda. Setting Expectations “How MO`s measure up against their journey towards advance development and compare to other MO`s working towards the same objective ” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

“Benchmarking an Organisation”

Presentation by Jon WigleyIPPA Conference

Harrogate, September 14th 2013

Page 2: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaSetting Expectations

“How MO`s measure up against their journey towards advance development and compare to

other MO`s working towards the same objective”Benchmarking process - Frameworks

Not-for-Profit v For-ProfitSimilarities and differences

Page 3: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaWhat are we benchmarking?

Organisational excellenceIn whose eyes?Who matters?

Members, Peers, Service Partners, Industry, Clients, Employees, Volunteers…..Others?

Page 4: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaAgainst whom are we benchmarking?

MO`s - Each Other?Other not-for-profit in the Health Industry?

Other not-for-profit?For profit?

Small Medium Enterprises (SMEs)?

Page 5: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaBenchmarking based on what criteria?

Deliverables (kpi`s)+ Set

+ Monitored+ Reviewed+ Revised

Objective v Subjective+ Deliverables v Feelings

Page 6: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaWhy are we benchmarking?Why is it important (to you)?

+ Excellence+ Better+ Challenge+ Change+ Positive Energy

Page 7: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

AgendaSetting expectations (yours)?

What would you like to get out of this day?Why?

Page 8: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Introduction – Jon WigleyJon Wigley – Background

A Business CoachCoaching v Consulting

SMEs focusIndustries – Finance, Legal, Media, Technology,

Entertainment, etcPrivate Practice – Physiotherapy

First hand experience!

Page 9: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

General IntroductionRapidly changing world and more demanding

pressures – drivers and impact…and opportunities!

Social trends: expectations and demandsTechnology & Social Networks: Communication

Mobility: LoyaltyAspiration: Consumerism

Recession: Cost/Value

Page 10: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Dynamics of a NFPThe prevailing dynamics of a Not-for-Profit

Honorary functions filled by dedicated insider practitioners, often for many years, even decades!

Passionately care about what they do xxxDay-to-day patterns of behaviour permeate their

voluntary contribution+ TRUST(ee)

+ COMMITMENT+ LOYAL(ty)

Page 11: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Similarity of NFPs to SMEsNot-for-Profit entities and the similarity to SMEs

The emotional pull of the small businessThe passion that create and drives an SME

The challenge of managing a small businessWorking “IN” v Working “ON”

Time – A most precious resourceCore skills and experience

Page 12: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Is business evolution predictable?

The evolution of a small businessIs there a typical mode of progression?

Anchor for our benchmarking – to know where we are up to, we need to reflect where we have come

from!How do we typically measure our progress?

Page 13: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Measuring objective progress

How do we typically measure our progress?Objective measures? Increase in:

TurnoverProfit

Number of clientsIncrease in pricing

Number of staffAmount/size of equipment, premises, etc

Page 14: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Measuring subjective progress

How do we typically measure our progress?Subjective measures? Feelings?! +/-

Feelings drive behaviour and have significant impact but often unconscious

Feelings can, and do, shift over timeBehaviour is managed with, and through, a

defined business culture

Page 15: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Stages - FeelingsThe “Stages” Framework

The major significance of feelingsHow they significantly and silently impact over

time on a business, a team, and every individualHow they shift over time

The Stages Framework - Presented

Page 16: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – The Key Skill

Functionality – The Key Skill Set to benchmarkBeing Functional – What does it mean?

“To serve a PURPOSE for which it was designed”“Fit for purpose”

Efficiency – minimum expenditure of time & effort“The purposeful use of resources to achieve a

desired outcome”

Page 17: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – benefits?Functionality – What will it achieve?

Clear management reportingMotivated staff

Lack of duplicationManagement focus that maximises skills

Time released

Page 18: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality - AvoidsFunctionality – What will it avoid?

Duplication of effortManagement time lost

Bottlenecks“Work-arounds” (The Rock in the Stream)

Staff frustrationMiss-match of skills

No direct, clear communication

Page 19: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

1. PROFITABILITY

(RESOURCES ALLOCATION)

Subjective: ObjectiveQualitative: Quantitative

People: Infrastructure

Page 20: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

2. PRODUCTIVITY

(EFFICIENCY)

ProcessesMethodology

FormalityDisciplinePrecision

Management Tools

Page 21: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

3. Building a STRONG FOUNDATION

Upon which to (GROW)

PlanningSchedulingManagingMonitoringReviewingRevising

Page 22: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

4. POSITIVE ENERGY

(People and Roles)

Define the “right” rolesDefine the “right” people

Put the right people in the right roles(Remove the wrong people!)

