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8 Simple Strategies for Measuring Productivity at Your Company

But with all this visibility come questions. What should you be tracking? Which data is most valuable to you? What should you be doing with all this information you’re collecting? And nowhere are there more questions than around productivity.

“Productivity” can seem like a bit of a buzzword for business owners. You know that improving productivity can be a key to improving revenue, but what exactly does that mean?

In this article, we look at some different methods you can use to measure your elusive “productivity”, and offer some ideas for implementing these strategies at your own company:

Strategy 1: The Simple Productivity Output Formula Strategy

This method calls for an extremely simple formula that can be applied in a similar way to different departments in your company. It’s the most basic definition of “productivity” and one of the easiest ways to get some actual numbers.

Here’s how to use the Simple Productivity Formula:

  1. Choose the output you will measure. Usually this is complete units made, or jobs completed.
  2. Find your input figure, which is the hours of labor put into production.
  3. Divide the output by the input.
  4. Assign a dollar value to the results, to measure your cost-benefit ratio.
  5. Measure non-manufacturing productivity in dollars instead of units

This formula works well in a factory-type setting, where each unit is of equal size and value. But in other types of businesses, it can fail to take into account complex jobs, different types of roles and working styles, and other factors. Because of this, it’s usually wise to mix this simply productivity formula with another productivity measure.

Strategy 2: The 360 Degree Feedback Strategy

In this strategy, you use the feedback generated from co-workers to measure the productivity of an employee. It sounds crazy, but in certain circumstances it can be an excellent strategy. Each employee has their productivity evaluated by their peers – including those both above and below them in the chain – in terms of how well they’ve fulfilled their duties and contributed toward the wider company goals.

In order to do this successfully, everyone in the team needs to have an understanding of the various roles and functions, as well as an expected level of output required for those roles.

The 360-Degree Feedback Strategy only works in an environment where your team interact a great deal, usually a smaller, tight-knit team. They need to be able to provide accurate commentary to you on each other’s habits. Before beginning a programme of 360-Degree feedback, you’ll need to provide some training to ensure employees are versed in the correct way to provide feedback. Each person needs to provide feedback based on their honest assessment of an employee’s overall contribution toward team goals, and not allow any personal feelings to crowd their judgement. Gathering feedback for the larger group also helps to counterbalance any potential personal grudges.

There are many templates available you can use to create parameters around your 360 Feedback. One we love is Start/Stop/Keep – you can find a great template from Manage Fearlessly.

Strategy 3: Time Tracking & Project Management Software

Clever online time tracking and project management software like WorkflowMax exists to help you track productivity at a glance. By submitting timesheets electronically, employees track data more accurately and you get an by-the-job look at exactly how your team are performing. With WorkflowMax, you can even use this data to run performance-based reports to see which employees or contractors are completing the most jobs or logging the most hours.

If your team works on site or remotely across the world, then online time tracking and project management software is a great solution, as it enables you to collect accurate data no matter where your employees are.

Of course, tracking time is only one measure of a productive and contributing employee, and depending on your type of business, it might not be your best productivity measure. See our recent article on productivity metrics for more information.

Strategy 4: The Monitor Social Media Strategy

Several managers – such as Erika London at iAdventure, who “friends” her employees on FB – follow the wisdom that any employee posting to social media or otherwise messing around on the internet during their workday is contributing less than their peers who might stay off Facebook. These companies take a hardline stance toward personal computer use on company time, and will strictly monitor social media and internet time and single out people they believe to be taking advantage.

Personally, we don’t advocate this strategy, as we think it takes a confrontational approach to productivity, instead of working with employees to give them ownership for their own work.

Strategy 5: The Profit = Productivity Strategy

In the business world, profit is everything. After all, we all know that money makes the world go round. (Or is that the sun’s gravitational force?)

So measuring productivity at your company by the amount of profit generated makes perfect sense. For small businesses, measuring productivity in terms of profit is often seen as the preferred method because it’s simple, and cuts right to the chase.

In service businesses, such as creative agencies, measuring by profit also ensures employees aren’t penalised for time spent thinking creatively or working to produce the best product possible for the biggest client. Instead, their results are measured by the value (profit) they bring into the company.

The main productivity = profit measurement is the “team effectiveness ratio”, which measures how much gross profit the company earns for every dollar spent on salary. This can be better than measuring profit against time as the goal is to get your team to work smarter, not longer.

