Barre Pens
Barre Pens
![]() who was the other goaltender that was on the ice for the hoisting of the cup?? i seen fluery, garon....? i seen that some of the wilkes barre scranton pens were there but i didnt recognize the other goalie that was there besides fluery and garon!!! Curry. He was the backup while Fleury was out for injury. |
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Do You Really Need A Corporate Performance Office?They're popping up like mushrooms after ground-soaking rains: the Corporate Performance Office, a small team of people devoted to developing, coordinating, and facilitating their organisation's performance measurement and management system, from top to bottom, left to right, and back to front. But do YOU really need one too? Let's take a look as some of the most compelling "pros" to have a Corporate Performance Office, and trade them off against some of the more deterring "cons" not to. PRO: Credibility. A CEO endorsed venture like a Corporate Performance Office puts meaningful performance measurement on everyone's radar. Coupled with a team that has respected qualifications and experience in performance measurement, and an official and clearly articulated role in coordinating and facilitating performance measurement organisation-wide, this gives performance measurement lots of healthy credibility. PRO: Organisation. A single place to go looking for useful templates, time-saving tools, up to date information on strategic goals and current measures, the latest performance data - imagine that! A good Corporate Performance Office will be the single port of call for all things measurement, conserving the blood, sweat and tears of managers and employees to pour into operational priorities instead. PRO: Efficiency. When the performance measurement system has a central hub like a Corporate Performance Office, the potential for erradicating duplication of effort in measure design, data collection, analysis and reporting is grand. Who's going to complain about having to spend less time copying and pasting data from one spreadsheet into another, and reformatting the monthly report every month? Their time is better spent improving performance, not reporting it. PRO: Consistency. When the Corporate Performance Office facilitates a consistent process for designing, implementing and using performance measures right across the organisation, it makes it heaps easier for everyone to link to strategy, collaborate across functional and departmental boundaries, and no one is left behind to struggle with outdated measurement methods. PRO: Cost Decrease. The hidden costs of mountains of data management, maintaining myriad dashboard systems, and manual performance reporting aren't to hard to expose, and when you do expose them, you can see how potent a Corporate Performance Office - focused on organisation, efficiency and consistency - would be in stripping back these costs. CON: Cost Increase. Employing people in performance measurement roles full time has a cost. But this cost needs to be seen in the context of the hidden costs that are already there, like duplication of reporting, rework and wasted time in finding meaningful measures, missed opportunities to improve performance due to measures not being linked to strategy and operational priorities. CON: Threat. Some people won't like having the joys and freedom of ad hoc performance measurement taken away from them. They won't buy in to new methods of measuring and managing performance, even if they work better. If that's the attitude, then maybe you really do need a Corporate Performance Office to change the performance culture! CON: Finding People. It's true that the field of performance measurement hasn't been professionalised yet, and that makes it hard to find people with convincing skills in performance measurement and management. This can be a setback for creating a Corporate Performance Office, but there are programs out there for acquiring these skills, and many people whose experience means they're at least part way there already. TAKING ACTION: About the Author Stacey Barr is a specialist in organisational performance measurement, helping corporate planners, business analysts and performance measurement officers confidently facilitate their organisation to create and use meaningful performance measures with lots of buy-in. Sign up for Stacey’s free email tips at www.staceybarr.com/facilitators and receive a complimentary copy of her renowned e-book “202 Tips for Performance Measurement”. |

