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Showing posts with label Balanced Scorecard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balanced Scorecard. Show all posts

Linking Strategy to Operations

Linking Strategy to Operations
Anonymous. Journal of Accountancy. New York: Oct 2008. Vol. 206, Iss. 4; pg. 80, 4 pgs

Abstract (Summary)
In an interview, Robert S. Kaplan, Harvard Business School professor, talked about activity-based costing and balanced scorecards. They found a few companies that had developed more accurate ways of assigning overhead costs to products and customers. That's how the activity-based costing (ABC) movement started. In 1990, David Norton and he developed the balanced scorecard (BSC), which retained financial metrics but supplemented them with metrics on the company's performance with customers, processes, and people and culture. Many accountants and finance professionals may not yet realize the simplicity and power of this new approach. They may remember that they tried ABC 10 or 15 years ago, and it didn't work out as advertised because of the difficulty of working from and maintaining employees' time estimates. The process time estimates used in time-driven ABC are much easier to obtain, verify and update as needed. He thinks that their current knowledge about the effective use of strategy maps and scorecards now offers something uniquely valuable that no other approach can.

Harvard Business School professor Robert S. Kaplan is co-developer of both activity-based costing and the balanced scorecard. In 2006, Kaplan was elected to the Accounting Hall of Fame, and received the Lifetime Contribution Award from the Management Accounting section of the American Accounting Association. In 2008, the Institute of Management Accountants honored him with a Lifetime Award for Distinguished Contribution to Advancing the Profession of Management Accounting. The following is an edited transcript of a recent interview with the JofA.

JofA: Could you give a summary of how you've come to work with activity-based costing and balanced scorecards?

Kaplan: This journey started in the 1980s when I became exposed to the changes and innovations that were going on in management primarily through the Japanese management approach, which included total quality management and just-in-time inventory. And I realized that, if what I was hearing from practice was true, it undermined what we had been teaching and doing research on and actually practicing for the last 75 years. In effect, new approaches would be needed for both costing and performance measurement.

From that stage on, I started working on solutions. We found a few companies that had developed more accurate ways of assigning overhead costs to products and customers. That's how the activity-based costing (ABC) movement started. But even these improved financial metrics captured only what was happening with physical and financial assets, not the organization's intangible assets. The Japanese were gaining advantage through training and motivating their employees, improving the quality of processes, and working better with suppliers and customers-a whole set of performance capabilities that would not be picked up by periodic financial statements.

In 1990, David Norton and I developed the balanced scorecard (BSC), which retained financial metrics but supplemented them with metrics on the company's performance with customers, processes, and people and culture. This was an independent development from ABC, which addresses, "What are the costs associated with our existing processes, products and customers?" The balanced scorecard responds to, "Are we creating current and future value for our shareholders and customers?"

JofA: In the United States, how do you see the implementation of activity-based costing progressing?

Kaplan: I think there was a clear upsurge of interest starting in the mid-1980s when we introduced the concept. I detected a falloff in the late '90s and early part of this decade, just because the approach that we introduced ended up being too complex to implement.

People worried about subjectivity from people's estimates about their distribution of time, and it was difficult to keep the cost estimates up to date. Processes changed, and the cost of re-interviewing people was high. I think that ABCs use has gone down because people tried it, and it just proved too difficult. But I think the new approach, time-driven ABC, which Steve Anderson and I introduced, addresses these problems and makes ABC much more accessible and realistic for all enterprises.

Time-driven ABC works at the transaction and order level, and estimates directly the resource capacity (usually time) needed to process a transaction, build and deliver a product, and service a customer. It eliminates the need for subjective time estimates, which makes it easier to implement. And by directly linking processes to transactions, it is more flexible and accurate since variations in resource consumption can be readily modeled. ERP systems, which did not exist in the 1980s, now are widespread so the data for costing directly from transactions is now feasible.

Many accountants and finance professionals may not yet realize the simplicity and power of this new approach. They may remember that they tried ABC 10 or 15 years ago, and it didn't work out as advertised because of the difficulty of working from and maintaining employees' time estimates. The process time estimates used in time-driven ABC are much easier to obtain, verify and update as needed.

