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Business Value



In management, business value is an informal term that includes all forms of value that determine the health and well-being of the firm in the long-run. Business value expands concept of value of the firm beyond economic value (also known as economic profit, Economic value addedtm, and Shareholder value) to include other forms of value such as employee value, customer value, supplier value, channel partner value, alliance partner value, managerial value, and societal value. Many of these forms of value are not directly measured in monetary terms.


 


Business value often embraces intangible assets not necessarily attributable to any stakeholder group. Examples include intellectual capital and a firm's business model. The Balanced scorecard methodology is one of the most popular methods for measuring and managing business value.


Philosophy

The concept of business value aligned with the theory that a firm is best viewed as a network of relationships both internal and external. These networks are sometimes called a Value network or Value chain. Each node in the network could be a stakeholder group, a resource, an organization, end-consumers, interest groups, regulators, or the environment itself. In a Value network, value creation is viewed as a collaborative, creative, synergistic processes rather than purely mechanistic or a result of command-and-control.


 


If the firm is viewed as a network of value creating entities, then the question becomes how does each node in the network contribute to overall firm performance and how does it behave and respond to its own interests. When the nodes are independent organizations (e.g. suppliers) or agents (e.g. customers), it's assumed that the firm is seeking a cooperative, "win-win" relationship where all parties receive value. Even when nodes in the network are not fully independent (e.g. employees), it's assumed that incentives are important and that those incentives go beyond direct financial compensation.


 


While it would be very desirable to translate all forms of business value to a single economic measure (e.g. Discounted cash flow), many practitioners and theorists believe this is either not feasible or theoretically impossible. Therefore, advocates of business value believe that the best approach is to measure and manage multiple forms of value as they apply to each stakeholder group.


 


As yet, there are no well-formed theories about how the various elements of business value are related to each other and how they might contributed to the firm's long-term success. One promising approach is the business model, but these are rarely formalized.


Strategies for Creating Business Value

An increase or decline in Business Value that an action produces is traditionally measured in terms of Customer Satisfaction, Revenue Growth, Profitability, Market Share, Wallet Share, Cross-Sell Ratio, Marketing Campaign Response Rates, or Relationship Duration.


 


Business Value of Information Technology


Various factors affect the business value impact of Information Technology (IT). The most important factor is the alignment between IT and business processes, organization structure, and strategy. At the highest levels, this alignment is achieved through proper integration of enterprise architecture, business architecture, process design, organization design, and performance metrics.


 


At the level of computing and communications infrastructure, the following performance factors constrain and partially determine IT capabilities:


    * Usability


    * Functionality


    * Availability


    * Reliability, recoverability


    * Performance (thruput, response time, predictability, capacity, etc.)


    * Security


    * Agility


 


In Extreme Programming the goal of delivering incremental Business value drives each iteration of development.

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