The Balanced Scorecard

Type: Article
Topics: Curriculum & Assessment, School Administrator Magazine

May 07, 2015

For a strategy-focused school district, a route for driving systemwide performance measurements, as Atlanta’s experience suggests

Ten years ago, the Atlanta Public Schools had low and declining student achievement, demoralized teachers, crumbling buildings, high turnover among superintendents (average tenure of two years) and disaffected parents pulling their children out of the system. More than 60 percent of the city’s high school students missed at least two weeks of school per year, and the district had more than 700 teaching vacancies. The system was failing its students and stakeholders.

Fast forward 10 years, and Atlanta has reversed its dismal numbers. Fourth graders’ reading and math scores are nearly on a par with their Georgia peers, chronic absences have plummeted, and 91 percent of the district’s elementary schools made adequate yearly progress in 2009. Last June, the New Schools at Carver had a 94 percent graduation rate. Superintendent Beverly Hall said of the transformation, “Atlanta Public Schools is becoming a model urban school district.”

The difference was not caused by a major infusion of new money, the standard remedy many offer to cure a sick and underperforming school system. Atlanta still has limited resources, constrained operations and multiple, often conflicting, constituencies. The positive developments were brought about by a shift in the district’s leadership and management. Previously, leadership managed reactively, addressing all the short-term operational problems that continually emerged. Today, Hall has the entire district focused simultaneously on delivering short-term results and executing on its long-term strategic plan.

Both of us, Kaplan of Harvard Business School who developed a tool called the balanced scorecard, and Miyake, a consultant who works with education and nonprofit clients to implement processes that improve performance systemwide, have collectively more than 40 years of experience. Miyake worked closely with the Atlanta Public Schools.

A Measuring Stick

All districts do strategic planning. Once a year, they invest time and money to develop a strategic plan and a budget. But for most districts, the strategic plan sits on a shelf until it is dragged out to serve as the starting point for the following year’s annual strategy retreat, an unfortunate, but well-chosen word for this process. The strategic plan is not a living document and has little to no impact on the district’s daily operations.

The poor strategy implementation processes of most school districts, however, are not atypical. Various studies over the past 25 years have documented that 70 to 90 percent of private-sector companies fail to achieve the targets outlined in their multiyear strategic plans. Almost all state that their shortcomings were not due to poor strategies but to their failure to execute their chosen strategies. Surveys indicate that effective strategy execution has become the No. 1 priority for senior executives.

For the transformation led by Hall, the Atlanta Public Schools applied a proven approach that organizations around the world have used to beat the odds against successful strategy execution. The secret is placing strategy as the centerpiece of a dynamic leadership and management system. The system is based on the balanced scorecard, a performance measurement framework developed 20 years ago to address shortcomings in how corporations measure their performance. (The first adoption of the balanced scorecard in a large public school system started in 2001 in Atlanta’s neighboring district, Fulton County.)

The basic principles underlying the balanced scorecard are remarkably simple: 

  • If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage and improve it; and
  • Measurement motivates.

Even with no explicit compensation incentives tied to achieving strategic targets, the simple act of measuring and monitoring causes people to pay attention to what is measured. The power of measurement is well-known and precedes by centuries the introduction of the balanced scorecard.

But prior to the balanced scorecard, performance measurement systems were either purely financial or, at best, driven by local operational improvement and quality programs. They were not derived from nor aligned with the enterprise’s strategy. These disconnects are particular problems for public school systems, where compliance with adequate yearly progress can cause a district to focus only on short-term measures and crowd out measures that align better with long-term strategic objectives.

Hall, recipient of the 2009 National Superintendent of the Year award, described the effort this way: “All school systems focus on student achievement — these are the critical outcomes that we track as educators. But to get to those outcomes, you must measure and evaluate everything we do as a district. The balanced scorecard is our way to look across all departments and ensure they are aligned to our strategy. It gives us transparency and clarity into how our central office (often the target of unfair attacks about a ‘bloated bureaucracy’) supports the district’s progress and children.”

The balanced scorecard captures both the financial and the nonfinancial elements of the strategy and describes the cause-and-effect linkages that drive results. It allows a district to look ahead, with leading indicators, rather than always looking back with lagging indicators.

“Before we adopted the balanced scorecard we had a strategy plan but not a strategy-focused plan,” said Kathy Augustine, Atlanta’s deputy superintendent of curriculum and instruction. “Planning did not compel us to constantly ask questions about alignment and how each department needed to work together so we could meet our goals. The balanced scorecard forced each and every department to answer the critical question: How does my work support the kids?”