JofA: Has implementation of the balanced scorecard been similar to that of ABC?

Kaplan: I believe the adoption of the balanced scorecard has been much more widespread than even ABC. It addresses a fundamental issue that all enterprises, manufacturing and service, private sector and public sector, and nonprofit as well, face: how to describe, communicate and implement your strategy. We have established the Balanced Scorecard Hall of Fame that now includes more than 100 enterprises from all sectors and from countries all over the world that have used our philosophy to implement BSC and achieved performance breakthroughs. I do an informal survey in an executive program I teach at Harvard. Twice a year we get 160 executives, two-thirds of whom come from outside the U.S., for an eight-week program. This is pretty much a random draw from the world's managerial population. They're not coming to this program because I'm teaching the balanced scorecard; they're coming to spend eight weeks at Harvard.

I start the sessions by asking how many are using the balanced scorecard in some form in their organizations. Consistently, over the past eight years, 65% to 70% of the hands go up. Not all of them may be following the principles that Dave Norton and I have been advocating over the last 10 years, but that still indicates the widespread adoption of the concept in some form.

JofA: In your most recent book, The Execution Premium, you introduce a six-stage closed-loop management system (see Exhibit 1). Does this system tie other management accounting tools such as ABC and balanced scorecards together?

Kaplan: A. Harvard Business Review editor has called the strategy execution management system my "theory of everything." It encompasses not only management accounting and control, but also quality management, beyond budgeting, strategy formulation, activity-based costing, analytics, operational dashboards and management by objectives. So it integrates a whole suite of management tools in a comprehensive and closed-loop system that links strategy and operations.

JofA: In your closed-loop system, it appears that ABC is really an operations planning and monitoring tool?

Kaplan: We describe how to use ABC for operational planning by having it forecast the levels of resource capacity-employees, equipment, space, technology-you need to supply in order to deliver on the revenue targets in your strategic plan. This is a powerful analytic tool that eliminates almost all of the guesswork, subjectivity and negotiations normally associated with the resource planning or budgeting process.

As the strategy is being executed, ABC monitors whether you're making money from your strategy-not in aggregate, financial statements do that-but product by product, by product line and also by customer-by-customer and by segment and channel. So the ABC system gives managers detailed feedback on where the strategy is working and where not, and greatly facilitates decisions managers can make to transform unprofitable operations into profitable ones.

JofA: And the balanced scorecard is used both to translate strategy into operations as well as to monitor strategy?

Kaplan: We are making strategy actionable and helping allocate resources consistent with the strategy. We make an important distinction between monitoring operations, which you can do with dashboards and key performance indicators, versus monitoring the strategy, which is the role for strategy maps and balanced scorecards.

JofA: What do you see as the primary role for the finance organization inside this closed-loop system?

Kaplan: We're advocating for a transformation of the finance function-we're not abandoning traditional financial reporting, internal controls and auditing because all that still needs to be done. But these should not be the only processes that the finance function does. In addition to the statutory compliance role, finance needs to play a role for value creation. We might talk about the finance function being transformed from bean counting and reporting to participating actively in value creation. Instead of just looking in the rearview window, the finance function can use tools such as activity-based costing, strategy maps and balanced scorecards to help the organization look through the front windshield and navigate to a profitable future.

The final chapter of The Execution Premium talks about a new office of strategy management. This office or function coordinates all the activities that go into the six-stage management system. We describe the roles and responsibilities for the strategy management office as well as where it should sit in the enterprise. The most natural place is likely within the finance function because finance is traditionally involved in planning, resource allocation, reporting, monitoring and evaluating. We have given the finance function a new and robust set of tools to help it guide the enterprise into the future. One can think of renaming the CFO to become the CVO, the chief value creating officer, or the CPO, the chief performance officer.

JofA: For CPAs who haven't had a lot of experience up to this point with either activity-based costing or balanced scorecards, how would you recommend they go about learning this? Where should they start and what should their focus be in learning how to become an integral part of a closed-loop system like the one you describe?

