We've spent this month talking about metrics: how to define them, and where they can go wrong. But it's also important to understand that metrics never tell the whole story. A numerical metric can be a powerful way to assess the performance of a complex process, by cutting through the fog of operational details to look at the results. But in the end it is still only one observation, and sometimes not the most important one.
Step back for a minute to consider what a metric is. A metric* is a value—typically a number—that answers a question about some organizational process. How many widgets does this machine produce per hour? What percentage of our customer orders are shipped on time? What percentage of customer shipments result in complaints? And so on.
This means that a metric is meaningful or useful only insofar as the question it answers is meaningful or useful. And that question rests on a set of assumptions about how the measured process works (or is supposed to work) and how it interacts with the world around it. As long as the assumptions are correct, the number is meaningful. Deprived of context, it's not.
Consider a couple of simple examples. We want to know How many widgets does this machine produce per hour? because we want to understand whether we will have enough stock to fill our orders. So we install a counter on the machine. But if the counter is out of order, the numbers on its display will be wrong. We still need to know the correct number, but our normal process—read the display and log what it says—may have to be replaced by a more manual counting process.
We want to know What percentage of our orders are shipped on time? because in general customers demand timely shipment. Late orders mean unhappy customers, and unhappy customers will start shopping with our competitors. But in some cases, timely delivery isn't the most important thing. Maybe we are artists or sculptors, who do priceless original work on special commission from wealthy patrons. On the whole, these patrons probably don't care exactly what date the order is shipped, so long as it is perfect when it is finally delivered. Once you change the context, the question and metric become meaningless.
In other words, numerical metrics are great so long as they are answering the right questions. But getting correct answers to wrong questions can easily steer you down the wrong path. Peter Drucker cites a couple of dramatic examples.**
- "The thalidomide tragedy which led to the birth of so many deformed babies is a case in point. By the time doctors on the European continent had enough statistics to realize that the number of deformed babies born was significantly larger than normal—so much larger that there had to be a specific and new cause—the damage had been done....
- "The Ford Edsel holds a similar lesson. All the quantitative figures that could possibly be obtained were gathered before the Edsel was launched. All of them pointed to its being the right car for the right market. The qualitative change—the shifting of American consumer-buying of automobiles from income-determined to taste-determined market-segmentation—no statistical study could possibly have shown. By the time this could be captured in numbers, it was too late—the Edsel had been brought out and had failed."
If you can find a way to supplement your quantitative metrics with some other (perhaps qualitative) way to assess how things are going—in best case, using a wholly different perspective—your overall understanding of the situation will be stronger.
This might sound like a narrow discussion inside Quality theory, but the same debate has been going on recently in the political arena over the state of the economy. Some people have pointed out that the normal quantitative metrics show the American economy to be in great shape. Others have countered that the economy is suffering, and that if the metrics don't agree then so much the worse for the metrics! Personally I have no idea what the economy is doing and I take no position in this argument. But it fascinates me to see this exact topic as a subject of intense public debate.
In brief, there is no reliable way to manage your organization on autopilot. Three years ago, I argued that there is no perfect process. In the same way, there are no perfect metrics. Process and metrics are useful tools, but you still have to pay attention, and to think hard about what you are doing.
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* in this context, at any rate
** Both of these examples are quoted from Peter Drucker, The Effective Executive (New York: HarperCollins, 1966, 1967, 1993), pp. 16-17.