Short-term operational measures remain important and AYP metrics and strategic metrics can co-exist successfully as Atlanta has demonstrated. In 2007-08, 100 percent of the district’s 57 elementary schools met targets for adequate yearly progress, while Atlanta continued to execute on its strategic mission of increasing student achievement across the district.

Mapping Strategy
Atlanta Public Schools Strategy Map

For Atlanta Public Schools, the process of building a balanced scorecard starts by having district leadership clearly articulate linked strategic objectives across the four perspectives of a strategy map for the Atlanta Public Schools.

The linked objectives in the strategy map tell the story of the strategy, indicating the school district will improve student achievement “by focusing on teacher effectiveness, community engagement, and high quality, safe facilities.” It will drive these objectives by “leveraging technology, ensuring fiscal stability and aligning resources with strategic priorities.” This will require “efficient and effective internal processes” and “improvements in customer services.” Finally, to make this happen, the district will “invest in their staff to increase capacity and leadership, increase engagement, improve the recruitment and retention of highly effective staff, and build a culture of alignment and accountability.”

Angela Smith, director of strategic programs and projects, considers the building of the strategy map “a turning point for our curriculum and instruction management team in fully understanding and communicating our strategy. The strategy map is a powerful communication tool that allows us to share and discuss our priorities in one single image. Our strategy map has helped our management team get on the same page.”

Once the strategic objectives have been selected and placed on a strategy map, the district selects one or more measures for each strategic objective. In this way, the district is sure all its metrics can be easily traced back to its strategy. For each metric, the district then selects targets, based on national, state and local performance standards. Then it sets priorities and funds strategic initiatives and the 6- to 18-month action programs that provide the impetus for the district to achieve the ambitious targets for its strategic measures.

This entire system — strategy map, linked measures and targets, and strategic initiatives — focuses and aligns the district to a long-term strategy.

According to Augustine, the balanced scorecard has “accelerated the progress on meeting the superintendent’s plans — from all departments. It’s allowed us to work smarter and in a more integrated fashion. It’s also made the accountability transparent — something that everyone, from funders to parents, is demanding.” Alexis Kirijan, chief strategy officer for Atlanta Public Schools, acknowledges the “excitement around strategic planning” now at the district. Instead of being something that people dread, people actually look forward to the balanced-scorecard reporting process.

Strategy Principles

Over the past 18 years, we’ve learned from many organizations, including Atlanta Public Schools, that have built strategy maps and scorecards. And the biggest learning is that these tools by themselves are not sufficient to drive systemic improvement.

Sharon Davis Williams, executive director of School Reform Team 1 in the district and a champion of the balanced scorecard, realized “it’s not enough to focus just on strategy development — you need to focus instead on strategy implementation.”

The current leadership team in Atlanta Public Schools succeeded where others had failed by implementing a new management system centered around the strategy. The new management system enabled leadership to articulate the cause-and-effect linkages of the strategy, invest to improve the leading indicators of strategic change, motivate all units to focus on the strategy, and govern the system to maintain its trajectory for achieving breakthrough performance.

Five principles characterize this strategy-focused management system.

  • Mobilize change through executive leadership. Breakthrough results do not happen by accident. They are the result of strong leadership with a clear strategy. To drive change, executives must develop a case for change and a vision and strategy on where they want to drive the organization. In Atlanta, Hall’s leadership and vision of a revitalized school system were the driving forces behind the strategic transformation. According to Hall, the balanced scorecard has become the “common language” for the senior cabinet to communicate with the Atlanta school board.
  • Translate the strategy into operational terms. The strategy map and scorecard translate the district’s strategy into terms that everyone in the organization can understand and act upon. Kirijan’s team owns the responsibility in Atlanta for ensuring the scorecard and map are refreshed on an annual basis and for updating the measures and targets. This critical translation of strategy into operations has helped the district garner extensive foundation funding (foundations love the transparency) and helped simplify the planning process.
  • Align the organization to the strategy. Once a balanced scorecard has been created at the top level of an organization, its objectives cascade down to operating and support units. This allows each area of the organization to understand how it contributes to the strategy. According to Augustine, the balanced scorecard enables the Atlanta schools to “break through departmental silos” and gives all units a common language to talk about issues related to student achievement. With the cascading of the strategy from the district level down to the schools, each level becomes more aligned and accountable for district performance.
  • Make strategy everyone’s job. While strategy may be formulated at the central office, it must be executed at each school. Communication and education are critical for strategy execution, as are aligning incentives and personal objectives. Cheryl Twyman, principal of West Manor Elementary School, claimed the balanced scorecard made it easy for her to see the district priorities and how she could align her school with district priorities.
  • Make strategy a continual process. The balanced scorecard allows strategy to happen continually, not just at an annual strategy review session. In Atlanta and other best-practice districts, the scorecard serves as the agenda for facilitating ongoing strategic discussions. Augustine noted that “funders are always looking for sustainability — proof that their investment in the district will have a return. The balanced scorecard,” she adds, “shows how the resources will be deployed and how we can sustain the benefits.”
Moving Ahead

Going forward, Atlanta Public Schools is rolling out the balanced scorecard to all the principals in the district and further integrating the balanced scorecard into the regular strategy review processes. A successful pilot recently ended in School Reform Team 1, led by Davis Williams.

