Balanced Scorecard
Saatchi & Saatchi: Balanced Scorecard Case Study
Saatchi & Saatchi was once one of the world's most respected advertising agencies, but its fortunes were floundering in the mid-1990s. It had crafted a quirky brand image for itself that had been diluted due to its over-expansion and a lack of a coherent vision for its various component agencies. "Throughout the 1970s and 80s we experienced rapid growth through acquisitions. We were essentially competitors only connected through common ownership" (Greenhalgh 2004:2).
The company established specific financial benchmarks for itself to meet.
These included growing its revenue base better than the market average, converting 30% of its incremental revenue to operating profit, and doubling its earnings per share (Greenhalgh 2004:3). This was designed to give the company a sense of focus, purpose and clarity in reshaping its new future over a three-year period. Clear goals provided shareholders with a sense that the company was getting 'back on track' versus vague reassurances that it was simply going to try to get better.
Analysis
As well as financial goals, the company also set customer-related goals. Three agency classifications of the existing Saatchi empire were created: 'lead, drive, and prosper' and "each category had different strategic charges" (Greenhalgh 2004:4). To some extent, it could be said that these 'coded' words was a way to soften Saatchi's decision to emphasize large, money-making...
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