"Benchmarking Is For Losers"

April 28, 2007
I heard a fascinating comment about benchmarking the other day. Without divulging which industry sector this person works in, the observation was basically this: "Only lousy companies bother with benchmarking. There's nothing you can learn from your ...

I heard a fascinating comment about benchmarking the other day. Without divulging which industry sector this person works in, the observation was basically this: "Only lousy companies bother with benchmarking. There's nothing you can learn from your competition because they don't know your business and your operations like you do."

In other words, "Measurements don't matter manage by your gut, and you'll do fine."

So why do I find this observation so fascinating? I guess I'm susceptible to the same fascination that draws people to slow down highway traffic to a crawl just to get a better look at the spectacular crash on the other side of the median. There's an undeniable curiosity at play whenever somebody or some company does something so outrageous that you just can't help but watch, grateful that it's not you who are involved in the accident.

And make no mistake any company that deliberately takes on the attitude that benchmarking is a sign of weakness will soon be needing a new sign of their own, and it will simply say, "CLOSED."

Not that benchmarking is a magic elixir that can cure all ills benchmarking, of course, doesn't actually fix anything. As I state in my book:

When it comes to measuring overall supply chain performance, companies typically focus on benchmarking metrics, such as those established in the Supply Chain Council's SCOR model. Delivery performance, fill rates, perfect order fulfillment, cash-to-cash cycle time, inventory turnsthese are some of the standards by which supply chains are judged, to determine whether they're best-in-class, fair-to-middling, or knocking on death's door.

I strongly suspect that the benchmarking naysayer I talked about earlier had a bad experience with a consultant, who probably promised that a benchmarking study would fix all his problems, but all that really happened was the consultant recommended a very long engagement that would mostly just fatten the consultant's wallet. But that's not benchmarking; that's an example of a "boiling the ocean" project designed to last forever.

In any event, none of the manufacturers that I write about in the metrics chapter of my book who do benchmarking could be defined as "losers" in any way, shape or form: Hyundai, IBM, Imation, Nissan. All these companies, and many more like them, have learned that by studying the best and emulating the best and that includes studying yourself, if in fact you're already the best you become and you remain a winner.

About the Author

Dave Blanchard Blog | Senior Editor

Focus: Supply Chain

Email: [email protected]

Follow on Twitter @supplychainDave

Call: 216-931-9794

Contributing Editor Dave Blanchard provides the IndustryWeek audience his expertise in lean supply chain, reporting on topics from logistics, procurement and inventory management to warehousing and distribution. He also specializes in business finance news and analysis, writing on such topics as corporate finance and tax, cost management, governance, risk and compliance, and budgeting and reporting.

Dave is also the chief editor of Penton Media’s Business Finance and editorial director of Material Handling & Logistics.

With over 25 years of experience, Dave literally wrote the book on supply chain management, Supply Chain Management Best Practices (John Wiley & Sons, 2010), and is a frequent speaker at industry events. Dave is an award-winning journalist and has been twice named one of the nation’s top columnists by the American Society of Business Publications Editors.

Dave received his B.A. in English from Northern Illinois University, and was a high school teacher prior to his joining the publishing industry. He is married and has two daughters.

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