Page 23: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

5. SELF RESPONSIBILITY

A (No Blame) CultureResponsibilities:

UnderstoodTaken

……Fully!

Page 24: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

6. OWNERSHIP

(Value)

To ownTo possessTo value

The endowment effect – care, commit, contribute

Page 25: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

Functionality – 7 x key objectives

7. EMPOWERED WORKFORCE

(Power)

Giving powerGiving authority

……to THINK……to ACT

Leads to effective SUCCESSION!

Page 26: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleAgainst which we can benchmark ourselves as

we go through the cyclePositive – Happy with current status

Average – OK but could do with some workPoor – Definitely needs work

Page 27: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality Cycle INTENT

Our fundamental purpose – Why do we exist?Focused, conscious, and clear – gives context to everything

we do or think to doObjectives set, unified and communicated

YouOthers

The BusinessAre You?

Page 28: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality Cycle RESOURCES

Lead: ManagePeople: InfrastructureCharacter: FacilitiesTalents: Equipment

Skills: SystemsWisdom: Knowledge

Potential: ActualDo You use well?

Page 29: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleSTRUCTURE

Clearly define the required outcomesCreate a structure that reflects the full range of necessary

tasks (see Workflow - next)Delegate responsibility, but be accountable

Distribute power and authorityEmpower a sense of ownership

Roles and responsibilities understood and takenDo you have?

Page 30: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleWORKFLOW

Create an effective interface and balance between:+ Strategic Operations (Long-term planning)+ Business Operations (The day-to-day work)+ Support Operations (The essential back office)

Page 31: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleWORKFLOW (cont`d)The efficient workflow is based upon the clear definition and understanding of:Structure, Roles & Responsibilities, Reporting Lines, Policies & procedures, Communication, KPIs, Monitoring, Evaluation, Feedback, and Training……..All supported by quality management toolsDo you have?

Page 32: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleEFFICIENCY/TIME

Efficiency – “The minimum expenditure of time and effort”Processes, Methodology, Formality, Discipline, Precision, Management ToolsTime – Time released v Management Time LostAwareness of value, allocation of usage, and effective delegationAre you?

Page 33: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleCAPACITY

The full and conscious leverage of existing resources – today?

Planning for future growth and the necessary increase in resources – tomorrow?

Investment Planning?Right People: Right Roles

Do You?

Page 34: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleSupport Operations

Most SMEs completely under-value/estimate the importance of the following functions and as a consequence do not invest sufficiently in their proper management:IT, Finance, Legal, Administration, Secretarial, HR,

Premises, Compliance, etcDo You?

Page 35: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality Cycle• PERFORMANCE

The importance of high performanceLeveraging potential

Setting objectivesReviewing performance – feedback

AcknowledgementValue(d)

Do You?

Page 36: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleQUALITY

Quality is a state of mindProduct (what) AND Service (How)

Always add value to what we do and how we do itReflects a chosen and sustained Position

Enhances brand and reputationAttracts – clients, referrals, employees, etc

How aware are you?

Page 37: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleCREATIVITY

Why is it important to encourage creativity?Fresh

ChallengePositive Energy

ChangeOpen

Are You?

Page 38: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleFLEXIBILITY

Why is it important to maintain flexibility?Speed

Choice and changeIndividual needs

BespokeDynamic

Are You?

Page 39: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

The Functionality CycleThe Business Culture & Soft Skills

Culture = Behaviour (expected)Articulated and aligned values

Processes – Recruitment, Induction, Delegation, Performance, Mentoring, etc

Communication, Relationships, IssuesEncouragement, Motivation and Incentives

How aware are you?

Page 40: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

SummaryBenchmarking – What, Against Whom, How and WhyA rapidly changing world – drivers and impactThe prevailing dynamics of a not-for-profitSimilarities with SMEsCore Observations on SMEsThe typical evolution of an SME – StagesFunctionality & its 7 x Key ObjectivesThe Functionality Cycle

Page 41: “Benchmarking an Organisation”

BenchmarkingStages – Where are you as an MO; Where are You?7 x key Objectives – Profitability, Productivity, Strong Foundation, Positive Energy, Self Responsibility, Ownership, Empowered WorkforceFunctionality Cycle – Intent, Resources, Structure, Workflow, Efficiency, Capacity, Support Ops, Performance, Quality, Creativity, Flexibility, Culture & Soft SkillsDid you get what you wanted from the day?