Kaplan: On the particulars of ABC and BSC, there are many articles, books and cases available that they can order. As far as having accounting and finance people become more central to the strategy management system, they'll have to get more comfortable being a business partner with the line managers and general managers, the CEOs. You can't just be the scorekeeper, sitting on the sidelines. You actually have to be part of the team. And that's probably a good place to start, is to become a more value-added partner of the team. You still need the finance function to be the corporate conscience or the corporate skeptic. Not all strategic ideas are profitable ideas or ideas worth doing, and the finance function has to retain that skepticism and control mentality. But they must complement the control function with a mind-set of helping the organization create sustainable value.

Accountants don't need to reinvent this stuff; these ideas now have been out about 20 years and there's been enough written about them that they should be able to do some reading or go to some courses to learn the fundamentals.

JofA: How do you see the use of balanced scorecards and strategy maps and strategy execution and dashboards and budgets-the things that are in the center of this closed-loop system-evolving over the next five years or so?

Kaplan: I think that our current knowledge about the effective use of strategy maps and scorecards now offers something uniquely valuable that no other approach can. The ability to describe your strategy, to measure your strategy, get feedback on your strategy-these are fundamental to business. All businesses need these capabilities, but until we formulated strategy maps and scorecards, they lacked the tools to accomplish them. I think that most people now recognize the limitations of attempting to manage competitive organizations with financial metrics alone. Financial metrics remain important, but they're not sufficient for guiding the success of the organization, and we now know how to fill the gap.

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Oracle Balanced Scorecard

Oracle Balanced Scorecard Receives Industry Certification
PR Newswire. New York: Feb 16, 2000. pg. 1

Abstract (Summary)
REDWOOD SHORES, Calif. and LINCOLN, Mass., Feb. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- ( http://www.oracle.com/tellmemore/?135836 ) As traditional companies move to e-business models, the need to be proactive in strategy determination and execution becomes imperative for sustaining competitive advantage. Oracle(R) Balanced Scorecard, a key component of Oracle Strategic Enterprise Management, gives companies this capability. Oracle Corp.'s certification by Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, Inc. today further validates Oracle's Balanced Scorecard as a key strategic management tool.

Under the terms of the certification, Oracle Balanced Scorecard is designated as compliant with Balanced Scorecard Functional Standards. The certification is designed and maintained by Balanced Scorecard Collaborative to eliminate confusion in the marketplace by educating suppliers and buyers with the important elements of the Balanced Scorecard management system. The Balance Scorecard is a widely accepted methodology that provides an enterprise view of an organization's overall performance by integrating financial measures with key performance indicators.

Dr. David P. Norton, president of Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, said, "We have developed the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative Certified Program based on Balanced Scorecard Functional Standards to ensure that the Balanced Scorecard name maintains meaning, and that any investment made in associated software retains its value. We are pleased that Oracle Corporation is taking part in this program."

Balanced Scorecard Collaborative Certification(TM) Validates Power of

Comprehensive Strategic Enterprise Management E-Business Suite

REDWOOD SHORES, Calif. and LINCOLN, Mass., Feb. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- ( http://www.oracle.com/tellmemore/?135836 ) As traditional companies move to e-business models, the need to be proactive in strategy determination and execution becomes imperative for sustaining competitive advantage. Oracle(R) Balanced Scorecard, a key component of Oracle Strategic Enterprise Management, gives companies this capability. Oracle Corp.'s certification by Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, Inc. today further validates Oracle's Balanced Scorecard as a key strategic management tool.

Under the terms of the certification, Oracle Balanced Scorecard is designated as compliant with Balanced Scorecard Functional Standards. The certification is designed and maintained by Balanced Scorecard Collaborative to eliminate confusion in the marketplace by educating suppliers and buyers with the important elements of the Balanced Scorecard management system. The Balance Scorecard is a widely accepted methodology that provides an enterprise view of an organization's overall performance by integrating financial measures with key performance indicators.

Oracle Strategic Enterprise Management, a Web-enabled suite of analytical applications, is embraced by companies worldwide and implemented at over 40 client sites across Europe, Asia Pacific, and the United States. It enables the key management processes for strategic planning, integrated budgeting and forecasting, measuring organizational effectiveness, as well as compensation.

