Re: performance measurements

Subject: Re: performance measurements
From: "Gene Kim-Eng" <techwr -at- genek -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com>
Date: Sun, 30 Jan 2005 08:28:43 -0800


Ideally, goals should be flowing from the top down. That is, your company has
corporate-level goals, the organization to which yours reports has goals that
advance the corporate goals, your department has its own goals that advance
those, etc. Otherwise, any goals you develop on your own will just be a case
of "we don't know what we want but we'll know it when we see it."

As far as the "phone calls to help desk" and "cost-effective documentation"
goals are concerned, be sure that reducing help desk calls is actually a
corporate goal, and if so, that you are specific about reducing help desk
calls for user issues whose solutions are findable in documentation, or else
you risk pitting yourself against your company's plan to charge for support
or having all your document improvements wiped out by some engineer who
writes the mother of all SW bugs or forgets to use dissimilar metals where
they need to be and finding yourself becoming more of a cost center because
calls went UP during the measurement period.

Our customers' primary concerns about our products are on-time delivery and
conformance to spec, so we all work to generic corporate goals for product
schedule and error counts (as well as others that are company-confidential
and can't be discussed), so my goals for my dept are designed to support those
and to prevent documentation from becoming a critical path in product delivery
or the source of user error.

Gene Kim-Eng



----- Original Message ----- From: "Lyndsey Amott" <amott -at- docsymmetry -dot- com>

My client is a young company that has grown rapidly. One of the top guns in the company has been tasked with developing manageable and measurable objectives and, as a result, all the managers, including the manager of the Tech Comm dept, have been asked to define some manageable and measurable objectives for their departments.
The achievement of an objective needs to include:
- the identification and prioritization of the desired results
- methods for tracking and measuring progress
- methods for assessing how well the results were achieved

Reducing the number of phone calls to the help desk and producing more cost-effective documentation are excellent manageable and measurable goals and I will suggest them at the next meeting with the manager. What other things are you (TECHWR-lers) doing in your tech comm departments? How do you measure progress? How do you determine how well you have achieved the goal?



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References:
Re: performance measurements: From: Lyndsey Amott

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