02/08/2012

Continue to Follow Blogrige!

Posted by Barb Fischer, Blog Moderator

RoadsignEffective today, Blogrige has a new location because we've changed blogging platforms. If you subscribe to us through GovDelivery, this will be seamless. If you have us bookmarked in your browser, we're now at nistbaldrige.blogs.govdelivery.com. For access through an RSS feed, look to nistbaldrige.blogs.govdelivery.com/feed.

However you get to us, be sure and not miss a thing. And, take a moment soon to tell us how we are doing.

 

02/07/2012

An Open Letter Representing the Baldrige Community

Posted by Dawn Marie Bailey

 

Dear Leader,

The Baldrige Performance Excellence Program remains a national Presidential award program. President Obama recognizes the benefits, just as his predecessors Presidents Reagan, Bush, Clinton, and Bush did, of a bipartisan program of national role models in the manufacturing, service, small business, education, health care, and nonprofit industries.

Economists have released a study that Baldrige's return on investment to the U.S. economy is over 800 to 1. That means for every tax dollar spent, the economy reaps $800 in benefits.

Thomson Reuters, which for the past 18 years has produced the 100 Top Hospitals list using a national balanced scorecard, has released a study that health care organizations pursuing the Baldrige Award outperformed the health care industry on five of six key indices, including patient outcomes and hospital consumer assessment scores.

Baldrige 20/20 provides data on Baldrige Award recipients using Baldrige as an improvement tool and generating annual revenue increases, improving customer satisfaction and workforce retention, increasing graduation rates and graduate employment rates, and gaining in patient clinical outcomes, among other improvements.

If you are looking for a small business national role model, consider Freese and Nichols, Inc. or K&N Management, among other Baldrige Award recipients.

If you are looking for success stories in health care, consider Henry Ford Health System, Southcentral Foundation, or Schneck Medical Center, among other Baldrige Award recipients.

Looking for successful manufacturers and other businesses? Many use Baldrige for improvement. Consider Concordia Publishing House, Nestlé Purina Pet Care Co., or MEDRAD.

We have more national role models in service, education, nonprofit—indeed all sectors of the U.S. economy—who use the Baldrige Criteria for improvement. We have the stories and the data. The volunteer Baldrige judges and examiners have worked very hard to investigate and review these award recipients, who are proven industry leaders.

Unfortunately, we remain a hidden gem in the federal government. We provide you and our nation with the role models, the stories, the data, the best practices of U.S. organizations to hold up as the very best of today's U.S. economy. We are eager to have the Baldrige story told.

Sincerely,

Dawn Bailey on behalf of U.S. Manufacturers, Services, Small Businesses, Health Care Organizations, Educators, and Nonprofit Organizations that have discovered Baldrige

02/02/2012

Creating Great Value and ROI: Read All About It!

Posted by Dawn Marie Bailey

 

TransitionA new Web page is now available to keep you apprised of how the Baldrige Performance Excellence Program is transitioning to a sustainable, enterprise model, in which the Foundation for the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award, the Alliance for Performance Excellence, the American Society for Quality, and state and other Baldrige-based performance excellence programs will work together toward a national, integrated model of excellence.

The page provides the evidence to support two themes:

  • The Baldrige Program is Transitioning to a Sustainable, Enterprise Model
  • 
  • The Baldrige Enterprise Creates Great Value for Your Organization and the Whole U.S. Economy

Under the second theme, talking points are provided, with evidence to support them:

  • Baldrige Award winners create more jobs.
  • Baldrige hospitals save more lives and are stronger financially.
  • Baldrige small businesses demonstrate increasing sales, profits, and market share.
  • Baldrige manufacturers' revenues improved 48 percent annually, on average.
  • Baldrige education organizations effectively improve reading and mathematics proficiency and graduation rates.
  • The Baldrige Program's benefit-to-cost ratio is 820-to-1.
  • Baldrige-based programs demonstrate great return on investment.

The Web page also features rotating success stories of Baldrige Award recipients--both at national, state, and other Baldrige-based-program levels--continuing to use the Criteria to improve.

The Baldrige Program and its Criteria remain vital and valuable to all programs and organizations that use and adapt the Criteria for their own performance excellence; indeed, they are vital and valuable to the entire U.S. economy.

