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Encyclopedia > Critical success factor

Critical Success Factor (CSF) is a business term for an element which is necessary for an organization or project to achieve its mission. For example, a CSF for a successful Information Technology (IT) project is user involvement. A company may use the critical success factor method as a means for identifying the important elements of their success. Wall Street, Manhattan is the location of the New York Stock Exchange and is often used as a symbol for the world of business. ... Information Technology (IT)[1] is a broad subject concerned with the use of technology in managing and processing information, especially in large organizations. ...


The concept of "success factors" was developed by D. Ronald Daniel of McKinsey and Company, "Management Information Crisis," Harvard Business Review, Sept.-Oct., 1961. The process was refined by Jack F. Rockart in, "A Primer on Critical Success Factors" published in, The Rise of Managerial Computing: The Best of the Center for Information Systems Research, edited with Christine V. Bullen, Homewood, IL: Dow Jones-Irwin, 1986.

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A plan should be implemented that considers a platform for growth and profits as well as take into consideration the following critical success factors [1]:

  • Money factors: positive cash flow, revenue growth, and profit margins.
  • Acquiring new customers and/or distributors -- your future.
  • Customer satisfaction -- how happy are they?
  • Quality -- how good is your product and service?
  • Product / service development -- what's new that will increase business with existing customers and attract new ones?
  • Intellectual capital -- increasing what you know that's profitable.
  • Strategic relationships -- new sources of business, products and outside revenue.
  • Employee attraction and retention -- your ability to do extend your reach.
  • Sustainability -- your personal ability to keep it all going

A critical success factor is not a key performance indicator or KPI. Critical Success Factors are elements that are vital for a strategy to be successful. KPIs are measures that quantify objectives and enable the measurement of strategic performance. ...


For example: KPI = number of new customers CSF = installation of a call centre for providing quotations


See also

In 1992, Robert S. Kaplan and David Norton introduced the balanced scorecard (BSC), a concept for measuring a companys activities in terms of its vision and strategies. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Image File history File links Crystal_kchart. ... Wall Street, Manhattan is the location of the New York Stock Exchange and is often used as a symbol for the world of business. ...

References

November 2005 issue of the Harvard Business Review. ...

Recommended Book

Friesen, Michael and Johnson, James A. (1995) THE SUCCESS PARADIGM. New York: Quorum.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Critical success factor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (375 words)
Critical Success Factor (CSF) is a business term for an element which is necessary for an organization or project to achieve its mission.
A company may use the critical success factor method as a means for identifying the important elements of their success.
Critical Success Factors are elements that are vital for a strategy to be successful.
Critical Success Factors (309 words)
Critical success factors (CSFs) are those things which must go right for the organization to achieve its mission.
The advantages of identifying CSFs are that they are simple to understand; they help focus attention on major concerns; they are easy to communicate to coworkers; they are easy to monitor; and they can be used in concert with strategic planning methodologies.
Primary measures that should be listed include critical success levels (such as number of transactions per month) or, in cases where specific measurements are more difficult, general goals should be specified (such as moving up in an industry customer service survey).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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