Accounting Business Reporting for Decision Making

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CHAPTER 14 Performance measurement 565

How do we look
to shareholders?

Financial perspective

GOALS MEASURES

Customer perspective

GOALS MEASURES

Innovation and
learning perspective

GOALS MEASURES

Internal
business perspective

GOALS MEASURES

How do
customers
see us?

Can we continue
to improve and
create value?

What must
we excel at?

FIGU R E 14.1 The balanced scorecard framework

Source: Kaplan, RS & Norton, DP 1992, ‘The balanced scorecard: measures that drive performance’, Harvard Business Review,
Jan–Feb, p. 72.


The balanced scorecard framework implies that traditional financial performance measures are inad-


equate to capture the entire performance of the entity alone. There is a need to include both short-term


and long-term measures, as well as financial and non-financial measures. This is made clear by Kaplan


and Norton (1992, p. 72), who compare the balanced scorecard to:


the dials and indicators in an airplane cockpit. For the complex task of navigating and flying an airplane,
pilots need detailed information about many aspects of the flight. They need information on fuel, air
speed, altitude, bearing, destination, and other indicators that summarize the current and predicted
environment. Reliance on one instrument can be fatal.
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