The activities associated with the selection of the key metrics for each performance attribute for each supply chain. A scorecard is used to define the metrics of most interest to an organization, to arrange them by area of impact, by business priority, and to provide a container for later benchmarking comparisons. Each scorecard is built from a subset of hundreds of OpenReference metrics.
Use Cases
Balanced Scorecard example
Balanced Scorecard: A standard method to analyze the performance of supply chains is the use of
Balanced Scorecards. A
Balanced Scorecard consists of a limited number of agreed, well-defined metrics, categorized by business perspective.
An example of such metrics are the level-1 Metrics for each Performance Attribute defined in OpenReference. Where necessary the level-2, 3, and 4 metrics are available to analyze and explain deviations between scorecard targets and actuals for each metric.
A OpenReference supply chain scorecard typically consists of 6-10 level-1 metrics.
Business Strategy Map template
Business Strategy Map:
OpenReference recommends the use of a
Business Strategy Map to visualize and/or communicate the linkage between the business priorities and the metrics/attributes in a scorecard.
A Business Strategy Map is typically created (and appended to the scorecard) after the supply chain strategy has been defined or refreshed and after the initiatives to operationalize/implement such strategy ('strategic initiatives') have been defined, planned, and funded.
Notes
Discuss Contract Custom Solution
Hierarchy
ID | Name | Level | x | A1 | Align Strategy | 2 | A1 |
A109 | Define Scorecard | 3 | A109 |
Workflow
Note: Common inputs and outputs are listed in alphabetical order. Other inputs and outputs may be required to support varying use cases.Define Scorecard Align Strategy 4110900 3 Supply, Chain, Management, Performance, Metrics, Standard, Reporting Selection of the key metrics for each performance attribute for each supply chain. A scorecard is used to define the metrics of most interest to an organization, to arrange them by area of impact, by strategic linkage, and to provide a container for later benchmarking comparisons