Growing up, every summer my family would road trip to Georgia.
We have a large extended family that lives there, so it meant seeing great grandparents, close relatives, extended relatives, and the people we had no clue how they were related.
This road trip portion was always a lot of fun for us kids, but I’m not sure it was so much fun for the adults (2 days of 12+ hours driving doesn’t sound like much fun to me today). We’d sit in the back of the van, play goofy games, eat a lot of food, and watch movies on TV with an embedded VCR.
It was always like a game of Tetris trying to fit everyone and everything in the vehicles.
When we got to Georgia, there was a lot of playing outside and very little sitting around the house watching TV or movies. I look back at those trips and think that exploring really shaped my childhood and adulthood in a way.
It made me curious and generally unafraid to explore.
We’d find condemned barns and climb every wall. We’d run through fields of crops. We’d fish in small ponds. We’d play laser tag around cars, roads, railroad tracks, and unwilling adults. And then we’d take breaks with popsicles and pound cake.
Because of school schedules, we’d always go during the summer. And most of the time, it’d be August. This meant heat… and because it was Southeast Georgia… humidity and bugs.
We’d count our mosquito bites by the end of the trip and declare the person with the most as the “winner.” There was no prize, so I’m not sure what they won besides itches.
I always thought Oklahoma was hot in the summer, but in Southeast Georgia, you could feel the humidity, and sometimes it even felt like you could see it.
As a kid, this was hard to understand at first. I thought 95 degrees was… 95 degrees. But it turns out there are many other variables at play as well.
I’m no meteorologist, but besides temperature the following impact how it “feels:”
In the same way, one KPI might not reveal the full picture of a business.
Your Revenue could be increasing, but margins and profit be going down.
Your employees could be busy and “billable,” but your clients are unhappy with what they’re getting.
You may be getting traffic to your website, but your copy (and thus conversion) stinks.
You may be selling more, but taking on sustainable debt.
So, we need to uncover these blind spots and understand the variables that aren’t always seen.
How do we take into account not just temperature, but also humidity, sunlight, and wind?
Here are 6 variables that impact your KPIs that you might not see.
Employee morale will directly impact productivity and service, which can directly impact any KPIs they’re touching.
This could be a direct touch (number of units packaged) or indirect (strained relation to supplier, thus slower delivery).
Metrics to watch with this is:
Monitoring individual performer's performance, personal relationships, and overall satisfaction can have a big impact across the business.
While individual employee morale can have a large impact, but a culture of mediocrity can have a much bigger one.
A bad culture will also increase employee turnover, which means that even good training is quickly lost. And as statistics show, training employees is expensive.
In 2017, Uber faced scrutiny about their work culture, and it hurt profits and slowed growth. While they recovered, it wasn’t until board members quit and Travis Kalanick was removed that things reversed.
On the opposite end, Google encouraging employees to use “20% time” on personal projects has led to the creation of some of Google’s biggest products (like Gmail). It keeps employees engaged and creative and ultimately leads to better results.
The immediate example here is COVID-19. It led to huge disruptions in the supply chain and large shifts in how people interacted with companies.
Since these are generally obvious, I won’t directly address this other than to say: we have a tendency to attribute more changes to one-time events than should be.
Margins aren’t temporarily down because of your Christmas party. That’s an every year thing and it should be planned for. Bookings aren’t down because the weekend was slow. It could be a sign of something bigger and it’s important to keep your eyes peeled.
The economy can and will impact your business, but the question is how.
Sometimes it’s the supply chain impact, others it’s the way consumers behave.
Being able to see these trends early is key to performing well in a hard economic climate.
Small changes in profit margins, sales volumes, or overall traffic could be signs of a much bigger economic shift.
The key is reacting quickly, but not overreacting.
We want to build resilient businesses that can “pounce” when others are struggling.
If getting products from overseas, factors like exchange rates, interest rates, and inflation, can hugely impact your business very quickly.
Consumer behavior shifts because of preferences, but also because of political winds of change.
Not eco-friendly? A change in the eco conversation could impact your business.
Not online? A change to online shopping could make your store unprofitable.
A few things to consider are:
With B2B businesses, this can be harder to track, but being on top of industry trade publications can be a great way to follow trends.
Kodak missed digital cameras and cell phone manufacturers didn’t see the iPhone coming.
Big shifts in technologies can not only impact companies but overall industries.
Being on top of technological shifts can keep your business growing and future-proof the business.
Be on the lookout for ways to use tech to:
Understanding these “under the radar” impacts helps you translate your numbers into actionable insights.
This is the whole game.
By understanding your numbers and then translating those numbers into stories, you’re able to gain a competitive advantage that will allow you to:
If you struggle to pick KPIs, I suggest you review my post from June, where I walk through a 7-step process to picking the right KPIs.