CHAPTER ONE

Introduction

EVERY DEPARTMENT IN EVERY business produces some kind of information that can be used by its manager to measure performance. This information may be related to operational considerations within the department, the financial condition of the entire company, or the performance of a company's suppliers and customers. Unfortunately, managers may not be aware of the multitude of measurements that can be used to track these different levels of performance or of the ways that these measurements can yield incorrect or misleading information.

This book is intended to help managers select the best possible set of measurements for a given situation. Chapters 2 through 14 itemize a series of performance measurements for different aspects of a company. Chapter 2 contains asset utilization measurements that can be used to determine a company's ability to sustain its sales, the level of asset and expense usage required to do so, and the sustainability of its current sales and expense levels. There are also specialized ratios that deal with such issues as sales returns, repairs and maintenance, fringe benefits, interest expense, and overhead rates.

Chapter 3 contains operating performance measurements, which describe an organization's operating performance in such areas as sales, gross margins, investment income, operating profit, and net profit.

Chapter 4 contains cash flow measurements, which are useful in determining the ability of a company's cash flows to keep it ...

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