Metrics Matter: Choosing the Right Ones

December 15, 2009 · Filed Under Healthcare Supply Chain, Hospital Supply Chain, Utilization 

If you want to see beyond the clutter, fog and noise that saturates our day-to-day business decisions the best way I know to do so is with metrics. Specifically, a metric is a set of measurements that quantify results thereby telling us more about our supply chain operations. This insightful information will then enable you to make your big and little decisions with confidence, congruity and speed.

One caveat! The difficulty in using metrics is that you need to choose the RIGHT ones to get the RIGHT results. I find the ideal methodology to do so is Activity-Based Costing: Linking a product or service to an activity or cost driver to uncover significant actionable information.

For instance, if you wanted to have a meaningful metric to analyze your office supply total in-use cost you would use full-time equivalents (FTEs) divided by your office supply spend to arrive at this measurement.  You can then benchmark this metric against your peers to determine whether your total in-use cost for office supplies is within acceptable limits. This is a much more scientific method than guessing!

Why FTEs? Because people drive the cost up or down on office supplies, consequently there is a direct relationship between your office supplies spend and the number of people your healthcare organization employs on a full or part time basis.   

Get the idea?  Anytime you want to measure something you need to first indentify your COST DRIVER for the product or service you are measuring.  You then divide your cost driver by your supply spend or labor cost to arrive at your metric.  This methodology can become much more complicated than my example of office supplies when a number of variables are involved, but this is the basics on how you would choose the RIGHT metric to keep you from going off track.

I know that this topic boarders on being academic, but it really has real world applications in supply chain management. If you master the basics of this concept, it can make your job easier, more productive and will allow you to become a saving machine. That’s why metrics matter! 

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