Strategy 6: The “Getting Shit Done” Strategy

Can you measure productivity simply by how much is achieved? Some – including Doreen Bloch of Poshly Inc, – believe you can. She doesn’t care how many minutes are spent on a task, or when those minutes were spent, only what tasks are completed.

You can track productivity in this way by breaking down projects into individual tasks (which is done as part of the WorkflowMax project management system). These tasks can then be assigned to the employee best able to handle them. Every person has their own KPIs in terms of the tasks they’re responsible for, and can track how many they can tick off in an hour/day/week/month.

Keeping everyone informed of project goals and milestones ensures projects remain on schedule, and emphasis is placed on the completion of each task, instead of the hours logged for the week.

Strategy 7: The Daily Check-In Strategy

Some business owners just want to keep their team on task, and aren’t so concerned with output so much as the ability to stay on task. So they have their team give daily updates of what they’re working on and what has been achieved. These daily updates also flow into weekly and monthly goal-setting and planning.

How you do this in your company is up to you. You may do a check-in:

  • Over the phone or a conference call.
  • Via Google Hangouts – you can even make a daily event in your calendar.
  • In a dedicated Slack channel
  • Via a round-robin style morning meeting (US company Method uses this method for their monday morning “huddles.”)
  • In a quick email.

Daily check-in can work wonders for employees who need validation for hard work and who struggle with procrastination, but beware that certain personality types will find this type of system quite overbearing. If done incorrectly, it can veer into the territory of micromanagement, which you want to avoid at all costs. It’s best employed alongside a system of trust and ownership, when each team member can be responsible for setting their own schedules and deadlines.

Strategy 8: The Service With a Smile Strategy

Measuring productivity in service staff can be tricky. Of course, you want to push your team to answer as many support tickets as possible, in order to avoid a backlog. But you also don’t want to encourage speed over good customer service. It’s no good having a quick response time if your responses are rude and condescending, is it?

When thinking about measuring productivity of service centre staff, most companies use a combination of measurements:

  • The output: number of tickets answered in a certain period of time.
  • Feedback: a customer satisfaction score, derived from customer feedback about that particular staff member. You can use your support tickets or automated telephone surveys to collect this data.

You can use whatever equation you believe best represents the duties your team perform and the importance of good customer service over quantity of tickets. There may be other factors you’d like to include in your equation, depending on the nature of your product, such as:

  • How long a customer has to wait on hold.
  • Retention – the number of customers who return to the business after making a support call.
  • How long it takes for an order to be fulfilled.
  • The number of customer complaints.

It’s important when considering an equation for your support team that you establish a baseline – where your company should be performing in terms of service. This will help you measure employee performance. You can adjust this baseline every year to take into account the current market.

These productivity measurements don’t just help you, as the business owner, to achieve your goals quicker. They also give a valuable glimpse into the value your company provides in the market, and the talent and drive of your team. But more than that, productivity measures can help your employees and contractors understand how they work and improve areas where they are weak. They can improve focus and foster ownership and leadership skills within your team.

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Build a business while still working full time

Below are some of the key considerations for anyone who wants to start their own business on the side.

Invest in its success

From the earliest stages, the revenue your business generates should be poured back into itself. Starting an entrepreneurial venture can be expensive and, unless you have unlimited capital, anything you make will need to go towards financing your progress. Your business will need a website and a domain, hosting, freelancers and contractors, business cards, equipment, and a long list of expenses that gets longer the more successful you are. Once you have reached a certain size, then you will need to employ people and pay salaries, rent a space, pay tax, and more. If you treat your business as simply another source of income, it will never grow beyond a side project.

Keep it professional

A business shouldn’t be just a hobby. If you are providing a product or a service for money, then your customers will expect a certain level of professionalism. Even if you are operating out of your home, you need to convey the sense that people are dealing with a business, not just a person killing time. You need to make sure you have all your legal ducks in a row in terms of your responsibilities and rights as a business, and your systems and processes should be established for consistency. Building a business is easier if you do the basics well and start out the same way you mean to continue.

Audit your skills

As an entrepreneur, you will need to have a broad range of knowledge and skills. However, this means that while you can do things to a certain level of quality, your “jack of all trades” approach will prevent you from devoting the required effort, expertise, and time required as your business grows. Freelancers and contractors enable businesses to buy the skills they require, as they require them. When you are in the early stages of growth, employing specialist staff is usually unaffordable for a small business. Outsourcing will give you access to skills and experience that would be beyond budget at a full-time rate.