Dr. David P. Norton, president of Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, said, "We have developed the Balanced Scorecard Collaborative Certified Program based on Balanced Scorecard Functional Standards to ensure that the Balanced Scorecard name maintains meaning, and that any investment made in associated software retains its value. We are pleased that Oracle Corporation is taking part in this program."

"I've always been a big believer in key performance indicators. If you can measure something, you can improve it. The power of Oracle Balanced Scorecard is that you can measure and improve performance across the enterprise, at all levels," said Jeff Henley, Oracle CFO. "The certification by the industry thought leaders is a clear acknowledgment that our product functionality meets the strict qualification criteria. Oracle's ability to deploy Balanced Scorecards over the Internet offers companies a powerful way to communicate and execute strategy throughout the enterprise."

Users of certified Balanced Scorecard applications are assured that those applications are compliant with Balanced Scorecard Functional Standards, and can thus be used as the foundation of a strategic management system based on the Balanced Scorecard.

About the Balanced Scorecard

The Balanced Scorecard is an organization framework for implementing and managing strategy at all levels of an enterprise by linking objectives, initiatives, and measures to an organization's strategy. The scorecard provides an enterprise view of an organization's overall performance by integrating financial measures with other key performance indicators around customer perspectives, internal business processes, and organizational growth, learning, and innovation. Since the concept was introduced in 1992, Balanced Scorecards have been implemented at corporate, strategic business unit, shared service functions, and even individual levels at hundreds of organizations -- in both the private and public sectors- worldwide.

About Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, Inc.

Balanced Scorecard Collaborative, Inc. (BSCol) is a professional services firm that facilitates the worldwide awareness, use, enhancement, and integrity of the Balanced Scorecard as a value- added management process. Founded and led by the creators of the Balanced Scorecard concept, Drs. Robert Kaplan and David Norton, BSCol provides a global center of Balanced Scorecard excellence through consulting, education, training, publishing, research and development. For more information, visit the Company on the Web where you can join Balanced Scorecard On-line free for the latest insight and resources at http://www.bscol.com.

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Utilizing Capabilities to Increase Stakeholder Wealth

Utilizing Capabilities to Increase Stakeholder Wealth: A Balanced Scorecard Approach
Michael L Pettus. Competition Forum. Indiana: 2006. Vol. 4, Iss. 1; pg. 159, 7 pgs

Abstract (Summary)
The balance scorecard can be used to examine the creation of wealth from a stakeholder perspective. While the balanced scorecard is focused upon metrics which measure wealth creation, this study examines what capabilities the firm needs to build to increase shareholder, employee, customer and future wealth. These capabilities have the potential to create heterogeneity between firms by creating future oriented processes which focus upon both financial and non financial activities

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The balance scorecard can be used to examine the creation of wealth from a stakeholder perspective. While the balanced scorecard is focused upon metrics which measure wealth creation, this study examines what capabilities the firm needs to build to increase shareholder, employee, customer and future wealth. These capabilities have the potential to create heterogeneity between firms by creating future oriented processes which focus upon both financial and non financial activities.
Keywords: Balanced Scorecard; Wealth Creation

INTRODUCTION

The creation of firm wealth is a goal of most for profit firms. From a conceptual perspective the resource-based view has added to your understanding as to how firms can increase wealth (Montgomery and Wemerfelt 1988; Chang and Singh 1999). The resource-based view of the firm has emerged as a perspective by which firms build resource positions which are rare, valuable, non-substitutable and not subject to imitation (Barney, 1991). However, it is not specific resources which lead to wealth creation, it is how these resources are accessed, developed, combined and/or deployed which leads to wealth creation (Moran and Ghoshal, 1999). As such, it is not the firm's resources which provide wealth: it is how these resources are transformed into capabilities which lead to wealth creation.

Capabilities represent the productive services that resources generate and the processes by which resources are developed and deployed over time (Amit and Shoemaker, 1993). A capability is a high-level routine that confers upon an organization's management a set of decision options for producing significant outputs of a particular type (Winter, 2000). A capability is substantial in scale and is reflected in a large chunk of activity that produces outputs that clearly matter to the organization's growth and prosperity (Winter, 2000).

