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Balanced scorecard: a rising trend in strategic performance measurement

Khim Ling Sim (Khim L. Sim, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Accountancy at Western New England College. Her research interests include management control systems, organizational learning, organizational reengineering in new manufacturing practices, performance measures and performance evaluations. She has published in journals such as Journal of Management Accounting Research, International Review of Accounting, International Journal of Operations and Production Management, among others. She is currently a member of Institute of Management Accounting, American Accounting Association, and Institute of Decision Sciences. Dr Sim can be contacted at ksim@wnec.edu or tel: (413) 782 1506.)
Hian Chye Koh (Hian Chye Koh, PhD, a Certified Public Accountant, is an Associate Professor and Vice‐Dean (Business) of the Nanyang Business School (Singapore). He has published widely in international journals and conferences and serves as a consultant to several statutory boards and organizations. His current interest is in strategic data analysis. Dr Koh can be contacted at ahckoh@ntu.edu.sg or tel: (65) 790 5646.)

Measuring Business Excellence

ISSN: 1368-3047

Article publication date: 1 June 2001

13801

Abstract

The long‐term survival of a business is dependent upon meeting market needs through a long‐term value creation process. Traditional performance measurement systems have been criticized as being too narrowly focused on financial figures and functional level performance such that they often fail to capture organizational long‐term business success. In contrast, the balanced scorecard calls on managers to first make a commitment to introduce an array of measures or scorecards that will guide their decisions away from the narrowly focused financial measures. These scorecards, in turn, serve as dials on a dashboard and guide businesses into greater profitability as managers position themselves to better serve their employees, customers, and shareholders at large. Using information collected from 83 electronics companies located within the USA, results from the study provide support for the balanced scorecard. Specifically, findings show that manufacturing plants that have strategically linked their corporate goals or objectives to their performance measurement systems, via the scorecard, performed better than those that do not.

Keywords

Citation

Ling Sim, K. and Chye Koh, H. (2001), "Balanced scorecard: a rising trend in strategic performance measurement", Measuring Business Excellence, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 18-27. https://doi.org/10.1108/13683040110397248

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2001, MCB UP Limited

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