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Question 1ii

Dargeboard Services (DS), a listed company, provides facilities management (FM) services where it manages such activities as cleaning, security, catering and building services on behalf of its clients. Clients can outsource to DS a single activity or often outsource all of these aspects in a full service contract.

The mission of DS is ‘to give the shareholders maintainable, profitable growth by developing the best talent to provide world-class services with maximum efficiency.’

The board have asked the chief executive officer (CEO) to review the effectiveness of Dargeboard’s systems for performance measurement and management. She has turned to you to begin this process by considering the strategic performance dashboard of DS. She has supplied the most recent example in Appendix 1.

She wants a report to the board which will cover three aspects of strategic performance reporting at DS. First, it should address whether the current set of key performance indicators (KPIs) measure the achievement of the mission by showing how each one links to all or part of the mission. She does not want suggestions of new indicators. Second, taking each of the current indicators in turn she wants the assumptions underlying the calculation of the indicators examined. There has been a suggestion made in the press that DS is producing a biased set of results aimed to mislead the markets. This would then artificially boost the share price and so boost the value of the senior management’s share holdings. Third, the report should evaluate the other presentational aspects of the dashboard against best practice.

The idea of employee share ownership has always been at the heart of DS’ remuneration schemes. Its aim is to support an entrepreneurial culture and is a key differentiator in the market for new employees. The current reward system grants shares based on the appraisal of the individual by the line manager against vague categories such as leadership and entrepreneurship. The results of this scheme have been that only about 5% of staff received their maximum possible bonus in previous years and half of them received no bonus at all. Increasingly, this has led to the staff ignoring the reward scheme and describing it as ‘only for the bosses’ favourite people’.

In response to this, the board have been discussing methods of analysing and improving the rewards system at DS. One non-executive director suggested using Fitzgerald and Moon’s building block model. The CEO was asked to consider this as a project separate from the issues of performance measurement mentioned above. She will select suitable indicators from the dimensions but currently needs you to explain to the board what is meant by results and determinants in this context and how the dimensions link to standards and targets. Finally, she believes that there are two types of reward scheme which might suit DS and wants an evaluation of their relative strengths and weaknesses.

Required:
Write a report to the board to:

(ii) Assess the assumptions and definitions used in the calculation of the current set of key performance indicators in Appendix 1. (12 marks)

Appendix 1
Dargeboard Services: Strategic performance dashboard
Year to 31 December 2016

Cleaning Security Catering Building services Full service Total Total 2015
Operating profit margin 6·5% 6·4% 6·5% 4·9% 5·9% 5·9% 5·8%
Secured revenue 76% 85% 92% 88% 93% 88% 87%
Management retention 86% 74% 87% 82% 89% 85% 87%
Order book ($m) 1,160 875 357 1,553 3,359 7,304 6,807
Organic revenue growth 7·1% 4·3% 5·0% 8·1% 7·9% 7·2% 4·6%
ROCE 17·2% 16%

KPI definitions and notes
1. Cleaning, security, catering and building services headings are for single service contracts.
2. No commentary is provided as the CEO talks the board through the dashboard at each board meeting.
3. Secured revenue is long-term recurring revenue. This is the percentage of budgeted revenue which is already contracted. The budget is often not completed until well into the year as it is a complex process. In 2016, the original budget showed revenue of $1,565m with the final budget signed off at the end of Q1 showing $1,460m.
The secured (contracted) revenue for the period was $1,285m. The accounts show a year end revenue of
$1,542m.
4. Management retention is the percentage of managers who were still employed throughout the whole year. The figure only includes those employees on full-time contracts (about 65% of all managers).
5. Order book is the total cash value of future contracted revenue. DS has contracts which run up to 10 years into the future.
6. Operating profit margin. This excludes exceptional items such as the reorganisation of the catering business which cost $55m in 2016, where revenue was $245m.
7. Organic revenue growth is calculated by using the total revenue figure as reported in the accounts. It includes net acquisitions which brought in revenue of $48m in 2016.
8. Return on capital employed (ROCE). Capital employed is total assets less current liabilities from the statement of financial position.