Keep your business and day job compartmentalised

One of the major mistakes people can make when starting a business on the side is allowing it to impact their day job. This can take many forms whether you spend all night working on your business and can’t function at work the next day, you find yourself taking sick days to do work on the side, or you start using company time to complete your side projects, these can all put your day job at risk. One of the major rules for starting a business after hours is to keep it professional; this means respecting the boundaries of your day job and small business. Losing your day job is just one consequence you could face if these lines begin to blur. Your contract will probably include clauses around misuse of company time and property, which will cover using resources for non-work related activities. This may mean that your day job could stake a claim to parts of your business or your clients and you may find yourself losing it before it has even started. There are also rules around what type of business you can start and usually, an employment contract will include a non-compete clause. Be conscientious and discuss your side project with your HR department to make sure that everyone knows where they stand.

Don’t quit too soon

Working full time and getting a business off the ground means long hours and sacrifice. You won’t get to watch your favourite TV programs, you’ll see less of your friends, your weekends will be spent working rather than relaxing, and you will generally feel busy, tired and stressed at all times. The upside is that you will still have a constant salary to rely upon. When the long hours start to wear on you, the temptation to throw in the day job will be enormous. However, if you haven’t reached your growth and financial goals, you should stick it out. You can only quit your job once, but the longer you stick it out, the better a position you will be in when the time comes to leave.

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Are you losing sleep over your business?

There’s something about starting a business that destroys all concept of time. There’s nobody to tell you when to stop, so many business owners simply don’t. An 18-hour day isn’t unusual when you’re trying to get your business off the ground.

As for weekends and holidays, forget them. They’re just more time in which to get work done. I speak as someone who once rewrote my website’s content management system during a snowboarding holiday. I did still manage to get on the slopes, but even then I never stopped thinking about my business.

Technology has made this worse, of course. It’s not so long ago that email access was difficult if not impossible when traveling abroad. Now it’s just like being at home.

So entrepreneurs don’t really go on holiday. We just temporarily move our work to a slightly nicer location. Even then we may not look up from our screens long enough to notice the change of scenery. Like dolphins, it feels as though we can never fully relax. We have our own sharks to deal with.

How to make sleep an important part of your business plan

Yet we have to sleep. That’s not an opinion – it’s a biological fact. Without sleep we progressively lose our sanity, start hallucinating and eventually die. That would curtail even the most ambitious of business plans.

Dolphins have a neat trick that gets around this problem. They sleep with only half their brains turned off at a time, switching between the two halves. In experiments this has been shown to let them stay alert for at least two weeks at a time.

Wouldn’t it be great if we could do the same thing? Actually no, it would be awful. Nobody would ever relax, wind down or enjoy the simple things in life. Instead we’d all be competing twice as fast as we do now, with no downtime whatsoever. So, if any eccentric scientist reading this has plans for splicing dolphin DNA into human brains so we can half-sleep too, please don’t.

Still, there are other ways we can improve our alertness. Power-naps have been shown to be remarkably effective. Some people have trained themselves to be able to drop into REM sleep (the deep, refreshing sleep) in seconds. Twenty minutes of this might be equivalent to an hour of conventional sleep.

One round-the-world yachtsman got so good at this trick that he could fall asleep in the time it took traffic lights to change. Presumably he was then quickly awoken by the sound of beeping horns behind him.

Tuning into your body’s natural sleep patterns can help, too. If you’re a night owl or a lark, plan your sleep time accordingly. You’ll get a more refreshing rest that way. Some experiments have shown that it’s possible to change your sleep pattern. Perhaps, but as a confirmed night owl, I have never functioned well before 9am, and some of my best work is done at 1am. That routine feels hard-coded in my head, and trying to change it might be more trouble than it’s worth.

What not to do

Tempting though they are, avoid stimulants. Caffeine and similar drugs come with a price tag attached – the law of diminishing returns. The more you use them, the more you have to use them. And they merely delay sleep – they don’t replace it. Eventually the bill must be paid.

Perhaps what’s more important than trying to stay awake longer is getting a better perspective on life. After all, we shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that a business is a means to an end – not the end itself. If we spend all our waking lives working, we’ll have no time to enjoy the fruits of that work.

To put it another way, if dolphins could build houses to keep out the sharks, they’d probably enjoy a good night’s sleep just as much as we do.

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