Please visit and pass along news of this Web page to learn more and share in the Baldrige enterprise's own journey to performance excellence.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On the page are Baldrige talking points with sources

01/31/2012

Baldrige and the Entrepreneur - A Love Story

Posted by Bob Fangmeyer

Flying booksRomance isn't a genre I would normally read, and Inc Magazine isn't where I would expect to find it, but the February 2012 issue has a love story that I can really get into--wild animals; dangerous adventures; and everyday people who overcome serious obstacles to achieve incredible feats. While the hero in this story is not like Fabio, he is arguably more passionate...not, in this case, for blondes, brunettes, or redheads, but for accuracy, precision, and near-perfection in his hobby and his business.

Editor-at-large, Leigh Buchanan, has really brought to life not only Larry Potterfield, the CEO of MidwayUSA, but the power and potential of the Baldrige criteria. I encourage you to read this story that explains how Larry is leveraging the Baldrige process to make MidwayUSA "the best run business in America."

Yellow brick road

01/26/2012

But Sir, We Are Offering You an Upgrade!

Posted by Harry Hertz, the Baldrige Cheermudgeon

So recently most blog posts have been about Baldrige Program news and changes. With all the changes occurring in the Baldrige Program, we cannot lose sight of the fact that the Criteria for Performance Excellence remain a great guidepost for evaluating our own organizations and those that provide us products and services.

This blog post is about credit card services and is probably so typical of experiences we all have that you can only sit back and enjoy, even while it is happening to you. I got a Customer service representativeletter from my VISA credit card supplier, with a printed note on the outside of the envelope "Loyal Customer Upgrade Inside." I must admit being the recipient of frequent mailings with promises on the outside, this made me immediately skeptical, rather than anticipating good news. My instincts were right. The letter inside said that my credit card program was being discontinued in favor of a "new and better" (uh..oh) program. The new program was offering me three points per dollar for some purchases, two points for others and one point for most purchases. The 3 point offers were for merchants I never use (and they know that from my purchase history), two points for the purchases I make most frequently with the current credit card, and one point for everything else. So my upgrade was, in essence, to two points per dollar spent for the bulk of my purchases on this card. Let's compare that to my current situation. I get one point per dollar spent, plus a 3% cash rebate. Maybe they were being silent on the cash rebate and this really was a doubling of my points?

With some assumed foreknowledge of what was coming, I called the 800 number to find out the details of the upgrade. It was as stated in the letter and no cash rebate. I said I respectfully decline the upgrade and want to stick with my current card. Not an option the representative tells me. I explain the loss associated with "the upgrade". She says but your points per dollar will double (to a value of 2% of my purchases). I explain kindly that I currently receive 4% (three in cash and one in points). 

Then the scripted response, "But sir, we are offering you an upgrade, most customers appreciate upgrades." We entered a non-sensical dialog for a few minutes. It ended with me cancelling the credit card. I would say my cancellation was 25% protest of the "upgrade" and 75% disgust with the company's customer engagement strategy (or lack thereof) and their training/empowerment of their customer representative. Please let these people have enough power to at least say, "I can't meet your old terms, this is not an upgrade for you, it is for others with different use patterns." Mind you my use of the VISA card was to purchase products associated with the company they had co-branded the VISA card with.

It is well known through published studies that a satisfied customer tells many fewer people about their experience than a dissatisfied customer. There's even a book entitled, Satisfied Customers Tell Three Friends, Angry Customers Tell 3000. (How many of you are reading this blog post?)

Customer and workforce engagement drive business results. Study the extensive research by the Gallup organization, leading to the Q12 and CE11surveys of employee and customer engagement. It is why Category 3 of the Baldrige Criteria focuses on customer engagement andd loyalty strategies. It is why Category 5 of the Criteria focuses on workforce engagement, empowerment, and development strategies. It is why Baldrige organizations succeed in the marketplace!

So my advice to all organizations with customers and employees is read or reread these two categories of the Baldrige Criteria and then put yourself in your customers' shoes. Do you feel good? I hope so, but many of you are probably squirming right now. In that case, take two doses of Baldrige Criteria, exercise them with your colleagues in the morning, and start feeling better! I do after writing this blog post!

 

01/24/2012

Baldrige Benefits the Economy, But What About CEOs?

Posted by Dawn Marie Bailey

 

Eco impactIn the blog Does Baldrige Benefit the Economy?, Harry Hertz presented an economic impact study that showed the Baldrige Program's benefit-to-cost ratio at 820-to-1. The economists who conducted the study arrived at this ratio by comparing the benefits received by the 273 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award applicants from 2007 to 2010 with the cost of operating the Baldrige Program.

