Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa

High failure rate of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been partly attributed to the use of inappropriate performance measures. This study seeks to determine the types of performance measures employed by SMEs, purpose for which performance measures are used, perceived effectiveness of performa...

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Main Authors: Caroline Chidinma Maduekwe, Peter Kamala
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2016-05-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7263/PPM_2016_02_Maduekwe.pdf
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spelling doaj-97aefb11fd1741ebb0c8b83b36025a232020-11-25T00:35:40ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672016-05-01142465510.21511/ppm.14(2).2016.057263Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South AfricaCaroline Chidinma Maduekwe0Peter Kamala1Department of management accounting, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South AfricaPh.D., Department of management accounting, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South AfricaHigh failure rate of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been partly attributed to the use of inappropriate performance measures. This study seeks to determine the types of performance measures employed by SMEs, purpose for which performance measures are used, perceived effectiveness of performance measures used and factors that may inhibit SMEs from using both financial and non-financial performance measures. Data are collected using a questionnaire and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The findings of this study reveal that most of the sampled SMEs measure their performance using both financial and non-financial performance measures, albeit financial performance measures are used more frequently than the non-financial ones. Of the financial performance measures, the most popular ones are sales growth, cash flows, operating income and net profit margin. The most popular non-financial measures are customer focused. These include response time, customers’ satisfaction, percentage of repeat customers and customers’ complaints. The findings also reveal that performance measurement reports are used by the sampled SMEs mostly for monitoring the business, gauging the performance of the business, improving business processes, identifying problems and optimizing the use of resources. The findings further reveal that the performance measures used are perceived to be effective but that the lack of awareness, qualified personnel, top management support, required resources such as computers, had, to some extent, inhibit SMEs from using the appropriate performance measures. This study not only fills in the gap in the literature on performance measurement by SMEs, but also provides invaluable insights on the extent to which these entities use different performance measures. These insights could inform future government interventions meant to avert the high failure rates of these entities and also aid SMEs to gauge their performance measurement practices with a view to adopt the best practices or avoid factors that could inhibit them from using these practiceshttps://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7263/PPM_2016_02_Maduekwe.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline Chidinma Maduekwe
Peter Kamala
spellingShingle Caroline Chidinma Maduekwe
Peter Kamala
Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
Problems and Perspectives in Management
author_facet Caroline Chidinma Maduekwe
Peter Kamala
author_sort Caroline Chidinma Maduekwe
title Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
title_short Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
title_full Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
title_fullStr Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in Cape Metropolis, South Africa
title_sort performance measurement by small and medium enterprises in cape metropolis, south africa
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2016-05-01
description High failure rate of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been partly attributed to the use of inappropriate performance measures. This study seeks to determine the types of performance measures employed by SMEs, purpose for which performance measures are used, perceived effectiveness of performance measures used and factors that may inhibit SMEs from using both financial and non-financial performance measures. Data are collected using a questionnaire and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The findings of this study reveal that most of the sampled SMEs measure their performance using both financial and non-financial performance measures, albeit financial performance measures are used more frequently than the non-financial ones. Of the financial performance measures, the most popular ones are sales growth, cash flows, operating income and net profit margin. The most popular non-financial measures are customer focused. These include response time, customers’ satisfaction, percentage of repeat customers and customers’ complaints. The findings also reveal that performance measurement reports are used by the sampled SMEs mostly for monitoring the business, gauging the performance of the business, improving business processes, identifying problems and optimizing the use of resources. The findings further reveal that the performance measures used are perceived to be effective but that the lack of awareness, qualified personnel, top management support, required resources such as computers, had, to some extent, inhibit SMEs from using the appropriate performance measures. This study not only fills in the gap in the literature on performance measurement by SMEs, but also provides invaluable insights on the extent to which these entities use different performance measures. These insights could inform future government interventions meant to avert the high failure rates of these entities and also aid SMEs to gauge their performance measurement practices with a view to adopt the best practices or avoid factors that could inhibit them from using these practices
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7263/PPM_2016_02_Maduekwe.pdf
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AT peterkamala performancemeasurementbysmallandmediumenterprisesincapemetropolissouthafrica
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