How do I Measure Employee Productivity Performance?
by Owen E. Richason IV, Demand Media
Employee productivity can be measured with simple calculations.
Measuring employee productivity is a
difficult task for small businesses. Journalist Saheli S.R. Datta points out in
CNN Money, "The standard economic measure of productivity--dividing
company revenue by number of employees--won't help you make operational
improvements. Nor can you simply count the widgets they ship per week, as
factory managers do." But methods do exist for measuring your small
business's employee productivity. With a little creativity and number
crunching, you will be able to put numbers to everyday operation.
Step 1
Establish a baseline. You need a
starting place to measure employee productivity at large. Using your small
business's normal or day-to-day business operation output, set an average for
the total amount and then divide it by the number of employees. If your small
business is watch and jewelry repair, take the average number of repair
services performed in the course of a normal business day and divide it by the
number of employees to yield a baseline.
Step 2
Identify and subtract productivity
limiters--things that hamper employees' ability to execute their jobs. If your
small business provides residential lawn maintenance and pest care services,
having employees fill out customer invoices by hand and writing work orders by
hand take more time than supplying preprinted, completed documents. Look for
redundancies also and eliminate them. David Sward at Intel describes it this
way, "Don’t forget to take into account any fundamental restructuring that
eliminates all or a portion of activities; these are often innovative
changes."
Step 3
Create a spreadsheet. Having eliminated
redundancies and time-wasting activities, coupled with establishing a baseline,
you now have the ability to measure employee productivity performance. Start a
new spreadsheet and place each employee's name on it along with columns that
track individual performance relative to your baseline. If your small business
writes software and your baseline is "X" units written per day
written, divide the total number of units by the number of employees and then
compare that to each individual's output. This identifies which employees are
meeting, exceeding or failing to meet the daily average.
Step 4
Re-evaluate your productivity
measurement. Every quarter to six months, establish a new baseline to ensure it
is accurately reflecting current operating conditions and re-evaluate each
employee based on the new standards.
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