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KPIs are used in every business, but few use them effectively. This article shows how to use KPIs the way they’re intended – to boost performance 📈


In any strategic planning meeting, coaching session or performance review, you’ll likely discuss KPIs. You might hear them referred to as ‘performance metrics’, ‘fundamentals’, or my favorite, ‘the numbers’. No matter what your team calls them, we’re all talking about the same thing: Key Performance Indicators.

The trouble is, if you ask 5 different people what the purpose of a KPI is, you’ll likely get 5 different answers. That’s because, while KPIs are ubiquitous in today’s competitive business environments, the term has become overused and misunderstood. You could say KPIs have joined other powerful but oft-misused terms like ‘synergy’, ‘proactive’ and ‘coaching’.

While KPIs are used across almost every business, few businesses use them effectively. This is a problem because, in today’s competitive markets, businesses fail quickly if they can’t keep pace with their competitors. This article will help by showing you how KPIs can be used to drive performance with your team.


So What are KPIs?

Managers use Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to turn a vision into measurable goals. For instance, a company’s vision might be to become ‘the world’s #1 seller of sprockets’. 

Suppose their leading competitor sells 20% more sprockets than them. In this case, the company might set a goal to ‘increase sales by 25%’, and the KPI they’d use would be ‘number of sprockets sold’.

That KPI would trickle down through the company and affect everyone else’s goals and KPIs. For instance, the production team would aim to increase capacity, the sales team would aim to sell more, the operations team would aim to manage costs of expansion, and so on.

KPIs are useful because they clarify where employees should focus their time. For instance, a salesperson will have a sales target, but probably not a ‘storage room cleanliness’ target. When that salesperson is choosing between making sales or cleaning the storage room, the choice should be clear.

High-Level versus Frontline KPIs

In a well-run organization, KPIs are used to measure performance at every level. Whether you’re the CEO or an entry-level staff-member, the only thing that changes is the scope:

High-level KPIs are the responsibility of executive leadership. They’re used to measure the overall performance of a company

The ultimate high-level KPI for most organizations is revenue. Some other common examples include stock price, market share, and environmental impact.

Front-line KPIs are the responsibility of everyone from middle-managers to entry-level employees. They’re used to measure the various activities that support the high-level KPIs.

If there’s a high-level goal around sales, then the front-lines will probably have sales targets. If there’s a high-level target around manufacturing costs, then the production staff will have targets around waste reduction.

How a High-Level KPI Trickles Down

I used to work for a national retail chain. In that business, the Vice-President of Sales had a goal to grow sales across the company by 20% year-over-year (YoY), and the KPI was ‘Sales Revenue’.

As a Store Manager, I had two KPIs related to that goal. First, I was expected to increase my sales volume by 20% YoY, and my KPI was ‘number of sales’. Second, I had a goal to make a sale to at least 15% of all customers who came into my store, and my KPI was ‘Sales Conversion %’.

My goals trickled down to my salespeople, who had targets related to the number of sales the store was expected to make, divided by how many hours they worked (with some other considerations).

As you can see, the KPIs of the salespeople directly support the KPIs of the Vice-President.

Developing KPIs

The development of an organization’s Key Performance Indicators is usually done at the strategic-planning level. You may or may not actually be involved in this work. Regardless, it’s valuable to understand how your KPIs work and what their limitations are in order to improve your coaching.

In order for KPIs to work, they need to be well-defined and well thought out. This means you need to put on your ‘analyst hat’ and answer the question: “if we meet our KPIs, will we achieve our goals?”

For example, you want to avoid setting KPIs that can be manipulated to achieve success. We see this all the time.

Consider the 2008 financial crisis. Many banks implemented KPIs that encouraged salespeople to sell mortgages to anyone, even risky clients. When those risky clients started defaulting on their loans, those banks closed down or had to be bailed out. This was shocking to an industry where everyone from the salespeople to the CEO’s were getting bonuses for hitting their KPI targets.