One way of determining how capabilities can lead to wealth creation is to utilize the balanced scorecard. The balanced scorecard consists of the following perspectives (1) financial (2) internal (3) customer and (4) future. (Kaplan and Norton 1992) The financial perspective is concerned with profit and risk from a shareholder perspective. The internal element is focused upon the various business initiatives which create customer and shareholder value. The customer aspect is determined by the value that is realized by customers upon purchase of a firm's products. The future component is focused upon growth and innovation. The balanced scorecard also has disadvantages.

One disadvantage of the balanced scorecard is that only the customer and future perspectives are focused upon the future: the financial and internal components are focused upon historical measures. These historical measures do not address future wealth creation. The balanced scorecard can be modified to focus upon future wealth creation.

This study modifies the balanced scorecard framework by identifying capabilities which have the potential to generate future wealth. These capabilities replaced metrics which have been used to measure historical firm performance. Because the focus is upon capabilities, this approach examines how firms can create future wealth. This focus upon capabilities, instead of metrics, allows for a perspective which provides for incorporation of financial and non financial activities for increasing wealth. This is a perspective which the balanced scorecard does not currently address.

This study proposes modifications to the balanced scorecard. The modified scorecard framework developed in this study focuses upon what capabilities need to be developed to increase wealth from a (1) shareholder (2) customer (3) employee and (4) future positioning perspective. The customer wealth component will be discussed first.

Customer Wealth

Creating wealth for consumers is critical for success. Measuring customer wealth is complicated because firms may have multiple sources of revenue and they may have positions within multiple industries. The first step is to identify what industries a firm is competing within. Industries can be defined by the North American Industry Classification System (NAlCS). This industry classification system is used for classifying firms within North America. The International Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) is used to group international firms outside North America. Once industry boundaries have been identified, it is important to determine how wealth is being created from a customer perspective within each industry.

Increasing customer wealth is dependant upon how much better the firm meets key success factors within each industry compared to competition (Vasconcellos and Hambrick, 1989). Key success factors are those determinants which dictate customer buying decisions (Omhae, 1982; Amit and Shoemaker, 1993). Customers make decisions based upon how well a firm's product meets these factors.

Key success factors are determined at the market level through complex interactions among the firm's competitors, customers, and environment (Amit and Shoemaker, 1993). To determine key success factors, firms engage in market research. Through market research, firms can determine what the key success factors are within each industry, and how firms are positioned with respect to these factors. An analysis of key success factors will determine the relative position of the firm in an industry with respect to competition. It is important not only to determine key success factors within the current time period, but how these factors evolve over time (Amit and Shoemaker, 1993). One of the best approaches to understanding how key success factors change over time is through customer relationship management.

Customer relationship management is achieved through maintaining long-term connectedness to customers over time. As key success factors change over time customers may require new benefits from existing products and services. As a firm continuously adapts its product offerings to changing customer preferences, firms can create greater wealth than competition (Peteraf and Barney, 2003). Firms may choose to allocate more resources to those industries which create more wealth. Without this assessment on an industry-by-industry basis, the firm may engage in reactive as opposed to proactive decisionmaking. One reason is because of customer cost.

Customers incur several costs from a purchase perspective. Money is usually what is exchanged when purchasing a product. However, customers can incur significant non-monetary costs. One such cost is time. Time can be divided into two primary elements (1) amount of time consumers spend on learning about a product/service and (2) the physical time it takes consumers to stop what they are doing and purchase the product/service (Peter and Olson, 2005). The perceived customer benefits plus the consumer costs will determine the price the consumer is willing to pay for the product/service. If the sales price is higher than the sum of consumer costs and customer benefits, the consumer will not engage in the transaction. Reducing customer costs results in additional benefits created for customers and increases the likelihood of engaging in continuous transactions with customers. A second element of firm wealth is the creation of shareholders wealth.

