Comments on: Dashboards Redux https://effectivedatabase.com/dashboards-redux/ Making data management a revenue generator Tue, 28 Apr 2020 19:43:13 +0000 hourly 1 By: Wes Trochlil https://effectivedatabase.com/dashboards-redux/#comment-948 Wed, 01 Oct 2008 12:18:24 +0000 http://effectivedatabase.com/2008/09/30/dashboards-redux/#comment-948 I agree with both points, but it still confounds me as to why associations that have been using the same system for many years (which implies some level of success and maturity) are not embracing dashboards.

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By: Bob Nedbal https://effectivedatabase.com/dashboards-redux/#comment-947 Wed, 01 Oct 2008 03:24:57 +0000 http://effectivedatabase.com/2008/09/30/dashboards-redux/#comment-947 I agree with Dan’s points. I think organizations need to be at a certain level management maturity and have an understanding of business-technology alignment before the concept of a BI dashboard can realized. In addition, commitment in both $ and time are then required to successfully implement, maintain and iterate the performance management tool.

Any readers of this blog who’ve encountered dashboards in non-profits; I’d be interested in hearing a) are they actively used and b) a description of their characteristics. What metrics are tracked? Is data collection and analysis automated or manual?

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By: Dan Kasprow https://effectivedatabase.com/dashboards-redux/#comment-946 Tue, 30 Sep 2008 21:44:02 +0000 http://effectivedatabase.com/2008/09/30/dashboards-redux/#comment-946 In my experience, dashboards are a management tool that an organization must evolve into. Dashboards are good at showing at a glance the information that executive management needs to monitor progress toward or maintenance of a business performance goal, and to effect business changes that make an organization more effective.

Studies by industry analysts show that the evolution into effective use of dashboard technology can sometimes take a year or more. There is an iterative process, a feedback loop, by which an organization first uses BI tools to discover what data it has that is useful for business performance management, and institutionalize those reports and data into daily, weekly or monthly business processes. Through that feedback loop, the organization learns what data is effective in monitoring as key performance indicators for the business, what additional data needs to be captured, and what data is meaningless. Ultimately, only those metrics which are valuable to measuring the health of the organization become worthwhile to build into dashboards. As an organization matures, the KPIs evolve and change. What is an indicator of performance today may not matter tomorrow, or may become so ingrained in the organizations culture over time that it is less important to monitor through a dashboard after a while.

In my view, many associations still have yet to define what those goals are, or don’t have a culture that is oriented towards business performance management. Wes, you often touch on this issue with your comments that state, “it depends on what you want to accomplish”. Those organizations that know what they want to accomplish will more likely succeed with dashboards to help them accomplish it.

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