If you manage in a business where the KPIs can be manipulated, it’s on you to enforce the ‘spirit’ of the KPIs. That is, to make sure that good judgment is used, and KPI success equals business success. There are two things that you should do to make sure you’re KPIs actually lead to business success:

1. Connect KPIs to a ‘S.M.A.R.T.’ Goal 

A good KPI starts with a good goal. This is because, of course, KPIs are meant to ensure that a goal is achieved. For instance, if the company’s goal is to ‘increase customer retention’, it’s hard to represent that with a single measurement. You can implement a KPI around ‘Product Returns’, but how will you know what’s good? 10%? 25%?

The goal needs to be linked to a S.M.A.R.T. goal like ‘Achieve an annual return rate of less than 10%’. With that, your KPI would be ‘Return Rate’, and each salesperson would have a target Return Rate of <10%.

Pro-tip: A wise manager would probably make it <8%, to compensate for any staff who miss their target.

2. Make Secondary KPIs that Protect Against Manipulation 

For instance, say you have a salesperson who has goals and a KPI related to ‘sales volume’. This salesperson should also have goals and KPIs related to ‘discount rate’, ‘return rate’, and ‘customer satisfaction’. This would help ensure a quality sale while supporting the overall goal of increased revenue.

Coach with KPIs

As a manager, it’s your job to drive performance for your business. Since the frontline staff are responsible for the activities that determine whether you succeed or fail, you need to loop them in. I’ve seen managers hide performance indicators to ‘shelter’ their staff, to gatekeep information, or both. Those managers got fired after their team underperformed without even realizing it.

As a manager, you want your team to have a very clear picture of what success looks like. You do this by making them aware of the KPIs, their order of importance, and how they’re doing with them. Talk about them every day, every coaching session, and every meeting. Post them where everyone can see them. They aren’t called ‘Key’ Performance Indicators for nothing — get comfortable sounding like a broken record.

You should make each staff member aware of how they’re doing with their own KPIs, as well as how the team as a whole is doing. This helps them to understand how they’re doing comparatively. This statement might be a bit controversial — I’ve heard a lot of managers express concern that this might ‘discourage a person’. However, these managers usually haven’t asked their staff how they’d feel about it. Researchers at Office Vibe asked, and they found that over 65% of employees want more information about their performance

Try it. You’ll find that, when communicated skilfully, everyone from your highest to lowest performers want to know how they’re doing comparatively.


Final Thoughts

The highest-performing team I ever managed was obsessed with KPIs. Every day, they’d print, post and discuss their individual and team-based KPIs before I even got in the door. They’d have come up with a strategy to ensure everyone had a winning day and month. The top performers would always help the bottom performers because they wanted them to succeed. And because everyone knew where everyone stood, it was easy for them to motivate and support one another.

At a former job of mine, a manager was fired for declining performance, and several of their employees were transferred to other managers, one of whom came to me. The first coaching session I had with them, I shared the KPIs. Their response: “Wow, I’ve never seen these before!” That employee went on to become a leader in peer-to-peer coaching and a top-performer for me.

With that team, I became a bit of a meme. They’d post photoshopped pictures of me in the store, poking fun at my obsession with KPIs. I loved it, because even though they made fun of me, they did the same thing, and won loads of awards along the way.

The point is this: talk about KPIs constantly, and your team will think about the KPIs constantly. And as Peter Drucker said, “what gets measured, gets done”.

Key Takeaways

  • KPIs are a measurement designed to demonstrate progress towards a goal. They are used to measure progress at every level of an organization, from the CEO to entry-level staff.
  • KPIs are linked to targets and can be applied to any department, whether that be finance, housekeeping, sales, or any other department or individual. There is no employee who cannot and should not have KPIs as part of their regular coaching and performance reviews.
  • Employees at all levels should be aware of the goals and KPIs, understand why they are important, and how their work contributes.


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