Shareholder Wealth

Most firms are in business to increase shareholder wealth. In other words, the price of the firm's stock needs to appreciate. There is a good reason for increasing the wealth of shareholders. If wealth is not created, shareholders will invest in other firms. Because increasing shareholder wealth is important, more firms are beginning to compensate senior management based upon shareholder performance. (Norton, 2005) Cisco compensates all of its senior management team based upon changes in shareholder wealth (Norton, 2005). This approach to compensating senior management tends to reduce agency problems between senior management and shareholders.

Several firms have implemented processes for linking shareholder wealth to senior management compensation. Caterpillar initiated a new type of management reporting in 2004. Called Transparent Financial Reporting, it aligns the company's internal management reporting system more closely with shareholders' returns. "It's much more 'live' in terms of what's actually happening as a shareholder would see it," stated Mr. Doug Oberhelman, the group president of Caterpillar who has oversight responsibility of the finance operation (Norton, 2005).

Procter & Gamble uses a model for calculating shareholder wealth called Total Shareholder Return (TSR). This model evaluates management performance by calculating bonus payments for senior managers based on firm performance (Norton, 2005). One measure of existing shareholder wealth is obtained by examining financial ratios.

Financial ratios are important because they measure a firm's current and historical performance. Financial ratios can be classified into the following groups: (1) liquidity ratios, (2) asset management ratios, (3) debt management ratios, and (4) profitability ratios (Brealey, Myers, and Marcus, 2004). Liquidity ratios measure the firm's ability to convert assets into cash quickly and at low cost. Asset management ratios measure a firm's effectiveness at managing its assets. Debt management ratios measure the extent to which a firms uses debt financing. Profitability ratios represent how well a firm is allocating its resources.

Ratio analysis should be conducted with respect to historical firm values, industry averages and competitor's ratios over time. Internal capabilities need to be developed to analyze the financial results by comparing the firm's performance to the performance of competition and the industry averages. While ratio analysis is beneficial for determining a firm's current performance, these financial measures cannot be utilized to determine a firm's future wealth. What shareholders desire are increases in wealth. Because shareholder wealth is based upon the future stream of cash flows, it cannot be calculated based upon historical performance. Shareholder wealth can be defined as the present value of the anticipated stream of cash flows added to the liquidation value of the company. As long as the returns from the firm exceed its cost of capital, the firm will add to shareholder wealth.

Most profitability ratios only focus on the cost of debt, not the cost of equity. Economic value added (EVA) focuses on debt and equity (Brealey, Myers, and Marcus, 2004). EVA is an estimate of a firm's economic profit for a specific year. EVA represents the income after the cost of debt and the cost of equity have been deducted. It measures the extent to which the firm has added to shareholder wealth (Brealey, Myers, and Marcus, 2004). EVA is a measure that enables managers to determine whether a firm is earning an appropriate return on capital (Brealey, Myers, and Marcus, 2004). One benefit of EVA is that it is a single performance statistic. It also tends to align the interests of shareholders and management because it reflects how effectively management uses capital.

Fletcher and Smith (2004) believe that EVA is also primarily based upon historical financial measures. One approach to the utilization of the EVA is to base the statistic on both financial and non-financial metrics. Processes need to be developed to identify value drivers. Only then can EVA be used as a measure for managers to ascertain if the firm is achieving the target level of return on capital (Fletcher and Smith, 2004).

One way to determining value drivers is to utilize Porter's ( 1985) value chain. Value chain analysis consists of developing capabilities which can create value from both financial and non financial processes. Examples of processes which can be measured from a financial perspective would include automation or the efficiency gains from total quality management (TQM) initiatives. Processes such as (1) developing an integrated inbound and outbound logistics network (2) utilizing technology to develop new products, or (3) developing a global communication infrastructure, are activities which can be implemented to create value from a non financial perspective.

Employee Wealth

Another group which the firm needs to create wealth for is employees. The firm wishes to retain employees because of two primary reasons. The first reason is economic. If an employee leaves, the firm will spend time and money to recruit and train a replacement. Since the firm has already trained the employee leaving, a competitor will not incur training costs. The second reason is knowledge transfer.

