What Lead US to Developing a Dashboard?
Transcription
What Lead US to Developing a Dashboard?
What Lead US to Developing a Dashboard? What interest our CEO … Fascinates us all To become less reactionary and more proactive in budgeting A desire to balance investments against our risk profile Leverage the combined talents of our senior executives to help address issues Drive accountability and agility in decision making Improve Priorities, Alignment and Decision Making Across the Business Through the Use of Integrated and Balanced Dashboards 1 Design of our Framework 2 Key Elements of Our Dashboard Objectives Metric Examples Workforce • • • Safety (TICR) Workforce Strategy Solid Waste / Recycling Customer • Service Levels / Fill Rates by Business Unit • Cost Savings Financials • Working Capital Savings • Budget Operational • Inventory Metrics (growth, excess, returns) • Sourcing Metrics (pipeline, compliance, diversity) Key Elements of the Dashboard 1-page (front and back) Focus on key drivers, initiatives, outcomes Maintain risk register associated with objectives Multi-year view, with focus on current year Metrics with targets and trends Stop light visuals Connection to Business Unit customers 3 Category Management Metrics Our Goal is to Provide Actionable Forward Looking Insights … Going Beyond Rearview Mirror Data Metrics Backward Looking Spend Supplier Market Intel Forward Looking Category Spend Trends Category Demand o Category Spend Analysis o Supplier Fragmentation o Sourcing Pipeline o Demand Plan Single / Sole Sourced Spend Diversity Spend Adoption Trends for Strategic Agreements Supplier Development Plans Should Cost Modeling Cost Driver Forecasts by Category Index Based Price Adjustment KPI’s by Contract 4 Inventory Metrics Enterprise Metrics Inventory Value and Growth Inventory Value in Rate Base Working Capital Savings Excess Inventory Business Unit Specific Metrics Inventory Growth by BU and Segment Inventory Metrics by Site o Value / MW Capacity o Value / Customer Service Levels o Order Fill Rate o Critical Stock Outs o Returns A Common Reporting Format is Used for Enterprise Wide Inventory Metrics, However Each Business Unit Defines and Reports Their Own Specific KPI’s 5 Our Results and Lessons Learned Business Unit Engagement Employee Engagement Performance Management Metrics and dashboard reporting is reviewed with Business Unit stakeholders at multiple levels Metrics are chosen to reinforce positive behaviors and bring awareness to negative behaviors Aligns our goals and objectives across the organization identifying specific initiatives that impact all aspects of our supply chain Supply Chain workforce is engaged in both developing and reviewing the metrics Periodic reviews (quarterly) are conducted to evaluate trends and ensure progress is made towards goals Data to support metrics must be easily attainable and understood