Critical Success Factors
Identifying the things that really matter for success
So many important matters can compete for your attention in business that it's often difficult to see the "wood for the trees". What's more, it can be extremely difficult to get everyone in the team pulling in the same direction and focusing on the true essentials.
That's where Critical Success Factors (CSFs) can help. CSFs are the essential areas of activity that must be performed well if you are to achieve the mission, objectives or goals for your business or project.
By identifying your Critical Success Factors, you can create a common point of reference to help you direct and measure the success of your business or project.
As a common point of reference, CSFs help everyone in the team to know exactly what's most important. And this helps people perform their own work in the right context and so pull together towards the same overall aims.
The idea of CSFs was first presented by D. Ronald Daniel in the 1960s. It was then built on and popularized a decade later by John F. Rockart, of MIT's Sloan School of Management, and has since been used extensively to help businesses implement their strategies and projects.
Inevitably, the CSF concept has evolved, and you may have seen it implemented in different ways. This article provides a simple definition and approach based on Rockart's original ideas.
Rockart defined CSFs as:
"The limited number of areas in which results, if they are satisfactory, will ensure successful competitive performance for the organization. They are the few key areas where things must go right for the business to flourish. If results in these areas are not adequate, the organization's efforts for the period will be less than desired."
He also concluded that CSFs are "areas of activity that should receive constant and careful attention from management."
Critical Success Factors are strongly related to the mission and strategic goals of your business or project. Whereas the mission and goals focus on the aims and what is to be achieved, Critical Success Factors focus on the most important areas and get to the very heart of both what is to be achieved and how you will achieve it.
Using the Tool: An Example
CSFs are best understood by example. Consider a produce store "Farm Fresh Produce", whose mission is:
"To become the number one produce store in
The strategic objectives of Farm Fresh are to:
- Gain market share locally of 25%.
- Achieve fresh supplies of "farm to customer" in 24 hours for 75% of products.
- Sustain a customer satisfaction rate of 98%.
- Expand product range to attract more customers.
- Have sufficient store space to accommodate the range of products that customers want.
In order to identify possible CSFs, we must examine the mission and objectives and see which areas of the business need attention so that they can be achieved. We can start by brainstorming what the Critical Success Factors might be (these are the "Candidate" CSFs.)
Objective | Candidate Critical Success Factors |
Gain market share locally of 25% | Increase competitiveness versus other local stores
|
Achieve fresh supplies from "farm to customer" in 24 hours for 75% of products | Sustain successful relationships with local suppliers |
Sustain a customer satisfaction rate of 98% | Retain staff and keep up customer-focused training |
Expand product range to attract more customers | Source new products locally |
Extend store space to accommodate new products and customers | Secure financing for expansion
|
Once you have a list of Candidate
CSFs, it's time to consider what is absolutely essential and so identify the truly Critical Success Factors.
And this is certainly the case for Farm Fresh Produce. One CSF that we identify from the candidate list is "Sustain successful relationships with local suppliers." This is absolutely essential to ensure freshness and to source new products.
Another CSF is to attract new customers. Without new customers, the store will be unable to expand to increase market share.
A third CSF is financing for expansion. The store's objectives cannot be met without the funds to invest in expanding the store space.
Tip: How Many CSFs?
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Using the Tool: Summary Steps
In reality, identifying your CSFs is a very iterative process. Your mission, strategic goals and CSFs are intrinsically linked and each will be refined as you develop them.
Here are the summary steps that, used iteratively, will help you identify the CSFs for your business or project:
Step One: Establish your business's or project's mission and strategic goals (click here for help doing this.)
Step Two: For each strategic goal, ask yourself "what area of business or project activity is essential to achieve this goal?" The answers to the question are your candidate CSFs.
Tip: How Many CSFs?
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Step Three: Evaluate the list of candidate CSFs to find the absolute essential elements for achieving success - these are your Criticial Success Factors.
As you identify and evaluate candidate CSFs, you may uncover some new strategic objectives or more detailed objectives. So you may need to define your mission, objectives and CSFs iteratively.
Step Four: Identify how you will monitor and measure each of the CSFs.
Step Five: Communicate your CSFs along with the other important elements of your business or project's strategy.
Step Six: Keep monitoring and reevaluating your CSFs to ensure you keep moving towards your aims. Indeed, whilst CSFs are sometimes less tangible than measurable goals, it is useful to identify as specifically as possible how you can measure or monitor each one.
Key Points
Critical Success Factors are the areas of your business or project that are absolutely essential to it success. By identifying and communicating these CSFs, you can help ensure your business or project is well-focused and avoid wasting effort and resources on less important areas. By making CSFs explicit, and communicating them with everyone involved, you can help keep the business and project on track towards common aims and goals.
1 comment:
Excellent article; thank you.
CSFs require real thinking; they are a great way to get a cross-functional team to focus on what's important; and people should use this simple approach more often.
Thanks again for the primer and excellent examples.
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