So, this is great news for an economy in which the Baldrige Program is operating. But how does this news translate for CEOs? If my main interest as a CEO is my bottomline, so what?

This study directly addresses the public accountability question for public programs—namely what is the social benefit of the Baldrige Program and how does the social benefit compare with the social costs. CEOs want more specifics—they want to know what the private benefits for their companies will be given an investment in performance excellence.

According to the economists, the Baldrige CEOs reported the substantial gains they experienced by using the Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence versus the shortfalls had they not invested in Baldrige. The CEOs saw more benefits from use of the Baldrige Criteria and the other resources of the Baldrige Program than if they had used the best available alternatives to develop their performance excellence strategies. And it is these benefits that resulted in the 820-to-1 return for the economy.

In addition, the Baldrige Program Web site provides much more data to make the case for Baldrige to CEOs across the sectors of the U.S. economy.

So now we know that the evidence supports not only an 820-to-1 ratio to show Baldrige's benefit to the U.S. economy, but it also supports the belief that CEOs who implement Baldrige will see great gains as well.



 







 

01/19/2012

The Importance of Community Support

Posted by Pamela Wong

CommunityOne characteristic of high-performing organizations is their active support of their communities, an area to address found in item 1.2 of the Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence. I dare say that most, if not all, Baldrige Award winners stand out in this way; today I’d like to focus on two organizations—a new recipient and a Baldrige veteran.

The first is Schneck Medical Center (SMC), a 2011 award recipient in Seymour, Indiana. SMC collaborates with local community agencies such as the health department, Red Cross, and United Way to conduct a biannual assessment of community health needs. Through the strategic planning process, SMC analyzes the needs and prioritizes its opportunities for involvement.

One way its staff members serve the local community is through donations, which have increased 14 percent over the last three years, to the United Way. In addition, staff members have donated portions of their earnings back to the SMC Foundation, which has funded projects such as a heliport that enables rapid transporting of patients to level 1 trauma centers and $250,000 toward construction of the hospital’s cancer center. SMC also provides many no-cost health screenings, health education programs, and health fairs to residents in the local area.

Another example of community support is that of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, the only service organization to receive the award twice, in 1992 and 1999. Ritz-Carlton’s Community Footprints program, formed as an actual nonprofit organization, funds its workforce’s efforts to give back to its communities all around the world. The employees focus on hunger and poverty relief, environmental conservation, and the well-being of children.

At our own Quest for Excellence Conference a few years ago, Ritz-Carlton partnered with us on a work project at Boys” Town in Washington, DC. A recent example is its partnership with America’s Promise Alliance’s Grad Nation campaign, which seeks to end our nation’s dropout crisis. The hotel company connects students to Ritz-Carlton employees through “career exploration modules” that help students understand the importance of continuing their education and provide training in life skills.

SMC and the Ritz-Carlton both serve their communities, but in different ways. What determines those ways? SMC’s mission is “to provide quality health care to all we serve.” The hospital’s community service helps fulfill that mission. The concept of strategic challenges wasn’t part of the Criteria when Ritz-Carlton won the award in 1999; however, that concept may be behind the hotel company’s involvement in education.

Service organizations often find that having a qualified workforce is a strategic challenge; by exposing high schoolers to job opportunities within the hotel industry and encouraging them to graduate, Ritz-Carlton is helping to prepare its future workforce.

Do you have examples to share of how your organization supports its key communities?

01/17/2012

Does Baldrige Benefit the Economy?

Posted by Harry Hertz, the Baldrige Cheermudgeon

A decade ago, in 2001, the Baldrige Program commissioned a study to evaluate the net social value of the Program. In 2011, the Baldrige Foundation asked the same economists to take a new look and see if the benefit still existed and to quantify it based on actual applicant data, rather than the more general ASQ member data used in 2001.

 

Benefit-to-cost ratioAn impressive benefit-to-cost ratio of 820-to-1 is the conclusion arrived at in the new study. The ratio is derived from the implementation of cost savings, gains from consumer satisfaction, and gains from increased value of sales in excess of resource costs of those organizations that have applied for the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.