If employees do not perceive that wealth is being created for them, they may decide to leave the firm and work for a competitor. All experience and knowledge that has occurred within your firm will now be available to competitors. This is important because employees build relationships with customers over time. As a result of these relationships, customers may switch to the firm that the employee is moving to. In this case, the revenue that is lost to your firm goes immediately to the firm the employee moves to. The firm the employee is moving to may generate this additional revenue at minimal cost. Creation of employee wealth is crucial for other reasons.

Because employees represent the most important asset of any firm (Barney, 1991), succession plans must be developed to retain high performing employees. Most employees in firms want to advance. Many times succession planning only addresses the CEO and senior management team. These plans should include general parameters for all employees. If employees are unaware of how they can advance within a firm, they may leave and join competitors that have more fully developed succession plans.

Succession planning affects many levels within a firm. Assume a new CEO is chosen from within the firm. Further assume that the former job of the new CEO was chief operating officer (COO) and the new COO was the chief financial officer (CFO). Assume that the new CFO was vice president of North American operations. The selection of an internal CEO puts in place a domino effect that impacts the entire organization. Employees perform important roles within firms

Employees dictate the long-run performance of the firm (Penrose, 1959). Therefore, it is of critical importance that a firm generate wealth for and retain employees. Employee satisfaction surveys, which should be distributed and scored without reference to specific employees, can be a measure of employee satisfaction. Employee turnover by department needs to be closely analyzed. In general, turnover should be approximately the same for each functional group. If it is not, a closer analysis of those departments generating higher turnover is required.

One of the best ways of retaining employees is to make them shareholders. Each year, United Parcel Service (UPS) rewards managers based upon how well the firm has performed during the year. Because these rewards are stocks, employees have an incentive to maximize shareholder wealth. This reward system links the compensation of employees to stock price changes because all employees are rewarded for stock appreciation. If the company has a bad year, all employees within the firm aggressively search to find the source of the stock decline and implement corrective action quickly. These actions increase wealth for external shareholders and all managers within the firm. The fourth element of firm wealth is an assessment of what will determine future wealth.

Positioning for Future Wealth

For the firm to create future wealth, it must design and implement its strategic plan. Some of the issues that need to be addressed are ( 1 ) expansion within domestic and international markets, (2) selection of firms for acquisitions and mergers, (3) costs and anticipated benefits of acquisitions, (4) restructuring, (5) resource utilization and (6) creation of strategic alliances.

Positioning for future wealth creation is due, in part, to identifying, acquiring, and implementing acquisitions. The price paid for each target firm needs to be evaluated versus the actual benefits (e.g. cost savings) realized. To determine changes in wealth, the wealth of the firm before the acquisition is compared to the wealth created after the target is totally integrated within the acquiring firm. Due diligence is a crucial component of a firm's acquisition strategy.

Due diligence is a comprehensive complete analysis of an acquisition opportunity. It is a third party's independent, objective view of the value of an acquisition target. This process should be performed for every acquisition opportunity. Consulting firms and investment bankers conduct due diligence because they have substantial industry experience. These firms perform many tasks. Some important due diligence functions are; (1) determining whether the acquisition will be friendly or hostile, (2) what is the maximum than that the acquiring firm should offer to make the acquisition opportunity profitable, (3) will the acquiring firm have to divest unwanted business sectors of the target firm, (4) what realistic cost savings will be realized as a result of the acquisition, (5) what is the likely reaction of investment bankers, (6) what has been the financial performance of the target over time, (7) what levels of funds will be needed to make implementation successful,(8) should the management team of the target be retained,(9) what type of R&D capabilities does the target firm have that can be utilized by the acquiring firm and (10) what are the cost and timetable for the integration process. If effective due diligence is not completed, acquiring firms may pay too much for acquisition targets or inappropriate targets may be selected.

In order to fund acquisitions, a firm may need to restructure existing businesses. The wealth created, as a result of the acquisition, needs to be compared to any restructuring that was needed to fund the acquisition. In general, acquisitions should add wealth to the firm, while restructuring should not result in decreases in wealth.