Williams summarized her experience this way: “The balanced scorecard is a change. And any change comes with learning and challenges. It’s not always easy. But the benefits come from teaching people how to plan, how to monitor, how to be accountable and how to solve problems. The balanced scorecard gives you a different way of working and puts in place a system that sustains a focus on long-term results.”

Robert Kaplan is Baker Foundation Professor at the Harvard Business School in Boston, Mass. E-mail: rkaplan@hbs.edu. Dylan Miyake is a founder and managing partner of Ascendant Strategy Management Group in Boston.

Authors

Robert S. Kaplan and Dylan N. Miyake
Five Things We’ve Learned About Organizations

The balanced scorecard is an iterative, learning process. No organization gets everything 100 percent correct the first time. After all, strategy formulation remains an art, not an exact science. It’s our best hypothesis about how organizations will succeed.

The balanced scorecard offers a rapid and effective way to implement and then to test the strategy and react and respond as necessary. “As the environment changes, so must the balanced scorecard,” says Beverly Hall, superintendent of the Atlanta Public Schools, who introduced her district to the scorecard approach in 2004. In working with dozens of organizations, both nonprofit and corporate, in applying the balanced scorecard, we have discovered a few important lessons that can help or hinder leadership’s goals.

Listen, listen, listen. The balanced scorecard will not be effective as a tool, and you will not be effective as a leader, if the balanced scorecard and strategy map do not reflect the realities the schools face every day. To successfully develop a balanced scorecard, don’t just retreat into your office with your deputies and put something together. Instead, you must go to the schools and meet all affected constituencies and listen to their needs. Learn how the current measurement system is broken (trust us, it is broken). Solicit ideas from everyone on how to fix it. And reflect these good ideas in the strategy map and scorecard.

Communicate early and often. People don’t like change, and change involving measurement can be even more scary. In addition to listening to stakeholders from inside and outside the district, communicate early and often about the strategy, the map and the scorecard. Experts have told us you must “communicate seven times, seven different ways.”

Deploy in phases. A key message from everyone interviewed for our accompanying article is the need to phase in the deployment of the balanced scorecard. It’s critical the strategy be clear and sustainable before introducing it to the principals and the schools. That’s not to say the principals shouldn’t be involved in the development process (they must!), but it’s important to get the district’s balanced scorecard right before starting work on the school- or department-level scorecards. Otherwise you risk losing the excitement around the process.

Also, show how the balanced scorecard can replace much of the data currently reported, which no one looks at or uses. Atlanta schools now just turn in a three-page scorecard instead of a school achievement plan typically running between 40 and 90 pages in length. All principals love the reduction in required paperwork.

Staff and train appropriately. According to Alexis Kirijan, chief strategy officer for Atlanta Public Schools, getting people involved in the process is easy. What’s challenging is keeping them engaged. To keep people involved, Kirijan has assembled a team of people who try to simplify the scorecard process. The team provides training and best-practice templates. The deputy superintendent, Kathy Augustine, emphasized the value of establishing a “strategy management office” to coordinate all the processes of the new strategy management system.

Use it or lose it. The balanced scorecard, said Atlanta Superintendent Beverly Hall, is “more than just show and tell.” To be successful, the scorecard must become ingrained as the central information system for managing the district. The scorecard changes as district strategy evolves. In that way, it remains relevant and adaptable to changes in the environment and new educational opportunities.

Additional Resources

For readers who’d like to learn more about the balanced scorecard, the authors suggest the following:

  • Ascendant Strategy Management Group. Ascendant works with nonprofits, government agencies, schools and associations to develop balanced scorecard management systems that help organizations achieve their mission.
  • Harvard Business Publishing. The balanced scorecard is the single largest category at Harvard Business Publishing, including articles, books, case studies, DVDs, a bimonthly newsletter and interactive learning resources.
  • The Strategy-Focused Organization: How the Balanced Scorecard Companies Thrive in the New Competitive Environment by Robert Kaplan and David Norton, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, Mass.

Advertisement

Advertisement


Advertisement

Advertisement