 

Three specific categories of social benefits were quantified from the responses of 45 Award applicants to a Web-based survey, with each category separately compared to the entire operating cost of the Baldrige Performance Excellence Program. The evaluation findings are achieved from:

 

 ·         the cost savings of the applicants because it was not necessary for them to incur the investment costs to achieve on their own the same level of benefits from their performance excellence strategies as they realized from the availability of the publicly funded Baldrige Performance Excellence Program

·         the gains to consumers from greater satisfaction from higher quality products because the Baldrige Criteria were available and used

·         the gains to the economy from saving scarce resources (because successful performance excellence strategies not only enable higher quality products or services but also lower the costs of providing them) because the Baldrige Criteria were available and used

 

The report summarizes, “The Baldrige Performance Excellence Program, with the imprimatur of national leadership and a prominent national award . . . , creates great value that could not be replicated by private sector actions alone.”

 

The economists even explain that a conservative method, a cluster approach, was used to estimate this ratio. “If the social costs were compared to the benefits for the economy as a whole, the benefit-to-cost ratio would be considerably higher,” they write.

 

The study, conducted by economists Albert N. Link of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and John T. Scott of Dartmouth College, focuses specifically on a survey population of the 273 applicants for the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award since 2006. It permits a more direct analysis of benefit than the earlier 2001 study and does, again, document the value of the Baldrige Program.

01/12/2012

You just stepped into an elevator . . .

Posted by Dawn Marie Bailey

ElevatorEver think about what you would say if you just stepped into an elevator and someone asked you what the Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence were all about? And more specifically, why they should even care about Baldrige?

Here are the talking points that I would try to cover. Depending on how many floors we needed to travel, I might elaborate on one or all. Here's what I would say:

"You ask, 'Why is Baldrige a good investment of your time and money?'

With Baldrige, you can

  • Create jobs
  • Save lives
  • Increase profits
  • Improve outcomes for students or patients or your business

TheBaldrige enterprise can help you learn how:

  • Baldrige is a way to improve.
  • Baldrige is a way to compete.
  • Baldrige is a way to enable your success.
  • Baldrige is a way for you to turn difficult situations around in tough economic times.

Baldrige benefits you

  • In aligning your work systems in order to concentrate on engaging employees and customers
  • In aligning your processes in order to focus on effective operations, student learning, or patient safety
  • In aligning your entire organization for success in your marketplace
  • In comparing your organization to role models across seven management categories

You can take charge and accelerate your success with Baldrige: a proven, flexible framework; an improvement model and tool; and a repository of standards and industry best practices."

What are your talking points for an elevator speech about Baldrige?

 

 

 

 

 

 





01/10/2012

It's that Ethics Thing...Again

Posted by Harry Hertz, the Baldrige Cheermudgeon

I know I frequently write and talk about business (and other) ethics. It's because I think they are so important to reputation (customer loyalty) and to a productive economy. And ethical practices have a significant return on investment, social Fingers crossedand financial. So why do I begin a new year with my first post being on this topic? Because the seventh biannual National Business Ethics Survey has just been released by the Ethics Resource Center. And there are some pieces of good news and some really troubling signs.

First the good news, the percentage of employees witnessing misconduct dropped to an all-time low of 45%, down from a high of 55% in 2007. And those who reported the misconduct they witnessed reached an all-time high of 63%, up from a low of 53% in 2005.

The bad news: retaliation against whistle-blowers rose significantly. 22% of employees who reported misconduct say they experienced some form of retaliation. That is up from 15% in 2009. And the percentage of employees who said they experienced pressure to compromise standards was at 13%, compared to 8% in 2009.

Senior leaders and managers set the tone by the ethics they demonstrate. And here the data were the most troubling to me. Confidence in the ethics of senior leaders dropped to 62%, down from 68% in 2009 and matching the all-time low in 2000. And 34% of employees said their direct supervisors do not disply ethical behavior, up from 24% in 2009.

Baldrige Award recipients have long been role models for ethical conduct. We have been writing about the importance of ethics for more than eleven years. And societal responsibility has been a Baldrige core value since the early days of the Baldrige Program. The Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence devote one out of 17 items totally to governance, legal and ethical behavior, and societal responsibilities. And a second item is totally devoted to leadership, governance, and societal responsibility results. I encourage you as you start the new year to look at all the Baldrige Criteria, but how about starting with an ethics refresher by looking at Items 1.2 and 7.4, the two items I referenced above.

I wish everyone a good and ethical new year!