Accounts These are some of the examples: • Percentage of overdue invoices • Percentage of purchase orders raised in advance • Number of retrospectively raised purchase orders • Finance report error rate (measures the quality of the report) • Average cycle time of workflow • Number of duplicate payments
Marketing and sales • New
customer acquisition • Customer acquisition cost (CAC) • Average deal size • Demographic analysis of individuals (potential customers) applying to become customers, and the levels of approval, rejections, and pending numbers • Status of existing customers • Customer density (the proportion of revenue attributable to a specified percentage of accounts, which ideally should match, for example the top 10% of accounts should broadly contribute 10% of revenue) with the help of KPIs' robust capabilities, which include: • Automated entry and approval functions • On-demand, real-time scorecard measures • Rework on procured inventory • Single data repository to eliminate inefficiencies and maintain consistency • Advanced workflow approval process to ensure consistent procedures • Flexible data-input modes and real-time graphical performance displays • Customized cost savings documentation • Simplified setup procedures to eliminate dependence upon IT resources Main KPIs for
supply chain management will detail the following processes: • Sales forecasts • Inventory • Procurement and suppliers • Warehousing • Transportation •
Reverse logistics In a
warehouse, the manager will use KPIs that target best use of the facility, like the receiving and put away KPIs to measure the receiving efficiency and the putaway cost per line. Storage KPIs can also be used to determine the efficiency of the storage space and the carrying cost of the inventory.
Government Governments around the world have adopted performance indicators as part of broader performance management reforms. These initiatives emerged from general concerns about performance deficits in the public sector, and the belief that systematic measurement could improve accountability and outcomes. While governments have established extensive systems for collecting performance data, research suggests that the value of these indicators depends on whether managers effectively use the information in their decision-making processes. Factors influencing the use of performance data include individual values, leadership roles, organisational culture, and external pressures. Managers with strong public service motivation are more likely to engage with performance information because they see it as a means of achieving public goals. Leadership roles also matter. Task-specific leaders often use indicators more actively than generalist leaders who face broader political responsibilities. International examples show the diversity of approaches. The provincial government of
Ontario, Canada has used performance indicators since the late 1990s to assess higher education institutions, reporting on measures such as graduate satisfaction, employment rates, and student outcomes. In England,
Public Health England applies indicators to monitor national health screening programmes, while UK government departments publish key contract-related indicators to improve service transparency. The United States requires federal agencies to set strategic goals and report on progress under the
Government Performance and Results Act. The
New Zealand Treasury’s Living Standards Framework and associated wellbeing indicators provide a broader set of measures that move beyond economic performance to social and environmental outcomes. Although performance indicators are now widespread, their effectiveness remains debated. It can be argued that indicators oversimplify complex goals, encourage symbolic compliance, and shift attention to what is easily measurable rather than what is substantively important. On the other hand, when well-designed and used within supportive cultures, indicators can strengthen accountability, guide learning, and improve service delivery. The effectiveness of HRM practices has been examined across public, semi-public, and private organisations. A large meta-analysis using the ability-motivation-opportunity (AMO) framework found that HRM practices positively influence individual performance in all sectors, but with sector-specific variations. Ability-enhancing practices such as training and selective recruitment are consistently associated with higher job satisfaction and performance. Motivation-enhancing practices, such as performance-based pay, show weaker impacts in public organisations, where employees are often driven more by intrinsic and altruistic motivations than extrinsic rewards. Employee turnover is a critical indicator for HRM. While traditionally seen as negative, research suggests that turnover may have more complex effects. A study of several hundred public school districts in Texas over nine years found that turnover was linearly negative for basic educational outcomes, such as standardised test scores, but showed a non-linear “inverted U-shaped” relationship with more complex outcomes like college readiness. This indicates that low to moderate turnover may introduce new skills and perspectives, benefiting organisational performance, while very high turnover imposes significant costs and reduces effectiveness. Other HRM indicators reflect absenteeism, which is often monitored as a proxy for workforce wellbeing and organisational health.
Other performance indicators • Duration of a
stockout situation : \text{ROC} = \frac{\text{Close}-\text{Close (Past)}}{\text{Close (Past)}}\times100 • Customer order waiting time ==Problems ==