Introduction
The development of key performance indicators (KPIs), or a set of related and quantifiable metrics, are required to ensure high-level business objectives are met. Used as a critical yardstick to measure progress at multiple levels throughout the organization, KPIs help you monitor where your lab is today, where it is headed with leading indicators highlighted, and the progress along the way. Asset, people, and science productivity all need to be measured and optimized. Coupled together, these metrics not only provide timely insight into lab leadership and allow corrective action to be taken to stay on course, but they also feed the balanced scorecard of the business.
S.M.A.R.T. Metrics and KPIs to Monitor When Making Strategic Decisions
To be of value, key performance indicators should follow the SMART goal format which means they are Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Procurement, lab managers, and business strategy teams continually seek methods to make their organizations more cost effective, compliant and productive.
Below are key areas organizations should be using to help develop their KPIs:
- Downtime and response times
- Service churn which identifies repeatedly repaired, problematic instruments
- First time fix rate
- SLA compliance
- Tail spend analysis which highlights the tail of low volume suppliers in the interest of consolidation leverage
- Asset utilization and injection throughput
- Capital planning and asset productivity
- Maintenance operating costs
- Fleet instrument age profile and distribution
- Benchmarking against global peers performance of like equipment
When operating/service metrics are correlated with instrument age and utilization, the below value drivers can be optimized:
Metrics and KPIs to Monitor When Making Strategic Decisions
- Fleet Analysis
- Tail and Bulk Spend Analysis
- Service Churn Analysis
- Asset Repositioning
- Instrument and Lab Environmental Monitoring
- Instrument and Lab Environmental Monitoring
- Rapidly Identify High Downtime Instruments ̶ Instruments that Need the Most Repairs
- First Time Fix Analysis
- Benchmarks
- Asset Productivity
- Predictive Maintenance
- Sample integrity
- Research Reproducibility
The Benefits of a Third-Party Partner
It can be difficult to collect and analyze all of the data needed to ensure you are reaching your goals and keeping the KPIs you have set. That’s why it is sometimes necessary to work with a third-party partner – someone who can provide you with the real-time data you need to make informed decisions.
For example, a third party partner can provide benchmarking analytics that not only analyze performance across labs, but also against peers so you can compare your lab’s performance against others in the industry. This type of visibility can give insight into how you can improve your lab’s efficiency. Real-time analytics can also provide information about which instruments are working, how many service repairs are being made, and the average response time. Having all this information helps you reach your KPIs by helping you find ways to reduce downtime and maintenance.
Summary
The development of key metrics to measure your lab’s performance can better equip your team for success, leading to greater cost savings.