The number of strategic alliances a firm has entered into is another measure of future wealth. Alliances may allow firms to generate increases in future wealth more quickly than other modes of growth (e.g. internal development) (Yip, 1982; Chatterjee, 1990). Scale alliances allow firms to combine similar resources to lower costs by increasing utilization of assets. Scale alliances allow firms to combine similar resources to grow quickly. (Dussage, Garrette, and Mitchell, 2004). Scale alliances are also less expensive than acquisitions. In general, costs may be reduced because each firm is using the resources of partners without acquiring them.

Link alliances are formed by firms combining different resources to create new products/services. (Dussage, Garrette, and Mitchell, 2004). Because firms are combining different resources, new sources of wealth may be created because the alliances generate new resources. New resources, or new combinations of existing resources, provide new productive services which creates additional wealth for the firm. (Penrose, 1959; Moran and Ghosphal, 1999).

New sources of wealth creation can be identified by conducting environmental scanning (Garg, Walters and Priem, 2003). Environmental scanning is the means through which top managers perceive external events and trends (Hambrick, 1981). Scanning is the first link in the chain of perception and actions that permit an organization to adapt to its new environment (Hambrick, 1981). This link is important because scanning identifies changes that are occurring in the environment. The better the firm is at ascertaining the changes, the greater the probability that the firm may be able to develop capabilities to capitalize upon these changes.

The environment is made up of factors, external to the firm, which firms have little control over. Sometimes these external factors exert great influence on the firm (Daft, Sormunen, and Parks, 1988). As such, environmental scanning is utilized to provide the firm a better picture of the environment in which it operates (Ginsburg, 1988). The ability to determine the requirements for change and the necessary adjustments depend on the ability to scan the environment, to evaluate markets and competitors, and to quickly accomplish reconfiguration and transformations ahead of competition (Teece, Pisano and Shuen, 1997).

Environment scanning is a necessary but not significant condition for generating wealth. The development of resources and capabilities to match changing environmental conditions is necessary to achieve environmental adaptation. Firms must continuously scan internally to develop resources and capabilities to respond to changes in a firm's external environment. Both external environmental and internal scanning are necessary for effective environmental adaptation (Garg, Wacters and Priem, 2003).

One quick way of creating greater wealth is to capitalize upon competitor's mistakes. Downsizing may be a weakness of many firms. By focusing on downsizing, as opposed to downscoping, firms are only addressing internal cost measures. By General Motors eliminating approximately 25,000 jobs per year, the firm is not addressing changing consumer needs. In many cases, downsizing results in a reduction of human resources. This reduction in resources may create a situation where wealth is reduced because of loss of intellectual capital. By reducing wealth, firms may have less revenue. With less revenue, the firm must cut additional resources. The cycle can continue indefinitely.

Another restructuring approach is downscoping. Downscoping does address changing consumer needs because it focuses resources on the profit generating segments of a firm's businesses. For example, Gillette generates its greatest profits from (1) blades and razors and (2) batteries. It is quite likely that Procter & Gamble will allocate more resources to these lines of business than other Gillette lines.

CONCLUSION

All elements of the modified balanced scorecard framework are linked to each other over time. Increase in shareholders wealth is a result of meeting consumer needs over time. Employees create wealth by building long-term relationships with customers and suppliers. By understanding how consumer needs change over time, the firm's senior managers can design and implement new strategies to increase shareholder wealth. Increases in shareholders wealth result in funds to invest in customers and future wealth initiatives. Increases in employee wealth allow the senior management team to focus upon increases in customer wealth and developing future wealth. As wealth is increased from a shareholders perspective, firm may have additional funds available to invest in the development of capabilities to generate future wealth. As employees become shareholders, they become more cognizant of how the firm can increase its wealth over time. The senior management team may then have funds to begin to generate additional sources of wealth for the firm and its employees. As the firm successfully positions for the future, customer, shareholder and employee wealth should all increase.

By utilizing the modified balanced scorecard over time, the firm can continue to create wealth. This is because the development of specific capabilities can lead to a source of firm heterogeneity over time (Penrose, 1959; Barney, 1991). If the firm is not engaged in the development of specific capabilities, other firms will take customers, employees, and market positions from firms that are not developing these capabilities (Hamel, 2000). This modified balanced scorecard framework awaits empirical testing.

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