Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/business/1579878-bp
https://studentshare.org/business/1579878-bp.
This scorecard was developed by BP in 2003 .We will see what this scorecard was- (Anderson, 2003)
FINANCE CUSTOMER
Business Process Matrices
In order to successfully implement the internal business processes, the following action plan was prepared by the bank –
Initiatives
Metrics
Time Frame
Increase product quality
Train Quality Managers and supervisors
2 months
Achieve benchmark for productivity projects
Launch of Echo
1 year
Launch Standardized safety manuals
Launch of manuals throughout
2 years
Make information availability easier
Launch of Project GOLD
1 year
Risk Identification and mitigation
Prepare and train Safety audit teams
1 year
We will analyze these 5 matrices in detail and see how failure in the above matrices leads to a failure in the other three business perspectives
Failures in Business Processes
After pointing out the performance matrices we will now analyze how their failure led to a cascading effect on the other three perspectives and the failure of the program as a whole.
Train Quality Managers and Supervisors
BP made the mistake of separating quality from normal day to day business activities. Quality managers were seen by most team as outsiders who came to overlook their work. Due to this quality concept was not internalized but workarounds were developed which were used whenever the quality team visited.
Echoke met with resistanceAs is this case for any standardized software which is launched across a mammoth organization, launch of Echoke met with resistance from employees. Echoke was supposed to find out the choking points of the operation team – the areas where problem occurs again and again and thus create a standardized benchmark – however it failed to factor the human factor in this software. (Bamberg, 2000)
Lack of Training on new safety manuals
A new safety manual was launched by BP in 2004 . These manual were uniform with slight variations from place to place. However the problem was that regular training on these manuals was stopped when BP faced financial crunch. This led to the employees reverting back to their old ways quickly.
.
Initial Failure of GOLD
GOLD stands for Global Operational, Leaders, and Display. Gold was the ERP project launched by BP.GOLD was supposed to accumulate information available from different countries BP operates in and present it to the top management in a comprehensive manner. Initially GOLD failed to capture the prevailing conditions in different countries as they were vastly from each other which made the data skewed. There were also compatibility issues with echoke which took a lot of time to be resolved.
Risk Identification and Mitigation
Safety audit teams faced the same fate as quality managers. Deep thought was not given over the composition of these teams. In the initial days these teams were usually formed in UK and they tried to impose UK safety standards wherever they went. This was not desirable and even not feasible in some of the countries. Eventually top management had to intervene and audit teams were re-stuffed by incorporating staff from both teams. This included the best practices of both the countries in the audit teams.
Conclusion
The following chart summarizes how the failure in the business process matrices led to failure in the other three perspectives