Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Performance management software is mainly aimed at medium to large organizations that have to watch the performance of various lines of business and departmental functions. This might include, but is not limited to inventory tracking, sales performance, geographical tracking of results and a lot of other business metrics that keep the business operating optimally. The main goal is to provide a simple way for business managers and executives to keep track of how the unit is faring at any given time. So there are various functions to be investigated while you go about choosing performance management software.

The first thing to do is not to get confused by the acronyms. You will see acronyms like Corporate Performance Management (CMP), Business Performance Management (BPM) or Strategic Performance Management (SPM). In truth, they are one and the same, and at the most they are only slightly varied. All of them aim to give you the necessary tools to track your company. So when you are looking for a performance management solution, look for the features that you would want the software to have. These can include everything that you have been doing manually so far and a lot of it depends on the kind of company that you run.

For companies selling products, you are analyzing how much of each product is stored in inventory and how in-stock and turnover rates of specific products are performing in comparison to each other. Any company also needs to keep analyze sales performance on many different levels, daily, weekly, monthly, or annually. For multi-national corporations, every aspect of business comes in to play, including manufacturing efficiency, market mechanics, individual performance tracking and other metrics. The software that you select should allow you to track any type of data, such as these, rather than being dedicated only to one functional area. This also means the software needs to access multiple disparate data sources in one interface. The software should be flexible enough to allow comparisons of any historical and current metrics, to slice and dice by various criteria, and include visualization features to permit the exploration of patterns or trends in the data.
By: Gen Wright

Posted By: Solomon

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