Assignment 2 - Benchmarking
Assignment 2 - Benchmarking
Introduction
The International Benchmarking Clearing House Design Committee which regards
benchmarking as “a systematic and continuous measurement process; a process of
continuously measuring and comparing an organization’s business process against business
leaders anywhere in the world to gain information which will help the organization to take
action to improve its performance”.
Benchmarking has gained acceptance worldwide as an instrument of continuous
improvement in the context of total quality management and as a means of enhancing
competitiveness.
This process is used intensively and extensively in the private sector and its use is growing
steadily in the public sector.
Benchmarking
Benchmarking is rapidly becoming an indispensable tool for savvy finance executives. Used
wisely, it can transform a company’s vision and clarify decisions on performance, markets
and internal efficiency.
“Benchmarking is a tool to help you improve your business processes. Any business process
can be benchmarked.” “Benchmarking is the process of identifying, understanding, and
adapting outstanding practices from organizations anywhere in the world to help your
organization improve its performance.” “Benchmarking is a highly respected practice in the
business world. It is an activity that looks outward to find best practice and high performance
and then measures actual business operations against those goals”.
What is Benchmarking?
Benchmarking means: “Improving by learning from others i.e., benchmarking is simply
about making comparisons with other organizations and then learning the lessons that those
comparisons throw up”.
Another definition is: Benchmarking is the continuous process of measuring products,
services and practices against the toughest competitors or those companies recognized as
industry leaders (best in the class)”.
Why Benchmark?
Although many organisations initiate benchmarking projects because of some dubious
reasons; for practical purposes the only reason to benchmark is because you recognise that
somewhere, somehow you are not as efficient or as capable of satisfying your customers
as your competition whether currently or because you have spotted a trend in the market that
you need to exploit, follow or respond to.
Although benchmarking is a measurement process and does generate comparative
performance measures, it also about attaining exceptional performance. The practices that
lead to exceptional performance are called enablers. Thus the process of benchmarking
results in two types of outputs: benchmarks, or measures of superior performance, and
enablers. Process enablers are developed to meet a specific business need within the context
of a specific business environment and company culture. This is why it is of little value to
‘steal’ from others because you will not have explored whether and where their business
practices are relevant or transferable to yours.
Types of Benchmarking
There are several ‘types’ of benchmarking including:
Generic - e.g: comparisons in a general sense - often using terms such as customer,
strategic or operational.
Functional - e.g: Finance, Sales or HR efficiency (e.g: HR staff to total employees).
Process - e.g: insurance claims or delivery of bulk commodities.
Global - across the world.
Cost - focusing on cost dynamics.
Performance - looking at revenue or growth.
Benefits of Benchmarking
The following benefits of benchmarking
It helps to develop an improvement mindset among staff.
It promotes an organizational dialogue about how things are and what needs to
change; this gives people throughout the organization an outlet for their experiences
and thinking.
It facilitates an understanding of best practices and processes in the industry.
It helps to develop a better understanding of processes.
It challenges existing practices within the business, thus encouraging innovation and
exchange of ideas.
It assists in setting goals based on facts.
It provides an educated viewpoint of what needs to be done rather than relying on
whim and ‘gut feel’.
It helps in defining better measures of productivity.
It improves companies’ competitive position.
It has produced a high degree of job satisfaction, learning, excitement and networking
among bench markers.
Steps in Benchmarking
There are five key stages in benchmarking:
1. Proto-planning
Decide what you wish to benchmark.
Decide against whom you need to benchmark.
Identify outputs required.
Determine data collection methodologies.
2. Data collection
Secondary/background research.
Primary research from the benchmark.
3. Analysis
Of the gaps.
Of the factors that create the gaps (enablers).
4. Implementation
Implementation planning.
Roll-out of new modus operandi (changes).
5. Monitoring
Collecting data.
Evaluating progress.
Iterative change.
Proto-planning
Choosing what to benchmark - Before starting a programme you must choose what to
compare.
Choosing your benchmark - Having decided what you want to benchmark the next
question is: ‘against whom will we benchmark?’
Deciding on outputs - Before collecting data it is vital that you decide on the format of
the outputs. This will in turn shape both how you collect the data and the method you
use for analysis. This should lead to developing benchmark metrics for use during the
project.
Defining the data collection methods - This will be driven by:
The outputs required.
The form of the information.
The nature of the exercise (group versus one: one).
Time.
Process to be benchmarked.
Data collection
Data collection is based on ‘secondary research, public background and primary research,
directly from benchmarks.
Secondary: It is important to learn as much as possible before making any direct
contact and this can be accomplished using ‘desk research including publications and
websites etc.
Primary: Direct data collection from the benchmark.
Planning the data collection.
Developing an interview guide/questionnaire.
Conducting primary research (telephone survey, mail survey, or individual
interviews).
Monitoring process performance and analyse performance gaps.
Making on-site observations to clarify and verify previous observations.
Conducting a post-site-visit debriefing with team members, to record
observations.
Preparation of a report.
Analysis
The analysis step in the benchmarking process model consists of five phases:
Data analysis.
Data presentation.
Root cause analysis.
Results projection.
Enabler identification.
The goal of this step is to identify adaptable process enablers for implementation.
The specific activities are:
Organize and graphically present the data for identification of performance
gaps.
Normalize performance to a common measurement base.
Compare current performance against the benchmark.
Identify performance gaps and determine the root causes.
Project the performance 3 to 5 years into the future.
Develop scenarios case studies for discussion.
Isolate process enablers that correlate to process improvements.
Evaluate the nature of the process enablers to determine their relevance to
your organization.
Implementation
Set goals to close, meet, and then exceed the performance gap.
Select best practices and enablers for consideration.
Modify process enablers to match the company culture and organizational
structure.
Enhance these enablers based on team observations for integrating process
improvements.
Develop a formal action plan for implementing improvements.
Obtain management buy-in and ownership of the required changes.
Commit resources.
Implement the plan-piloting where sensible.
Iterate changes based on pilot.
Roll-out elsewhere as appropriate.
Monitoring
This is about ensuring that the new processes work and that any ‘edge’ created is sustained,
and involves collecting data on the new process, evaluating progress and if necessary,
iterating changes, monitoring and reporting improvement progress, identifying opportunities
for future benchmarking and recalibrating the measure regularly.
Competitive Benchmarking
This is a comparison against the direct competitors within a company’s market. It is often
difficult, if not impossible in some industries, to obtain the data for this form of
benchmarking as, by the very nature of being a competitor, the company is seen as a threat.
Hence, it is usually done through third party consultants who assess a consortium of
companies in the same industry and individual companies receive only summary information.
External benchmarking encourages a broad perspective and many times redefines old
paradigms by providing previously unavailable, objective data. It can often detect market
trends and create a sense of urgency that provides a legitimate basis for instituting essential
change. External benchmarking can ensure that a company’s goals are proactive and
industry- leading instead of just being an improvement on last year’s performance.
Conclusion
Benchmarking is more than just a comparative analysis this sort of analysis has been
undertaken for many years with little benefits. What benchmarking contributes is that
‘lessons are learned’. The difference with a benchmarking study is that a better way of doing
things is analyzed and then the key factors the enablers are then used to close the gap. There
are a few key issues for organizations beginning benchmarking efforts:
Top management commitment and participation are necessary.
Sufficient time must be allowed for the project as it takes time.
An able, well-trained team is critical where appropriate get outside help (consultants).
It is heavy on resources: people, travel, research, consultants, and other factors are
involved.
Process rigor is an absolute sine qua non for success you cannot ‘graze the surface’.
Quantitative data is often difficult and time consuming to obtain.