Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard

In 2002 the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia's management began a project to move its executive-level Balanced Scorecard metrics into a dashboard-type intranet application. This thesis begins by discussing this improvement in the communication of Balanced Scorecard results....

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Main Author: Read, Bryan Andrew
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14055
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-140552018-01-05T17:37:05Z Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard Read, Bryan Andrew In 2002 the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia's management began a project to move its executive-level Balanced Scorecard metrics into a dashboard-type intranet application. This thesis begins by discussing this improvement in the communication of Balanced Scorecard results. It then explores, in detail, two different approaches to assessing performance. The first approach outlines the most common methods being used to set targets. These targets are measurable goals that the organization strives to achieve as part of its corporate strategy. The second approach involves the use of historical data to assess current performance. This section of the thesis discusses how the most recent value, short-term and long-term trends can be ranked against prior period measurements, and then combined into an aggregate performance assessment for the business metric. This result can then be used to communicate performance that is better or worse than historically experienced. Both the target setting and historical ranking approaches can be used in the dashboard to trigger an indicator light (red, yellow, or green) that signals performance to an executive. A red light signals that the organization needs to do additional work to explain performance or to initiate projects to improve results. Ultimately, it is through both setting targets and ranking performance that the WCB or any other organization will move closer to achieving its strategic objectives. Business, Sauder School of Graduate 2009-10-19T21:56:58Z 2009-10-19T21:56:58Z 2003 2003-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14055 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 6041600 bytes application/pdf
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description In 2002 the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia's management began a project to move its executive-level Balanced Scorecard metrics into a dashboard-type intranet application. This thesis begins by discussing this improvement in the communication of Balanced Scorecard results. It then explores, in detail, two different approaches to assessing performance. The first approach outlines the most common methods being used to set targets. These targets are measurable goals that the organization strives to achieve as part of its corporate strategy. The second approach involves the use of historical data to assess current performance. This section of the thesis discusses how the most recent value, short-term and long-term trends can be ranked against prior period measurements, and then combined into an aggregate performance assessment for the business metric. This result can then be used to communicate performance that is better or worse than historically experienced. Both the target setting and historical ranking approaches can be used in the dashboard to trigger an indicator light (red, yellow, or green) that signals performance to an executive. A red light signals that the organization needs to do additional work to explain performance or to initiate projects to improve results. Ultimately, it is through both setting targets and ranking performance that the WCB or any other organization will move closer to achieving its strategic objectives. === Business, Sauder School of === Graduate
author Read, Bryan Andrew
spellingShingle Read, Bryan Andrew
Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
author_facet Read, Bryan Andrew
author_sort Read, Bryan Andrew
title Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
title_short Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
title_full Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
title_fullStr Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
title_full_unstemmed Red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the Workers’ Compensation Board of British Columbia executive dashboard
title_sort red, yellow, or green light? : signaling performance in the workers’ compensation board of british columbia executive dashboard
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14055
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