1) Measuring information technology success.
- Key performance indicator – measures that are tied to business drivers
- Metrics are detailed measures that feed KPIs
- Performance metrics fall into the nebulous area of business intelligence that is neither technology, nor
business centered, but requires input from both IT and business professionals
2) Efficiency and effectiveness
· Efficiency IT metric – measures the performance of the IT system itself including throughput, speed, and availability
· Effectiveness IT metric – measures the impact IT has on business processes and activities including customer satisfaction, conversion rates, and sell-through increases.
3)Bench-marking - base-lining metrics
- Regardless of what is measured, how it is measured, and whether it is for the sake of efficiency or
effectiveness, there must be benchmarks – baseline values the system seeks to attain
- Benchmarking – a process of continuously measuring system results, comparing those results to optimal system performance (benchmark values), and identifying steps and procedures to improve system performance
4) The interrelationship of efficiency and effectiveness IT metrics
- Efficiency IT metrics focus on technology and include:
- Throughput - the amount of information that can travel through a system at any point
- Transaction speed - the amount of time a system takes to perform a transaction
- System availability - the number of hours a system is available for users
- Information accuracy - the extent to which a system generates the correct results when executing the same transaction numerous times
- Web traffic - includes a host of benchmarks such as the number of page views, the number of unique visitors, and the average time spent viewing a Web page
- Response time - the time it takes to respond to user interactions such as a mouse click
- Effectiveness IT metrics focus on an organization’s goals, strategies, and objectives and include:
- Usability - The ease with which people perform transactions and/or find information. A popular usability metric on the Internet is degrees of freedom, which measures the number of clicks required to find desired information.
- Customer satisfaction - Measured by such benchmarks as satisfaction surveys, percentage of existing customers retained, and increases in revenue dollars per customer.
- Conversion rates - The number of customers an organization “touches” for the first time and persuades to purchase its products or services. This is a popular metric for evaluating the effectiveness of banner, pop-up, and pop-under ads on the Internet.
- Financial - Such as return on investment (the earning power of an organization’s assets), cost-benefit analysis (the comparison of projected revenues and costs including development, maintenance, fixed, and variable), and break-even analysis (the point at which constant revenues equal ongoing costs).
5) Metrics for Strategic Initiatives
Metrics for measuring and managing strategic initiatives include:
- Web site metrics
- Supply chain management (SCM) metrics
- Customer relationship management (CRM) metrics
- Business process reengineering (BPR) metrics
- Enterprise resource planning (ERP) metrics
6) Website metrics
- Web site metrics include:
- Abandoned registrations
- Abandoned shopping cards
- Click-through
- Conversion rate
- Cost-per-thousand
- Page exposures
- Total hits
- Unique visitors
7) Supply chain management metrics
- Back order : An unfilled customer order. A back order is demand (immediate or past due) against an item whose current stock level is insufficient to satisfy demand.
- Customer order promised cycle time : The anticipated or agreed upon cycle time of a purchase order. It is a gap between the purchase order creation date and the requested delivery date.
- Customer order actual cycle time : The average time it takes to actually fill a customer’s purchase order. This measure can be viewed on an order or an order line level.
- Inventory replenishment cycle time : Measure of the manufacturing cycle time plus the time included to deploy the product to the appropriate distribution center.
- Inventory turns (inventory turnover) : The number of times that a company’s inventory cycles or turns over per year. It is one of the most commonly used supply chain metrics.

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